Do you Support the End of Life Choice Act 2019 Coming into Force? – A Resource for Voters

What is the End of Life Choice Act 2019 Referendum About?

If passed, the End of Life Choice Act 2019 (EOLC Act) will make assisted suicide or euthanasia available to competent people with a terminal illness who are 18 or over, and are thought to have six months or less to live, and are in an advanced state of irreversible decline, and experience “unbearable suffering that cannot be relieved in a way the person considers tolerable”.

The group most at risk if we legalise euthanasia and assisted suicide are those vulnerable to the suggestion they would be ‘better off dead’ – our elders, disabled people, and people with depression and mental illness who find themselves fitting the eligibility criteria.

The specific wording of the referendum question is important. We are not being asked to vote on the idea or desirability of euthanasia. Rather, we are being asked to vote on the robustness of a specific law, one that differs in the quality of its processes and safeguards from assisted death laws overseas.

A group of more than 200 lawyers, some of whom support euthanasia, are opposed to the proposed EOLC Act because it is a badly drafted, dangerous law that is broader in its scope and riskier than comparable laws overseas – see www.lvnz.org. The Act cannot now be changed. If a simple majority of voters support the Act, it will be enacted in its current form without the opportunity to implement changes to make it safer.

What is “Assisted Dying”?

The term ‘assisted dying’ is the preferred language used by the Act. It is a generic term that can refer to either assisted suicide or to euthanasia or to both. The proposed EOLC Act would allow both.

What is “Assisted Suicide”?

Assisted suicide occurs when lethal drugs are prescribed to a person at their request but taken by the patient themselves to end their life.

What is “Euthanasia”?

Euthanasia occurs when a third party ends the life of a person by administering a lethal drug, either orally or by injection. The EOLC Act delegates this task to doctors or nurse practitioners.

What is “Palliative Care”?

Palliative care is a relatively new and specialised branch of medicine that provides relief for physical pain and also addresses psychological, spiritual and emotional suffering. Recent advances make it highly effective in dealing with extreme pain. Euthanasia is not required to ensure people experience a dignified, comfortable, compassionate death, provided that quality palliative care can be accessed by those needing it. Quality care needs to be available to all, not just the privileged.

Why are people voting ‘NO’ to the End of Life Choice Act?

 

How is the End of Life Choice Act 2019 Different From What is Already Legal in New Zealand?

Research shows many people are confused about what is already legal in New Zealand and what the Act will allow. The following things are already legal in New Zealand and are not euthanasia:

Conclusion: The EOLC Act is badly drafted and seriously flawed. It will expose many New Zealanders to the risk of a premature death at a time when they are most vulnerable. Whatever one’s views about the idea of euthanasia, it is not compassion to vote for a dangerous law.

Some Resources on Reasons to Vote No for the End of Life Choice Bill Referendum

Risky Law: www.riskylaw.nz/ - “Whatever your views of death and dying, this Act is poor legislation because it does not protect people from being killed against their will.”

Vote Safe: www.votesafe.nz/ - “LETHAL DOSE: with NO parental knowledge required; with NO assessment for coercion required; with NO mental health support required; with NO attempted treatment required; and with NO physical pain required.”

A Fatal Law with Fatal Flaws: https://carealliance.org.nz/ - The End of Life Choice Act is: “Unsafe – lacks adequate safeguards against wrongful deaths; Unwise – will fundamentally change our societal attitudes towards compassion for the worse; and Unnecessary – we can address end-of-life suffering without using lethal doses of drugs.”

Hospice, Euthanasia – Our Opinion: https://www.hospice.org.nz/resources/end-of-lifechoice-act-our-concerns/euthanasia-our-opinion/

Authorised by John Kleinsman, the Nathaniel Centre for Bioethics, 15 Guildford Terrace, Wellington 5028