Source: http://alexschadenberg.blogspot.com/2015/03/
Timestamp: 2019-04-22 22:14:15+00:00

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This research article was published by the Heritage Foundation on March 24, 2015.
This article was published by Wesley Smith on his blog on March 31, 2015.
During the Terri Schiavo debacle, I would often debate bioethicists and others who claimed that Terri’s death would be gentle.
These advocates either intentionally or ignorantly conflated two different circumstances.
The first, taking food and water from someone whose body readily assimilated sustenance. That is an agonizing death.
The second, people dying naturally whose bodies are shutting down. In such circumstances, people stop eating and drinking on their own as part of the process of passing on. That does not cause suffering, and indeed, it is medically inappropriate–and can be cruel–to force sustenance into their bodies.
Terri was a number 1, and the advocates pretended she was a number 2.
After almost two weeks without food or water, my sister’s lips were horribly cracked, to the point where they were blistering.
Her skin became jaundiced with areas that turned different shades of blue. Her skin became markedly dehydrated from the lack of water. Terri’s breathing became rapid and uncontrollable, as if she was outside sprinting.
Her moaning, at times, was raucous, which indicated to us the insufferable pain she was experiencing. Terri’s face became skeletal, with blood pooling in her deeply sunken eyes and her teeth protruding forward.
Even as I write this, I can never properly describe the nightmare of having to watch my sister have to die this way. What will be forever seared in my memory is the look of utter horror on my sister’s face when my family visited her just after she died.
This article was published by Advocate Daily on March 31, 2015.
Many Canadians do not recognize the full extent to which existing rules around end-of-life decision-making are not serving as appropriate barriers to inappropriate conduct, says Toronto health and human rights lawyer Hugh Scher.
Concerning cases around end-of-life care decisions continue to crop up across Canada, says Scher, noting it is unclear whether directives from prior court rulings are being respected and enforced.
In one recent case, a Toronto physician and hospital were sued by a family who alleged a “do not resuscitate” (DNR) order was unilaterally placed on an elderly patient at Toronto East General Hospital against their wishes, reports the Toronto Star.
Scher, who is not involved in the Luong case but who has been involved in other such cases, says clear rules and meaningful consequences for those who go against the established guidelines are needed.
In Carter, released in February, the Supreme Court struck down the ban on doctor-assisted suicide in specific cases. The court gave the federal government 12 months to craft legislation to respond to the ruling, with the ban on doctor-assisted suicide standing until then.
The Carter decision risks creating a culture of permissiveness with regard to all end-of-life matters, says Scher, and real consequences are required for those that break or ignore the law. Without them, all Canadians are put at serious risk in health care settings across the country, Scher states.
Scher, has acted as counsel to The Euthanasia Prevention Coalition in several high-profile end-of-life files including Rasouli v. Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, 2011 ONCA 482 (CanLII); Cuthbertson v. Rasouli, 2013 SCC 53,  3 S.C.R. 341; Bentley v. Maplewood Seniors Care Society, 2014 BCSC 165 (CanLII); Bentley v. Maplewood Seniors Care Society 2015 BCCA 91; Carter v. Canada (Attorney General), 2012 BCSC 886 (CanLII); Carter v. Canada (Attorney General) 2013 BCCA 435 (CanLII); and Carter v. Canada (Attorney General), 2015 SCC 5.
Clear rules and consequences needed concerning right to receive food and water.
Appeal dismissed in BC normal feeding case.
BC Supreme court sides with nursing home in spoon feeding case.
BC Supreme court decides that normal feeding is basic personal care.
The 2015 HOPE International Symposium on Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide.
The Fourth International Symposium on Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide is hosted by HOPE Australia on May 22 - 23, 2015 at the Rydges Hotel South Park in Adelaide South Australia.
Register for the 2015 HOPE International Symposium.
