Tuesday 25 October 2016

Assisted suicide for "completed life": the State showing mercy?

Euthanasia was formally legalised in the Netherlands in 2003 after several years in which it was practised openly after court decisions allowing it in certain circumstances. 

Assisted suicide for “completed life”


On 12 October 2016 the Netherlands Government formally reported to the Parliament its response to the February 2016 report of a commission on assisted suicide for “completed life”.[1] The report considered the possibility of expanding the law to specifically provide for legalised assisted suicide for people who felt their life was complete but who did not qualify under the existing law because there was no medical basis for the feeling that life was an unbearable burden. The report suggested that in most cases such people could be accommodated under the existing law by the increasingly broad interpretation being given to its requirements.

However, the government’s response, cosigned by Edith Schippers, Minister of Health, Welfare and Sport and Ard van der Steur, Minister of Security and Justice, proposes a new law – to be drafted in 2017 – to specifically legalise assisted suicide for those who feel that their life is complete and who wish to die in cases where there is no underlying medical basis for this feeling.

The government proposes the creation of a new category of community worker – stervenshulpverlener – a death worker

The role of a death worker would be to assess whether the person’s request for assisted suicide was voluntary and persistent and that there were no reasonably available medical or social measures to relieve the feeling that life was a burden.

The government response points out that the existing law on euthanasia is premised on a doctor being confronted with a patient who has unbearable suffering that cannot be relived other than by deliberately ending the patient’s life. Euthanasia is portrayed as an act of mercy.

The government response suggests that for persons who feel that they have completed their life and that to continue living it is a burden the State also can facilitate an act of mercy – namely after approval by a death worker and confirmation by a second death expert, facilitating assisted suicide.

There is a suggestion that as this feeling of completed life is most common in elderly people it would be in order to impose a minimum age limit but no indication is given as to what this might be.

Complications


Technical problems, complications and problems with completion in the administration of lethal drugs for euthanasia have been reported from the Netherlands.

Technical problems occurred in 5% of cases.  The most common technical problems were difficulty finding a vein in which to inject the drug and difficulty administering an oral medication.

Complications occurred in 3% of cases of euthanasia, including spasm or myoclonus (muscular twitching), cyanosis (blue colouring of the skin), nausea or vomiting, tachycardia (rapid heart beat), excessive production of mucus, hiccups, perspiration, and extreme gasping.  In one case the patient’s eyes remained open, and in another case, the patient sat up. 

In 10% of cases the person took longer than expected to die (median 3 hours) with one person taking up to 7 days.[2]

Increasing number of deaths


The number of reported deaths from euthanasia and physician assisted suicide has risen sharply from 1815 in 2003, the first year under the new law, to 5516 deaths reported in 2015.[3]

This represents an increase of 204% in raw number of reported deaths from euthanasia between 2003 and 2015.  

In other words the number of euthanasia deaths has more than trebled in the first 13 years of legalisation.  

In 2003 some 1.28% of all deaths were brought about by reported acts of euthanasia or physician assisted suicide.  In 2015 this had risen to 3.75% of all deaths.[4]

Failure to report cases of euthanasia


According to a 2012 paper only 77% of deaths by euthanasia or physician assisted suicide were reported in 2010, that is there were 914 unreported acts of euthanasia as well as the 3136 reported acts of euthanasia making a total of 4050 or 2.8% of all deaths resulting from euthanasia or physician assisted suicide in 2010.[5]

The authors of this study speculate that the temporary decrease of euthanasia deaths following the enactment of the law may have been a result of doctors being uncertain about how the law would be applied.  It is clear now that the codification of the law has not led to any lasting decrease in the rate of euthanasia and the trend has increased steadily for the past 13 years.

Grounds for euthanasia


As is usually the case when legalised euthanasia is first proposed supporters in the Netherlands initially focussed solely on unbearable and unrelievable physical suffering associated with a terminal illness.

