Not Dead Yet Condemns Maine Governor’s Signing of Assisted Suicide Bill

Not Dead Yet, the Resistance

Contacts:
Mike Reynolds 207-576-7396 (no voicemail; uppitycrip@gmail.com)
John Kelly 617-952-3302 (jkelly@notdeadyet.org)

Not Dead Yet Condemns Maine Governor’s Signing of Assisted Suicide Bill

(Augusta, ME) Long time Not Dead Yet disability activist Mike Reynolds condemned today’s signing of “An Act To Enact the Maine Death with Dignity Act” by Governor Janet Mills. “This is a terrible day in the history of Maine that will lead to the untimely deaths of disabled people due to inevitable mistakes, coercion and abuse.”

Reynolds had been scheduled to speak to the Governor’s staff today at 1:00 p.m. along with two others, but learned shortly beforehand that the call was cancelled. Reynolds had penned a recent op-ed in the Bangor Daily News on the issue. He had planned to report on yesterday’s decision by the American Medical Association to maintain it’s longstanding opposition to these bills. He would also have made the following points, which are all too rarely considered by policy makers.

1. When assisted suicide is legal, it’s the cheapest treatment available—an attractive option in our profit-driven healthcare system. If insurers deny, or even merely delay, expensive live-saving treatment, the person will be steered toward assisted suicide. Will insurers do the right thing, or the cheap thing? Examples already exist where this is legal.

2. Elder abuse, and abuse of people with disabilities, are a rising problem. One in ten elders are abused, usually by close family. Where assisted suicide is legal, an heir or abusive caregiver can suggest or steer someone towards assisted suicide, witness the request, pick up the lethal dose, and even give the drug — no independent witnesses are required at the death, so who would know?

3. Terminal diagnoses and prognoses are too often wrong, leading people to lose good years of their lives. And many people with chronic conditions and disabilities can become “terminal” simply by refusing or being denied coverage for essential medications or treatments like insulin or dialysis. This bill is not limited to the imminently dying.

4. The “safeguards” turn out to be truly hollow, with no real enforcement or investigation authority. And the legal immunities in the bill just require a claim of good faith compliance, not actual compliance, protecting everyone involved in the death except the patient.

5. Although assisted suicide proponents will say that it’s not about disability, the top 5 reported reasons for assisted suicide requests in Oregon throughout the years since legalization are all disability issues: “loss of autonomy” (90.6%), “less able to engage in activities” (89.1%), “loss of dignity” (74.4%), “losing control of bodily functions” (44.3%), and “burden on others” (44.8%). These are issues that many people face, not only those of us commonly considered disabled, but also seniors, people with chronic conditions, and people with advanced illnesses, including terminal illnesses. These reasons demonstrate that virtually all who die by lethal prescriptions in Oregon are disabled, in that they need assistance from another person for daily activities. Consumer directed home care would go a long way in actually helping people and families.

6. Evidence appears to show that assisted suicide laws also lead to suicide contagion, driving up the general suicide rate. For example, a CDC report reveals that from 1999-2010, suicide among those aged 35-64 increased 49% in Oregon, where assisted suicide has been legal the longest, as compared to a 28% increase nationally.

1 thought on “Not Dead Yet Condemns Maine Governor’s Signing of Assisted Suicide Bill

  1. Janet Mills should be ashamed of herself for promoting a bill which would lead to the medical killing called “assisted suicide” (what an Orwellian euphemism to mask killing!). The pro-life community is outraged that she supports such a violation of the first civil right, the right to life.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *