On November 11, 2016, NDY sent a letter to the AMA, the first of two submissions urging the AMA through its Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs to re-affirm its position opposing legalization of assisted suicide.
During the twelve years that NDY was based in Chicago, when we knew of motions being made to overturn this longstanding policy, several of us would go down to the hotel used for the annual AMA conference and meeting to distribute a boldly colored leaflet about our reasons for opposing such a dangerous change in policy.
Yesterday I decided to send a supplemental message to the AMA. In recent years, a few state medical societies have gone neutral on the issue. Among other reasons, they seem to be buying the unsupportable claim that there have been no problems in Oregon. As I and many others have tried to convey, there is much evidence to back up our concerns, including the Oregon state reports themselves. My supplemental message to the AMA follows below.
Supplemental Submission to the American Medical Association
Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs
By Diane Coleman, JD, President/CEO Not Dead Yet
February 14, 2017
One of the most frequently repeated claims by proponents of assisted suicide laws is that there is “no evidence or data” to support any claim that these laws are subject to abuse, and that there has not been “a single documented case of abuse or misuse” in Oregon during the 18 reported years. These claims are demonstrably false. Although SB1129 is actually a euthanasia bill, as explained later below, an examination of the Oregon myth is still relevant and essential to the Committee’s deliberations.
Regarding documented cases, please refer to a compilation of individual cases and source materials pulled together by the Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund entitled Oregon and Washington State Abuses and Complications.[1] For an in-depth analysis of several cases by Dr. Herbert Hendin and Dr. Kathleen Foley, please read Physician-Assisted Suicide in Oregon: A Medical Perspective.[2]
The focus of the discussion below is the Oregon Health Division data.[3] These reports are based on forms filed with the state by the physicians who prescribe lethal doses and the pharmacies that dispense the drugs. As the early state reports admitted:
“As best we could determine, all participating physicians complied with the provisions of the Act. . . . Under reporting and noncompliance is thus difficult to assess because of possible repercussions for noncompliant physicians reporting to the division.”
Further emphasizing the serious limits on state oversight under the assisted suicide law, Oregon authorities also issued a release in 2005 clarifying that they have No authority to investigate Death with Dignity case.[4] Thus, all of the state reported data is a statistical summary of self-reports submitted by physicians who prescribe lethal drugs, nothing more.
Nevertheless, contrary to popular belief and despite these extreme limitations, the Oregon state reports substantiate some of the problems and concerns raised by opponents of assisted suicide bills.
Non-Terminal Disabled Individuals Are Receiving Lethal Prescription In Oregon
The Oregon Health Division assisted suicide reports show that non-terminal people receive lethal prescriptions every year.
The prescribing physicians’ reports to the state include the time between the request for assisted suicide and death for each person. However, the online state reports do not reveal how many people outlived the 180-day prediction. Instead, the reports give that year’s median and range of the number of days between the request for a lethal prescription and death. This is on page 7 of the 2015 annual report.[5] In 2015, at least one person lived 517 days; across all years, the longest reported duration between the request for assisted suicide and death was 1009 days. In every year except the first year, the reported upper range is significantly longer than 180 days.
The definition of “terminal” in the statute only requires that the doctor predict that the person will die within six months. There is no requirement that the doctor consider the likely impact of medical treatment in terms of survival, since people have the right to refuse treatment. Unfortunately, while terminal predictions of some conditions, such as some cancers, are fairly well established, this is far less true six months out, as the bill provides, rather than one or two months before death, and is even less true for other diseases. Add the fact that many conditions will or may become terminal if certain medications or routine treatments are discontinued – e.g. insulin, blood thinners, pacemaker, CPAP – and “terminal” becomes a very murky concept.
The state report’s footnote about “other” conditions found eligible for assisted suicide has grown over the years, to include:
“. . . benign and uncertain neoplasms, other respiratory diseases, diseases of the nervous system (including multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease and Huntington’s disease), musculoskeletal and connective tissue diseases, cerebrovascular disease, other vascular diseases, diabetes mellitus, gastrointestinal diseases, and liver disease.”
Overall as of 2015, 7%, or 68 individuals across all reported years, had conditions classified as “other”. Another 16% had ALS, chronic respiratory or heart disease, or HIV/AIDS. In addition, it should be noted that the attending physician who determines terminal status and prescribes lethal drugs is not required to be an expert in the disease condition involved, nor is there any information about physician specialties in the state reports.
The Only Certifiers of Non-Coercion And Capability Need Not Know the Person
Four people are required to certify that the person is not being coerced to sign the assisted suicide request form, and appears capable: the prescribing doctor, second-opinion doctor, and two witnesses.
In most cases, the prescribing doctor is a doctor referred by assisted suicide proponent organizations. (See, M. Golden, Why Assisted Suicide Must Not Be Legalized,[6] section on “Doctor Shopping” and related citations). The Oregon state reports say that the median duration of the physician patient relationship is 12 weeks. Thus, lack of coercion is not usually determined by a physician with a longstanding relationship with the patient. This is significant in light of well-documented elder abuse-identification and reporting problems among professionals in a society where an estimated one in ten elders is abused, mostly by family and caregivers. (Lachs, et al., New England Journal of Medicine, Elder Abuse.[7])
The witnesses on the request form[8] need not know the person either. One of them may be an heir (which would not be acceptable for witnessing a property will), but neither of them need actually know the person (the form says that if the person is not known to the witness, then the witness can confirm identity by checking the person’s ID).
So neither doctors nor witnesses need know the person well enough to certify that they are not being coerced.
No Evidence of Consent or Self-Administration At Time of Death
In about half the reported cases, the Oregon Health Division reports also state that no health care provider was present at the time of ingestion of the lethal drugs or at the time of death. Footnote six clarifies:
“A procedure revision was made mid‐year in 2010 to standardize reporting on the follow‐up questionnaire. The new procedure accepts information about time of death and circumstances surrounding death only when the physician or another health care provider is present at the time of death. This resulted in a larger number of unknowns beginning in 2010.”
While the only specific example mentioned is the “time of death,” other “circumstances surrounding death” include whether the lethal dose was self-administered and consensual at the time of death.
Therefore, although “self administration” is touted as one of the key “safeguards” in the Oregon law, in about half the cases, there is no evidence of consent or self-administration at the time of ingestion of the lethal drugs. If the drugs were, in some cases, administered by others without consent, no one would know. The request form constitutes a virtual blanket of legal immunity covering all participants in the process.
What is perhaps most disturbing is that bills recently introduced in Hawaii and the District of Columbia do not even purport to require self-administration of the lethal dose. Even if an ill person requests a lethal prescription just in case they want it later, whether of their own volition or after being “encouraged” to do so, once the drugs are obtained, the ill person has no protection from unscrupulous family members or caregivers. And without any nominal requirement, or procedural or enforcement provisions related to self-administration, these are not assisted suicide bills, but open and full blown euthanasia bills.
Pain Is Not the Issue, Unaddressed Disability Concerns Are
The top five reasons doctors give for their patients’ assisted suicide requests are not pain or fear of future pain, but psychological issues that are all-too-familiar to the disability community: “loss of autonomy” (92%), “less able to engage in activities” (90%), “loss of dignity” (79%), “losing control of bodily functions” (48%), and “burden on others” (41%).
These reasons for requesting assisted suicide pertain to disability and indicate that over 90% of the reported individuals, possibly as many as 100%, are disabled.
Three of these reasons (loss of autonomy, loss of dignity, feelings of being a burden) could be addressed by consumer-directed in-home long-term care services, but no disclosures about or provision of such services is required. Some of the reported reasons are clearly psycho-social and could be addressed by disability-competent professional and peer counselors, but this is not required either. Moreover, only 5.3% of patients who request assisted suicide were referred for a psychiatric or psychological evaluation, despite studies showing the prevalence of depression in such patients.
Basically, the law operates as though the reasons for suicidal feelings don’t matter, and nothing need be done to address them.
Conclusion
The Oregon assisted suicide data demonstrates that people who were not actually terminal received lethal prescriptions in all 18 reported years except the first, and that there is little or no substantive protection against coercion and abuse. Moreover, reasons for requesting assisted suicide that sound like a “cry for help” with disability-related concerns are apparently ignored. Thus, the data substantiates problems with the implementation of assisted suicide laws and validates the concern that the risks of mistake, coercion and abuse are too great.
Please fully reaffirm the AMA’s opposition to legalizing assisted suicide and active euthanasia.
[1] https://dredf.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/Revised-OR-WA-Abuses.pdf
[2] https://dredf.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/Hendin-Foley-Michigan-Law-Review.pdf
[3] https://public.health.oregon.gov/ProviderPartnerResources/EvaluationResearch/DeathwithDignityAct/Pages/ar-index.aspx
[4] https://dredf.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/Oregon-DHS.pdf
[5] https://public.health.oregon.gov/ProviderPartnerResources/EvaluationResearch/DeathwithDignityAct/Documents/year18.pdf
[6] https://dredf.org/public-policy/assisted-suicide/why-assisted-suicide-must-not-be-legalized/
[7] http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMra1404688
[8] https://public.health.oregon.gov/ProviderPartnerResources/EvaluationResearch/DeathwithDignityAct/Documents/pt-req.pdf