Even before formal legalisation the grounds for euthanasia were expanded by the courts well beyond physical suffering allowing psychiatric conditions such as depression, anorexia, and anxiety associated with asymptomatic HIV to be are sufficient grounds to justify a physician granting a request by a person for the administration of lethal drugs.[6]

One of the requirements of careful practice, under which physicians performing euthanasia and assisting with suicide were assured freedom from prosecution, required that the patient be suffering.  Doctors with patients who were suffering physically were not subject to prosecution, but it was not yet clear whether they would be treated the same in cases involving patients with non-somatic suffering.  The psychiatrist and general practitioner of a woman suffering from depression decided to assist the woman with suicide.  Although they were acquitted, the Rotterdam District Court noted that in cases of non-somatic suffering the consultation of another independent physician is preferable.

In another case, the Almelo District Court held that although the suffering of a 25 year-old anorexia nervosa patient was not primarily physical, it was unbearable and therefore sufficient to dismiss the indictment against the pediatrician who had assisted in the patient’s suicide.

The Supreme Court addressed the issue of non-somatic suffering in the landmark 1994 case of Chabot.

Dr. Boudewijn Chabot was a psychiatrist who supplied lethal drugs to a patient who had recently experienced a series of traumatic events that had left her with no desire to live. Although offered treatment for her condition, the patient refused.  The Court began by affirming its earlier holdings that euthanasia and assisted suicide can be justified if:

the defendant acted in a situation of necessity, that is to say … that confronted with a choice between mutually conflicting duties, he chose to perform the one of greater weight. In particular, a doctor may be in a situation of necessity if he has to choose between the duty to preserve life and the duty as a doctor to do everything possible to relieve the unbearable and hopeless suffering of a patient committed to his care.

The prosecution argued that the defense of justification should not be available to doctors who assist with suicides in cases where the suffering is non-somatic and the patient is not in the “terminal phase.”

The Supreme Court rejected this contention, and held that in such cases the justification can be rooted in the autonomy of the patient herself.  The Court noted that,“the wish to die of a person whose suffering is psychic can be based on an autonomous judgment.”[7]

Euthanasia is now legally permitted in the Netherlands for dementia patients and for persons with depression or other mental health issues in the complete absence of any physical illness or suffering.[8]

In 2015 there were 56 notifications of euthanasia or assisted suicide involving patients with psychiatric disorders (four times the 14 cases in 2012) and 109 notifications involving dementia (more than two and a half times  the 42 notifications involving dementia in 2012). These cases were in the absence of any other condition justifying euthanasia.[9]

More than half (33) of the 56 cases of euthanasia for psychiatric disorders in 2015 were carried out by doctors from the Levenseindekliniek (End of Life Clinic).[10]

Psychiatric conditions for which euthanasia was performed in 2015 included personality disorder with post traumatic stress disorder and self-mutilation; and obsessive compulsive disorder.[11]

In its June 2011 publication The role of the physician in the voluntary termination of life the Royal Dutch Medical Association (KNMG) states that as the elderly experience “various other ailments and complications such as disorders affecting vision, hearing and mobility, falls, confinement to bed, fatigue, exhaustion and loss of fitness take hold … The patient perceives the suffering as interminable, his existence as meaningless and – though not directly in danger of dying from these complaints neither wishes to experience them nor, insofar as his history and own values permit, to derive meaning from them.” The KNMG considers that “such cases are sufficiently linked to the medical domain to permit a physician to act within the confines of the Euthanasia Law.”[12]

The 2015 report cites 183 cases of euthanasia involving “multiple aging disorders”. These cases probably represent the kind of “tired of life” cases discussed by the KNMG.[13]

In its first year of operation (1 March 2012 to 1 March 2013) the Levenseindekliniek (End of Life Clinic) granted euthanasia to 11 out of 34 cases of persons who requested on the sole grounds of being “tired of living” without any other medical (physical or psychological) condition.[14]

Euthanasia on wheels


In March 2012 the Dutch Right to Die organisation launched the Levenseindekliniek (End of Life Clinic) with six mobile teams of doctors to “end their lives free of charge in their own homes”.[15]  By the end of 2014 there were 29 mobile teams and the clinic dealt with 1035 requests for euthanasia in 2014.[16] This approach bypasses any need for the person’s regular physician to be involved in the decision making about euthanasia.

