Terri Hancharick: Being disabled doesn’t mean death is better than life

Yesterday (Sept. 7) Delaware’s Daily State News published an opinion piece by the Chair of the State Council for Persons with Disabilities who is also the parent of a person with developmental disabilities. In the article, Terri Hancharick stated in part:

Delaware’s assisted suicide bill is based on legislation in Oregon, where assisted suicide was first legalized. Data from Oregon provides insight into the top reasons that patients ask for assisted suicide. The top five reasons that people gave were the loss of autonomy, being unable to participate in activities that make life enjoyable, loss of dignity, loss of bodily functions and becoming a burden on family, friends and caregivers. These reasons are all disability-related. Contrary to popular belief, pain does not even make it into the top reasons people give to justify their application for assisted suicide.

These disability-related concerns are similar to the concerns that my daughter and other Delawareans with disabilities face daily ….and deserve appropriate multidisciplinary care — but they are not worth seeking death as an alternative. Legalized assisted suicide devalues the life of my daughter and her peers, and it simply sends the wrong message to the disability community, that they are better off dead than disabled.

As written in testimony by the Autistic Self Advocacy Network, “When people are offered the option of suicide but not the option of affordable home care, they do not have any meaningful choice. People with significant disabilities due to illness should not have to die to have dignity.”

Because there are no safeguards against social and medical bigotry toward people with significant disabilities, assisted suicide is simply too dangerous….

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To read the full article, please go HERE.

1 thought on “Terri Hancharick: Being disabled doesn’t mean death is better than life

  1. Able-bodied people like to draw people who are opposed to assisted suicide into the dark, hopeless pit of the jungle. A mother squirrel will kick her baby out of the nest if it fails to grow hair on its tail. Squirrels are mammals. Humans are mammals. Isn’t it natural to be like a squirrel? Answer: 98% of all mammal species are non-monogamous. Humans are largely monogamous. Is this unnatural? Yes, it is. Humanity, possessing great spirit and keen mind, has transcended the brutality of the jungle. In many, many ways (not all ways!) we have risen above our animalistic roots. To love and care for those of us less abled signifies our commitment to a higher level of civility and to our dreams of a more advanced civilization.

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