SPUC delivers “YES to our hospices, NO to assisted suicide” petition to No. 10 Downing Street

Pictured, from left to right: SPUC’s Development Officer, Katherine Hampton, Palliative care consultant, Dr Dominic Whitehouse, SPUC’s Parliamentary Officers, Maureen Martin and Monika Užkalnytė.

Today, 17th April 2025, SPUC delivered its “YES to our hospices, NO to assisted suicide” postcard petition to Prime Minister Keir Starmer at No. 10 Downing Street. The petition was signed by 9,272 people.

MP Kim Leadbeater’s Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill is currently being considered by the House of Commons. The draft law proposes to legalise assisted suicide in England and Wales for terminally ill adults given six months to live.

The next stage of the Bill will be a second MP debate and vote at Third Reading, which is expected to take place on 16 May.

SPUC’s petition has now sent “a powerful and unequivocal message” to the Government and MPs that the British public wants improved hospital care, not assisted suicide, stating:

 “I, the undersigned, call upon the Prime Minister to commit to long-term reform of hospice funding as part of the Government’s 10-year plan for the NHS, so that every hospice has the resources it needs to properly care for dying patients.

“With the need for palliative care projected to increase by 25% over the next 25 years, the current model for funding hospices is not fit for purpose.

“Dying people in this country need outstanding hospice care, not assisted suicide.”

“A powerful and unequivocal message”

Terry Graham, SPUC’s Northern Development Officer, said: “The UK is facing a palliative care crisis. A Marie Curie study, published last year, found that nearly half (49%) of bereaved respondents were unhappy with the end-of-life care that a family member received, and one in eight made an official complaint.

“Our petition calls on the Prime Minister to fund the urgent staffing needs of our hospices, so that dying patients get the very best care available and can have a dignified, peaceful death.

“At a time when even the Government’s own Health Secretary, Wes Streeting, says he will vote against assisted suicide legislation for this very reason, the public demands meaningful action to protect lives, not end them. This petition sends a powerful and unequivocal message to all MPs underscoring the democratic will of the people.

“SPUC is working hard to ensure that the concerns of the public are heard and responded to by politicians who owe them a duty of care, not least the preservation of life. Parliament cannot afford to ignore such a vital issue as assisted suicide that threatens so many vulnerable lives.”

Dr Dominic Whitehouse leads call for improved palliative care funding

Esteemed palliative care expert Dr Dominic Whitehouse led the call to sign the petition. He said:

“I am a palliative care consultant working in my local hospice. I am only too aware of the desperate situation of many hospices, where lack of funding means they are unable to deliver the level of care needed by the local community.

“I want to give my dying patients the very best care available, so that they can have a peaceful and dignified death.

“Please join me in petitioning the Prime Minister to fund the urgent staffing needs of our world-class hospices. Palliative care has suffered in countries where assisted suicide has been legalised.

“Palliative care is the way forward. Not assisted suicide.”

Leadbeater Bill will turn NHS into “national death service”

This month, Health Secretary Wes Streeting said he would vote against the Leadbeater Bill, citing concerns about coercion and funding “implications” for the NHS and palliative care.

Similarly, Cardinal Vincent Nichols of the Catholic Church warned that Ms Leadbeater’s assisted suicide law risked turning the NHS into a “national death service”.

Palliative care doctors in the UK are also overwhelmingly against the legalisation of assisted suicide. A recent Association for Palliative Medicine (APM) survey found that over two in five respondents said that “if assisted dying was implemented within their organisation, they would have to leave”.

In September 2024, the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) stated that any assisted suicide law must include “a right to refuse to participate in the process” and “should not have a negative impact on funding for palliative care services in any way”.

During the Committee Stage of the Leadbeater Bill, MPs voted against an amendment to ensure an opt-out for hospices not wanting to participate in assisted suicide.


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