Loneliness


In nearly half the cases where the Levenseindekliniek (End of Life Clinic) granted a request for euthanasia in its first year of operation (1 Mar 2012 to 1 Mar 2013) loneliness was listed as a type of unbearable suffering in nearly half (49.1%) the cases.[17]

Euthanasia “experts” trump physicians giving care


On 22 April 2015 a woman with dementia, Cobi Luck, was euthanased by a doctor at the Levenseindekliniek (End of Life Clinic), after a court ruled that doctors from the clinic had an expertise in euthanasia leading him to prefer their testimony to that of the doctors and staff from the nursing home who were providing her with daily care.

They testified that Ms Luck only spoke about euthanasia after her family had paid a visit. She still appeared to enjoy life and made comments which were not consistent with a desire for euthanasia. The nursing home staff knew her well and believed that she was not competent to make such a momentous decision. They stressed that people like Ms Luck were very vulnerable.[18]


Review is too late for the dead patient


The review committees in the Netherlands are required to consider whether all the conditions of the euthanasia law have been met in each case.  In case 15 of the 2011 annual report the Regional Euthanasia Review Committees conclude that the attending physician failed to achieve an accurate diagnosis of the woman’s back pain and only prescribed limited pain relief medication.  Consequently it could not be said that the woman’s pain was definitively unrelievable. 

Of course the woman can get no relief from this finding of error on the part of the doctor who failed her and then euthanased her as she is already dead by euthanasia.[19]

The same lack of remedy applies to the two cases of people with dementia who were euthanased in 2012 in relation to which the Review Committees found “not to have been handled with due care”.[20]

In 2015 there were four cases where the Review Committee found a lack of due care before euthanasia was carried out. These included:

·         Case 2015-01 where euthanasia was carried out on a woman with a history of stomach pains from an undiagnosed cause, who was reluctant to be examined by a geriatrician; [21]

·         Cases 2015-28 and 2015-29 where the doctor failed to give an adequate dose of propofol to induce coma before administering rocuronium, a neuromuscular blocker that causes paralysis of all muscles except the heart and brings on respiratory arrest. Consequently these people may have experienced the distress of suffocation;[22]

·         Case 2015-81 where, after the person was still breathing with a full pulse 25 minutes after being given thiopental to  induce coma and rocuronium to cause respiratory failure, the doctor administered a second dose of rocuronium without adequately ensuring the person was in a full coma.[23]

Even where the Review Committees identify failures and report the cases to the Public Prosecution Service action is seldom taken apart from “counselling” the offending doctor. In Case 2014-02 a doctor performed euthanasia on a woman with aphasia after a stroke solely based on a twenty year old living will in which she expressed a desire for euthanasia if she ever had to live in a nursing home. The doctor subjectively concluded that she would be experiencing unbearable suffering simply from being in the nursing home despite the woman being unable to communicate. There were no signs of distress. Both the  and the Council of Attorneys-General recommended no prosecution.[24]

Euthanasia without request


In the Netherlands between 500 and 1000 adults each year are given lethal injections without making an explicit request.[25]

Pressure from family members


Professor Theo Boer, who served on a regional euthanasia committee for 9 years says that ‘In some instances there is pressure from the family.’ From the 4,000 case files that have crossed his desk, Boer estimates that “ the family is a factor with one in five patients. The doctor doesn’t want to put it in the dossier; you need to read between the lines. Sometimes it’s the family who go to the doctor. Other times it’s the patient saying they don’t want their family to suffer. And you hear anecdotally of families saying: “Mum, there’s always euthanasia”.’

Dr Ruben Van Coevorden, an Amsterdam physician who has performed euthanasia, believes Boer’s figure of one in five is realistic: ‘There was one case where a woman was dying and had terrible stomach pains, her doctor was tearing his hair out, and when I turned up at the house the family practically pinned me to the wall and said: “You need to give mum the jab now, she’s in agony!” ‘I discovered that her treatment wasn’t working, she was on the wrong type of laxatives and was terribly constipated. I organised a palliative regime that made her more comfortable, and afterwards the family were extremely grateful. She was close to dying anyway, but it allowed them to say goodbye in a better way.’[26]

Euthanasia by family members


On 13 May 2015 the Arnhem-Leeuwarden Court of Appeals, in acquitting Albert Heringa of assisting the suicide of his stepmother by feeding her a cocktail of pills, ruled that for lay people as well as doctors the defence of force majeure applies.[27] It was court decisions, beginning in 1973, ruling that this defence was available for a doctor who euthanased a patient if “no reasonable alternative was available”, that led to euthanasia becoming widespread in the Netherlands well before it was formally legalised by Parliament in 2003.