The 2015 HOPE International Symposium is hosted by HOPE Australia, and co-sponsored by the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition - International, Euthanasia-Free New Zealand, the disability rights group - Lives Worth Living, and Doctors Opposed to Euthanasia.
Nic Steenhout, Director, Vivre dans la dignité Quebec.
Henk Reitsma, Board member, EPC - International and an expert on the Netherlands Euthanasia statistics.
Tom Mortier, Chemistry professor in Belgium. His depresed mother died by euthanasia in 2012.
Professor Theo Boer, former member of a Dutch Euthanasia Regional Review Committee.
Nancy Elliott, Board member, EPC - International and a past three term New Hampshire state representative.
Dr Paul Dunne, a leading Palliative Care Medical Specialist in Australia.
Brendan Malone, from New Zealand, is a dynamic speaker on youth, culture and media.
This is the first International Symposium hosted in the southern hemisphere by EPC - International. Previous symposia were held in Toronto, Washington, Vancouver, Edinburgh.
Clear rules and consequences needed concerning the right to receive food and water.
This article was published by Advocate Daily on March 30, 2015.
Top British Columbia courts have made it clear that oral nutrition should not be considered health care or medical treatment and instead be seen as basic personal care and support. But, how the directive will be applied and enforced across Canada remains to be seen, says Toronto health and human rights lawyer Hugh Scher.
In Bentley v. Maplewood Seniors Care Society 2015 BCCA 91, the British Columbia Court of Appeal dismissed a request from the family of an 83-year-old woman that their mother no longer be given nourishment or liquids by staff members at the nursing home where she resides.
Justice Mary Newbury agreed with a lower court judge, ruling that the woman, who has advanced Alzheimer’s disease, is exercising her consent when she opens her mouth to accept food and water, despite her family’s position that it was her wish while she was mentally capable that she not be fed in her current condition.
The Euthanasia Prevention Coalition and the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition – BC, represented by Scher and Geoff Cowper QC, were intervenors in the case at trial and on appeal.
“I recognize the terribly difficult situation in which Mrs. Bentley’s family find themselves and I appreciate the disappointment they must feel in being unable to comply with what they believe to have been her wishes and what they believe still to be her wishes,” writes Newbury.
“It is a grave thing, however, to ask or instruct caregivers to stand by and watch a patient starve to death. It should come as no surprise that a court of law will be assiduous in seeking to ascertain and give effect to the wishes of the patient in the ‘here and now’, even in the face of prior directives, whether clear or not," says the decision.
The case has seen national media attention, with Scher appearing on outlets including Global News, CTV and Lawyers Weekly, and he says with the appeal concluded, it’s time to look forward at how the ruling will take shape across the country.
“The first step is going to be to determine how the ruling in Bentley, which determines that regular feeding and regular hydration represent basic personal support and not health care or medical treatment, is applied across the country,” says Scher.
There are a number of international policies and provisions in places such as the U.S. and Scotland, says Scher, that also consider foods and fluids to be personal support and not health care, but the issue now is how to determine whether the rules are being respected.
This article was published by Not Dead Yet on March 27 2015.
At the end of February, John Kelly, the New England Regional Director of Not Yet Dead and Alex Schadenberg, Executive Director of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, were guests on “Brave New World,” a show on Radio Sputnik. Also on the show was Gert Huysmans, the President of the Federation of Palliative care of Flanders (Belgium). John Harrison is the host of the show.
Gert Huysmans: What you mentioned in Flanders and in Belgium, euthanasia is not a right. You have the right to request for euthanasia, and that’s a world of difference. So it’s not that you have the right to choose your moment of dying with euthanasia. You have to follow certain conditions that are mentioned in the law. You have to have unbearable suffering caused by a disease or an accident, and the physician you request your euthanasia [from] should have the internal persuasion that euthanasia is the only proper solution for your problems and in some cases and in some circumstances euthanasia is acceptable, but it is not a right as such.
And, as news of the law’s actual application has shown, practice is only as narrow as the broadest comfort zone of any given individual physician.
