Belgium's assisted suicide rate has increased 247 percent since 2010
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There's also a record number in Oregon.
As assisted suicide advocates continue to push their agenda in the UK, new reports from jurisdictions that have legal euthanasia show just how swiftly a society falls down the slippery slope when the practise is permitted.
Both Oregon, often taken as a model for assisted suicide legislation, and Belgium, where both assisted suicide and euthanasia are legal, released death statistics this week.
Euthanasia for mental health in Belgium
Alex Schadenburg of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, who has analysed both reports, says that the 2018 Belgian euthanasia report, released on February 28, indicates that in 2018 there were 2357 reported assisted deaths, up from 2309 in the previous year. There were 954 reported assisted deaths in 2010, representing a 247% increase in 8 years.
The report indicates that the number of deaths are stable. This slowed growth is likely due to the Courts agreeing to examine some of the most controversial euthanasia cases. In January, the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg agreed to hear a case being brought against Belgium by a man whose mother was euthanized in 2012 for depression. Tom Mortier was only informed that his mother, Godelieva De Troyer, who was 64 and in good physical health, had been killed by lethal injection when hospital officials called him to deal with paperwork for disposing of her remains.
In another case, three Belgian doctors are facing trial for certifying a heartbroken woman as autistic so she could be euthanised.
Not about pain in Oregon
In Oregon, there were 168 reported assisted suicide deaths in 2018, up from 158 in 2017. As 249 lethal prescriptions were obtained, and the "ingestion status" is not always known, the actual number of deaths may be higher.
The relief of unbearable suffering is the most common argument put forward for euthanasia and assisted suicide, but the data from Oregon shows that it is not the primary reason people chose to end their lives. The three most frequently reported end-of-life concerns were loss of autonomy (91.7%), decreasing ability to participate in activities that made life enjoyable (90.5%), and loss of dignity (66.7%). Inadequate pain control was mentioned by only 31.2%.
In fact, the data from Oregon adds to the concerning evidence that assisted suicide deaths are not the peaceful end promised by advocates, but slow and painful. The report says that the time of death after taking lethal drugs ranged from 9 minutes to 14 hours. When dying from DCMP2 (a lethal drug cocktail that was invented when the preferred alternatives became too expensive), death took an average of 2 hours, with the longest time taking 21 hours.
A poll by the campaign group My Death, My Decision claims that 90% of people in the UK support assisted suicide in some circumstances. The questions in such polls are often very leading, but if we take it at face value, would the answers be the same if the respondents knew what actually happens in places that have already gone down this path?
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