Moek Heringa was aged 99 and not seriously ill. Her doctor refused to give her euthanasia as she was not eligible under the law. 

The Court of Appeals found that there was no reasonable chance of finding another doctor who would agree to perform euthanasia so that, faced with his stepmother being “tired of life”, Albert Heringa was morally forced to help her by killing her. 

This judgement opens the door to assisted suicide by family members as well as to assisted suicide or euthanasia on the grounds of being “tired of life” or having “completed a life”.

Child euthanasia


Children as young as 12 years of age may be given euthanasia under the euthanasia law. 

For 12 to 15 year olds the parents must agree with the child’s request for euthanasia. For 16 and 17 year olds the parents must be involved but the decision is for the child alone. A total of seven children have been given euthanasia, including one 12 year old child in 2005, a 16 year old in 2015 and five 17 year old children.[28]


[2] Groenewoud J, et al.  (2000) “Clinical Problems with the Performance of Euthanasia and Physician-Assisted Suicide in the Netherlands”, New England Journal of Medicine, Vol 342, p.  551-556, http://content.nejm.org/cgi/reprint/342/8/551.pdf
[3]Regionale Toetsingscommissies Euthanasie, Jaarverslag 2015, p. 4 https://www.nvve.nl/files/8414/6166/0719/RTE_jaarverslag2015DEF.pdf
[4] Denominator for calculations for percentage of all deaths (141,936 in 2003; 147,134  in 2015) from Centraal Bureau voor der Statistiek; http://statline.cbs.nl/StatWeb/publication/?DM=SLEN&PA=37943eng&D1=1,21-46,438-439,442-443&D2=(l-16)-l&LA=EN&VW=T
[5] Bregje D Onwuteaka-Philipsen et al., “Trends in end-of-life practices before and after the enactment of the euthanasia law in the Netherlands from 1990 to 2010: a repeated cross-sectional survey”, The Lancet, Published online July 11, 2012, http://press.thelancet.com/netherlands_euthanasia.pdf
[6] “Choosing Death,” The Healthcare Quarterly, WGBH-Boston, aired March 23, 1993.
[7] Smies. Jonathan T. “The legalization of euthanasia in the Netherlands”, Gonzaga Journal of International Law, (2003-4) 7, p. 19-20, http://www.gonzagajil.org/pdf/volume7/Smies/Smies.pdf
[8] Regional Euthanasia Review Committees, Annual report 2010, p. 10, 13, 22-23,  http://www.euthanasiecommissie.nl/Images/JV%20RTE%202010%20ENGELS%20(EU12.01)_tcm52-30364.pdf 
[9] Regionale Toetsingscommissies Euthanasie, Jaarverslag 2015, p. 7, 9 https://www.nvve.nl/files/8414/6166/0719/RTE_jaarverslag2015DEF.pdf
[10] Regionale Toetsingscommissies Euthanasie, Jaarverslag 2015, p. 7 https://www.nvve.nl/files/8414/6166/0719/RTE_jaarverslag2015DEF.pdf
[11] Regionale Toetsingscommissies Euthanasie, Jaarverslag 2015, p. 50-52 https://www.nvve.nl/files/8414/6166/0719/RTE_jaarverslag2015DEF.pdf
[12] KNMG [Royal Dutch Medical Association], The role of the physician in the voluntary termination of life, June 2011, p. 23, Available at: http://knmg.artsennet.nl/Publicaties/KNMGpublicatie/Position-paper-The-role-of-the-physician-in-the-voluntary-termination-of-life-2011.htm
[13] Regionale Toetsingscommissies Euthanasie, Jaarverslag 2015, p. 10 https://www.nvve.nl/files/8414/6166/0719/RTE_jaarverslag2015DEF.pdf
[14] 6 cases where the person died before a decision was made or withdrew the request are excluded. Marianne C. Snijdewind et al., “A Study of the First Year of the End-of-Life Clinic for Physician-Assisted Dying in the Netherland”, JAMA Internal Medicine, Published online 10 Aug 2015, Table 2: Outcomes of Requests to the End-of-Life Clinic for Euthanasia or Physician-Assisted Suicide, According to Medical Conditions, http://archinte.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleID=2426428
[15] Tony Paterson “Euthanasia squads offer death by delivery”, The Independent,  5 March 2012, http://www.independent.ie/health/health-news/euthanasia-squads-offer-death-by-delivery-3039420.html
[16] Marianne C. Snijdewind et al., “A Study of the First Year of the End-of-Life Clinic for Physician-Assisted Dying in the Netherland”, JAMA Internal Medicine, Published online 10 Aug 2015, http://archinte.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleID=2426428
[17] Marianne C. Snijdewind et al., “A Study of the First Year of the End-of-Life Clinic for Physician-Assisted Dying in the Netherland”, JAMA Internal Medicine, Published online 10 Aug 2015, Table 3:  Outcome of Requests for Euthanasia or Physician-Assisted Suicide According to Patient Characteristics and Other Circumstances http://archinte.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleID=2426428