JK: We in the United States, the disability rights movement have fought [for] a generation against the arrogance being displayed by the doctor, where the doctors can presume to judge the quality of life, and when it is correct to end it. We have a history of being judged to not have high quality of lives, and whenever suffering is the subjective criterion for deciding who gets to die, people with disabilities will always be the ones who are targeted.
This show is an excellent one. I encourage readers to listen to the show or to read the transcript.
Safeguards do little to control euthanasia in Belgium.
This article was published on March 27 by OneNewsNow.
Promised safeguards and controls for euthanasia and doctor assisted-suicide in Belgium apparently aren't working, according to the latest study.
In 2007, a study was conducted in Belgium, and figures released in the most recent examination of the practice from 2013 still show it is problematic. Alex Schadenberg of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition tells OneNewsNow experts researched over 3,700 deaths.
In other words, doctors or nurses decided to kill an ailing person who had not requested euthanasia.
According to Schadenberg, the absence of estimates on unreported cases is glaringly apparent. He says the practice is so out of control that even people suffering depression are assisted to die.
But Schadenberg says the regulations are neither safe nor do they guard against abuse. He says that's also true in states in America where assisted suicide has been legalized.
Almost half of all Belgian euthanasia deaths may not have been reported.
New study: Euthanasia represents 4.6% of all deaths in Flanders Belgium in 2013, deaths without patient request continue.
More than 1000 deaths may have been hastened without explicit request in 2013 in Belgium.
We Can End the End-of-Life Impasse in the Texas Legislature.
By Jacqueline C. Harvey, Ph.D .
After five consecutive sessions of bitter battles over end-of-life bills, the Texas Legislature is finally poised to pass the first reform to the Texas Advance Directives Act (TADA) in twelve years. An issue that created uncanny adversaries out of natural allies and equally odd bedfellows has finally found common ground in H.B. 3074: an act that simply prohibits doctor-imposed euthanasia by starvation and dehydration. Since H.B. 3074 includes only those provisions and language that all major organizations are on record as having deemed acceptable in previous legislative sessions, there is finally hope of ending the end-of-life impasse in the Texas Capitol.
Many people are surprised to learn that Texas law allows physicians to forcibly remove a feeding tube against the will of the patient and their family. In fact, there is a greater legal penalty for failing to feed or water an animal than for a hospital to deny a human being food and water through a tube. This is because there is no penalty whatsoever for a healthcare provider who wishes to deny artificially administered nutrition and hydration (ANH). According to Texas Health and Safety Code, “every living dumb creature” is legally entitled to access to suitable food and water. Denying an animal food and water, such as a case this January in San Antonio, is punishable by civil fines up to $10,000 and criminal penalties up to two years in jail per offense. Yet Texas law allows health care providers to forcibly deny food and water from human beings - what they would not be able to legally do to their pet cat. And healthcare providers are immune from civil and criminal penalties deny of food and water to human beings as long as they follow the current statutory process which is sorely lacking in safeguards. Therefore while it is surprising that Texas is the only state law that explicitly mentions food and water delivered artificially for the purpose of completely permitting its forced denial (six other states mention ANH explicitly for the opposite purpose, to limit or prohibit its refusal), it is not at all surprising that the issue of protecting a patient’s right to food and water is perhaps the one point of consensus across all major stakeholders.
H.B. 3074 is the first TADA reform bill to include only this provision that is agreed upon across all major players in previous legislative sessions. Texas Alliance for Life and Texas Right to Life have each previously sponsored broad and ambitious bills to either preserve but reform the current law (Texas Alliance for Life’s position) or overturn it altogether as Texas Right to Life aims to do. Prior to H.B. 3074, bills filed by major advocacy organizations have often included ANH, but also a host of other provisions that were so contentious and unacceptable to other organizations each bill ultimately died, and this mutually-agreed-upon and vital reform always died along with it. The 2011 and 2013 sessions present a prime example where both organizations filed complicated, contentious opposing bills, both of which would have protected a patient’s right to food and water but each bill also included provisions that other groups saw as contrary to their goals. Both bills were ultimately defeated and neither group was able to achieve protections for patients at risk of forced starvation and dehydration- a mutual goal that could have been met through a third, narrow bill like H.B. 3074. H.B. 3074 focuses on what unites the organizations involved rather than what divides them.
