Today’s Newsweek features a terrific opinion piece by disability advocate and attorney Lisa Blumberg! Here’s a photo, excerpt and link to the whole article:
This summer, disability rights advocates sued California over its so-called End of Life Options Act. Under this 2016 law, assisted suicide is available to persons deemed terminally ill with less than six months to live. But, as argued in the lawsuit, the act violates the legal rights of disabled Californians and worsens the dehumanization they already face.
California residents Lonnie VanHook and Ingrid Tischer know the problem firsthand. VanHook and Tischer have significant disabilities that would be fatal without medical management. Both have struggled to get medical care and in-home support. They believe they have encountered discrimination in hospitals due to their disabilities, and in VanHook’s case, also for being Black. Both have heard suggestions that their quality of life is unacceptable. Tischer describes a doctor’s refusal to get her into rehabilitation after pneumonia as a “solid gut punch.” Both have had bouts of depression, anxiety and thoughts of ending it all. They are fearful that if they become suicidal, they will not be given the suicide prevention services available to the general California public but instead be approved for a lethal drug prescription.
Amid existing health care disparities, assisted suicide, although ostensibly voluntary, imperils the ill and disabled. A law enabling it is discriminatory because it carves out an arbitrary health-related exception to the state’s policy of deterring suicide attempts. Four disability rights groups have joined VanHook and Tischer in filing a federal lawsuit alleging that California’s End of Life Option Act violates the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, and the equal protection and due process clauses of the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.