Final Exit Network, Zealotry and Groupthink

The latest story from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution centers on Dr. Lawrence Egbert, the “medical director” of Final Exit Network (FEN). According to the AJC, Egbert’s own words describe him as some sort of Bizarro-world version of Will Rogers, who said “I never met a man I didn’t like.”

In the Bizarro world of Egbert and company, it runs like this: “I (almost) never saw a suicide plea from someone who didn’t deserve to die.”

From the article:

As medical director and co-founder of the Georgia-based Final Exit Network, Egbert in the past four years approved the applications of people who wanted to die because they were diagnosed with terminal cancer.

He approved the applications of people who wanted to die because their bodies were wasting away with ALS or multiple sclerosis.

He approved the applications of people who had not been diagnosed as terminally ill but whose quality of life, in their mind, was no longer worth living.

Egbert, an 81-year-old Baltimore anesthesiologist and teacher affiliated with the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, said in an interview Friday that there were times when he rejected people who wanted to die, “but not very frequently.”

Of course, the allegations from the Georgia Bureau of Investigation go beyond simply providing information and “being there.”:

The GBI says the group has a pattern of assisting people in suicides in which a “hood” is lowered over the person’s face, and the person breathes helium until losing consciousness. Death can take 10 or 20 minutes longer.

The GBI alleges that the group breaks state law by holding the hands of the person to prevent struggle or removal of the hood.

There’s no word yet as to whether or not the GBI has this on tape, which is a common practice in “sting” operations.

Friends and sympathizers reject the notion that members of FEN could ever have actively prevented someone from taking the “exit bag” off.

Yet, out of at least 200 (Egbert admits to this) suicides, there apparently hasn’t been one single case in which a person changed their mind – rejecting the feeling of suffocation and claustrophobia. Not one. If there had been one, that person would have needed immediate medical attention. There would be no time to get rid of evidence – paraphernalia, fingerprints, etc. before the paramedics arrived. There sure would be a lot of unpleasant questions to deal with – and possibly a civil suit by the family if brain damage occurred.

But that is pretty cynical and self-serving motivation. It’s easy enough for those of us who don’t think much of the ethics of pro-euthanasia/assisted suicide activists to believe members of FEN would slide from “assistance” to “murder.”

But most people probably don’t feel that way. It’s unthinkable, many would say, that intelligent and ethical people could let their behavior lapse so badly.

Guess what. It’s not unthinkable at all. In fact there’s a name for the phenomenon in which intelligent and ethical individuals – as members of a tightly knit group – can do stupid and unethical things.

It’s called groupthink – originally studied and defined by psychologist Irving Janis. It’s a fascinating and complex topic, with some real-world examples.

Janis identified eight symptoms that put a group of individuals at risk for falling into groupthink:

  1. Illusions of invulnerability creating excessive optimism and encouraging risk taking.
  2. Rationalising warnings that might challenge the group’s assumptions.
  3. Unquestioned belief in the morality of the group, causing members to ignore the consequences of their actions.
  4. Stereotyping those who are opposed to the group as weak, evil, disfigured, impotent, or stupid.
  5. Direct pressure to conform placed on any member who questions the group, couched in terms of “disloyalty”.
  6. Self censorship of ideas that deviate from the apparent group consensus.
  7. Illusions of unanimity among group members, silence is viewed as agreement.
  8. Mindguards — self-appointed members who shield the group from dissenting information.

Afte years of operating without any consequences, it’s easy to see how FEN members could have developed a feedling of invulnerability. Anyone who has lurked on Derek Humphry’s (Humphry is an advisor to FEN) email list or engaged the most zealous euthanasia supporters has encountered the symptoms covered in numbers 2-4 firsthand. Number 5 has played out on Derek Humphry’s email list several times – most notably when one member suggested that Jack Kevorkian’s activities in assisted suicide might have been reckless and irresponsible. Seeing that kind of thing play out makes it quite possible that there is at least some degree of self-censorship going on within the movement to avoid the dogpiling that occurred in the Kevorkian episode. That, of course, leads to the illusion of unanimity. While it’s impossible to know if there were “mindguards” in FEN itself, Humphry is pretty careful in handpicking information sent out to his list, highlighting news items that reinforce the “rightness” of his cause and framing the opponents as opportunists and/or religious zealots.

So, even starting from the highly questionable assumption that FEN members are moral and ethical people, they operate in a world that is geared toward the erosion of those aspects of their character in favor of group cohesion, loyalty and self-preservation. –Stephen Drake

8 thoughts on “Final Exit Network, Zealotry and Groupthink

  1. I find this issue and the FEN in particular very upsetting. In our society where the narrative about disability is so negative groups like FEN pose a clear danger.

    Have they chosen their method because they can’t get caught–and have they convinced themselves that this is because the outside world just won’t understand??

    The whole thing is horrifying–putting a bag over someone’s head and holding their hands (?down) is very intimate… gives me the creeps.

  2. Zero out of 200 people changing their mind while suicidal is highly unlikely given the statistics on number of suicide attempts in the general population and number of actual deaths by sucide. I frankly find it impossible to believe as a retired mental health professional doing outpatient therapy in a community mental health center. Never lost a person to death by suicide.

  3. According to an article in today’s New York Times, the Final Exit Network seems to take a VERY active role in its clients’ suicides. Here’s an excerpt:
    “The arrests followed an inquiry in which an investigator posed as a cancer patient and persuaded network members to help him prepare to commit suicide.
    “According to the agent’s affidavit, network members instructed him to buy a helium tank and a plastic ‘exit mask.’
    “Thomas E. Goodwin, who was the network president at the time, and Claire Blehr, a member, planned to hold down the agent’s hands while helium flowed into the mask, the affidavit says.
    “The agent would lose consciousness within seconds and die within minutes, and the guides would remove evidence from the scene.
    “‘They went through a dry run just to let the agent know what would happen,’ [GBI spokesman] Mr. Bankhead said. ‘Mr. Goodwin got on top of the agent and held down both of his hands,’ which investigators say would have prevented him from removing the mask if he had changed his mind during a real suicide.”
    You can read the full article at
    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/11/us/11suicide.html?_r=1

  4. I do not understand how this is not murder. If someone changes their mind and these people make them die than that is murder, what degree I don’t know, but certainly murder. How is this different to pushing someone from a height who was coming back down after thinking he or she might kill him or herself? I’m pretty sure that would be prosecuted as murder of some sort.

  5. Terri,

    it *should* give you the creeps. Disability vs. terminal aside, this was a group of “volunteers” (we don’t know how many) devoting significant time and energy to planning and presiding over the deaths of total strangers. How could this *not* attract some really really (to put it mildly) creepy people?

  6. Alison,

    I kind of thought 0 out of 200 was pretty unlikely myself, especially when you factor in reactions to suffocation and claustrophobic reactions to having your head in a bag.

  7. Laura,

    Thanks for the link. I’ll do a short blog post on it. Other articles include the “holding hands down” info, many don’t. I have hammered that point with every reporter I’ve talked with.

    Personally, as I explained in this post (don’t know how well), I find the charge all too believable. –Stephen

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