H.B. 3074 is progress that is pre-negotiated and pre-approved. It is not a fertile springboard for negotiations on an area of mutual agreement. Rather it is the culmination of years of previous negotiations on bill that all came too late, either due to the complex nature of rival bills, the controversy involved or even both. On the contrary, H.B. 3074 is not just simple and an area of agreement, moreover, it is has already been negotiated. since Texas Alliance for Life and Texas Right to Life (along with their allies) were able to agree on language in 2007 with C.S.S.B. 439.
A law professor at McGill University says that a recent decision of the Supreme Court of Canada overturning the ban on assisted-suicide and euthanasia is a "nightmare" and "full of errors". Margaret Somerville, the Founding Director of the Centre for Medicine, Ethics and Law at McGill made these remarks recently to a rapt audience at a public forum organized by the Newman Centre for Catholic students and faculty.
She said that the SCC decision goes farther than simply striking down the ban against aiding someone to commit suicide, permitting euthanasia by physicians in certain circumstances, while cautioning that the ruling is unclear in this regard.
In physician assisted-suicide the doctor prescribes drugs that the patient takes, whereas in euthanasia the doctor administers a lethal injection - in either scenario, ostensibly at the patient's request. However, in jurisdictions where assisted-suicide has been legalized, there are multiple examples of abuse with people being euthanized without their consent.
This is especially true in the case of children and incompetent adults who can't give informed-consent: for example, the Groningen Protocol of the Netherlands permits so-called "voluntary euthanasia" of babies at the parents' request. Pro-euthanasia advocates refer to this gruesome practice as "post-birth abortion" while opponents say that it is really a form of "closet eugenics" - if the child is born with congenital defects the parents can request euthanasia on the pretext of preventing the child from suffering.
More than 40% of Belgian euthanasia deaths were not reported in 2013.
The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) published a new study concerning the Belgium euthanasia experience titled: Recent Trends in Euthanasia and Other End-of-Life Practices in Belgium.
Similar to previous studies, researchers sent a questionnaire to 6188 physicians who had certified death certificates in the first six months of 2013 in Flanders. There were 3751 returned questionnaires representing a 60.6% response rate. The data represents about 6% of all deaths in 2013.
1. 4.6% of all deaths were euthanasia. There were 61,621 total death in 2013.
2. .05% of all deaths were assisted suicide.
3. 76.8% of the requests for euthanasia or assisted suicide were granted.
4. 1.7% of all deaths were hastened without explicit request.
With help from a Belgian researcher I learned that in 2013 there were 61,621 total deaths in Flanders Belgium. Since the data from the study indicated that 4.6% of all deaths were euthanasia, therefore there were approximately 2834 assisted deaths in Flanders in 2013.
The data did not include information concerning the number of unreported euthanasia deaths.
Since the official Belgian euthanasia report states that there were 1807 reported assisted deaths in Belgium, of which, 1454 were in the Flanders region, therefore approximately 1380 assisted deaths were not reported in Flanders Belgium in 2013.
Last year, Dr Marc Cosyns, a Belgian euthanasia doctor, admitted that he does not report his euthanasia deaths.
This means that more than 40% of all euthanasia deaths were not reported in Flanders in 2013.
The study also found that 1.7% of all deaths were hastened without explicit request. Since there were 61,621 deaths in Flanders, therefore approximately 1047 deaths may have been hastened without explicit request in Flanders Belgium in 2013.
The recent Supreme Court of Canada assisted death decision suggested that abuse of euthanasia laws in other jurisdictions was only anecdotal. Canada needs a Royal Commission to set the record straight.