[18]Vrouw (80) krijgt euthanasie tegen wil van haar behandelaars [80 year old woman receives euthanasia against the will of her carers”, nrc.nl, 3 April 2015, http://www.nrc.nl/nieuws/2015/04/23/vrouw-80-krijgt-euthanasie-tegen-wil-van-haar-behandelaars/
[19] Regional Euthanasia Review Committees, Annual report 2011, p. 17 http://www.euthanasiecommissie.nl/Images/RTE.JV2011.ENGELS.DEF_tcm52-33587.PDF
[20] Regional Euthanasia Review Committees, Annual report 2012, p. 13 http://www.euthanasiecommissie.nl/Images/JV.RTE2012.engelsDEF2_tcm52-39100.pdf
[21] Regionale Toetsingscommissies Euthanasie, Jaarverslag 2015, p. 28-31 https://www.nvve.nl/files/8414/6166/0719/RTE_jaarverslag2015DEF.pdf
[22] Regionale Toetsingscommissies Euthanasie, Jaarverslag 2015, p. 44-46 https://www.nvve.nl/files/8414/6166/0719/RTE_jaarverslag2015DEF.pdf
[23] Regionale Toetsingscommissies Euthanasie, Jaarverslag 2015, p. 47-48 https://www.nvve.nl/files/8414/6166/0719/RTE_jaarverslag2015DEF.pdf
[24] Regionale Toetsingscommissies Euthanasie, Jaarverslag 2015, p. 68-69 https://www.nvve.nl/files/8414/6166/0719/RTE_jaarverslag2015DEF.pdf
[25] Allen, Mason L, (2006) “Crossing The Rubicon: The Netherlands’ Steady March Towards Involuntary Euthanasia”, Brook Journal of International Law, 31:2, pp 535-575; www.brooklaw.edu/students/journals/bjil/bjil31ii_allen.pdf ; van der Heide, A et al. (2007)  “End-of-Life Practices in the Netherlands under the Euthanasia Act”,  New England Journal of Medicine, Vol 356:1957-1965, http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/356/19/1957
[26] “Rise in euthanasia requests sparks concern as criteria for help widen”, DutchNews.nl, 3 July 2015,  http://www.dutchnews.nl/features/2015/07/rise-in-euthanasia-requests-sparks-concern-as-criteria-for-help-widen/
[27] J Smits, “Dutch court acquits man who euthanized his mother after doctor refused”, LifeSite News, 21 May 2015, https://www.lifesitenews.com/opinion/dutch-court-acquits-man-who-euthanized-his-mother-after-doctor-refused
[28] Regionale Toetsingscommissies Euthanasie, Jaarverslag 2015, p. 14 https://www.nvve.nl/files/8414/6166/0719/RTE_jaarverslag2015DEF.pdf