Euthanasia is out-of-control in Belgium.
To learn more about the abuse and extension of euthanasia in the Netherlands and Belgium purchase my book: Exposing Vulnerable People to Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide.
Belgian doctor admits to not reporting euthansia deaths.
Chilean girl who asked for euthanasia, changes her mind.
Valentina has changed her mind after meeting with a family from Argentina.
"Manic-depressive patients are in their manic moments capable of the most improbable things, They spend their bank loot, for weeks at a five-star lodge, buy several cars one day. At that stage they are not competent. But in moments of depression they by their exhaustion come back to the baseline and are indeed competent. Then they can for instance say, "I live for thirty years crazy highs and lows, I've tried everything to break that infernal cycle Now that I'm back on the baseline, and I know that I have a couple of weeks left, back I for a dip in the depth or a jump in height. " These are people who are eligible for euthanasia."
Once euthanasia has become an acceptable solution to human suffering the only question that remains is what conditions will death become the solution for life.
Lethal injections for people with psychiatric conditions is based on a false compassion. Distelmans appears to be reacting to his fear of living with chronic depression.
Court challenge: Belgian doctor kills depressed patient by euthanasia.
This article was published on the HOPE Australia website on March 20.
The Tasmanian MPs who tabled and pushed the last Euthanasia bill defeated in 2013, have said that they will try again later this year.
The then Premier, Lara Giddings MP and her then deputy, Nick McKim MP, now on the opposition benches made the announcement in The Examiner Newspaper on the 14th of March.
But bringing the issue to a vote in this new bill will not be as easy as it was when the then Premier and her Deputy were in control of the parliamentary debate from the treasury benches.
Moreover, whereas the vote in 2013 was resolved by 13 votes to 11, a cursory look at the chamber post the 2014 election suggests that the numbers are at least at that level if not more strongly against.
When Giddings and McKim had the privilege of office behind them, a faux discussion paper arising out of the Premier's Office and full control of the timing of the debate, they still could not find a majority on the chamber.
It is always possible that votes change and we must ever be vigilant, but I cannot help but observe that this seems more like grandstanding than it does about anything else.
Nitschke: Frank admissions on Tasmanian radio.
Executive Director Euthanasia Prevention Coalition.
Contrary to the Supreme Court decision that struck down Canada's laws that protect people from assisted death, in Belgium, where euthanasia has been legal since 2002, a significant number people are dying by euthanasia without request.
Yesterday I wrote an article about the study published in the NEJM on March 19, 2015 on the experience with euthanasia in Flanders Belgium. The study sent 6188 questionnaires to the physician who certified death certificates in the first half of 2013. The researchers received 3751 responses representing a 60.6% rate of return. The data indicated that 4.6% of all deaths were euthanasia and .05% of all deaths were assisted suicide.
This study found that 1.7% of deaths in the Flanders region of Belgium, in 2013, were intentionally hastened without explicit request. A similar study in 2007 found that 1.8% of deaths in the Flanders region of Belgium were hastened without explicit request, meaning that the problem continues.
Since there are 61,621 deaths in Flanders in 2013 and since the study found that 1.7% of all deaths were hastened without explicit request, therefore more than 1000 deaths were hastened without explicit request in 2013 in Flanders.
The Supreme Court of Canada assisted dying decision stated that abuse of euthanasia laws are anecdotal. A previous Belgian study in 2007 found that 1.8% of all deaths were hastened without explicit consent and this new Belgian study (2013) found that 1.7% of all deaths were hastened without explicit consent representing no statistical change in Belgium.
People need to recognize that euthanasia or assisted suicide laws will be abused. Will assisted death be your choice or will it be imposed on you?
To learn about the abuse and expansion of euthanasia in the Netherlands and Belgium order my book: Exposing Vulnerable People to Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide.
Supreme Court of Canada decision is irresponsible and dangerous.

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