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The panel has proposed a very rigorous process - comprised of 68 safeguards – that involves three separate requests for voluntary assisted dying (one which is witnessed by two independent witnesses) and two independent medical assessments.Read more about the panel’s recommendations that informed the final bill here: Victoria may soon have assisted dying laws for terminally ill patients
[…] the bill doesn’t have adequate safeguards to protect the vulnerable; legalising assisted dying presents a slippery slope; palliative care services must be improved first; and a doctor’s duty is to treat, not to kill.Four reasons Victorian MPs say ‘no’ to assisted dying, and why they’re misleading
A review of studies exploring predictions of survival in palliative care for patients with a range of illnesses found that doctors’ predictions were ‘frequently inaccurate’. Estimates ranged from an underestimate of 86 days to an overestimate of 93 days.The six-month amendment could defeat the purpose of Victoria’s assisted dying bill
While [alternative drugs] are legally available in Australia, they could cause a long, protracted death, with many more side effects that could cause distress and suffering at the end of life. Nembutal and its relatives are less likely to do so, with greater evidence from international practices than any other drugs that can end life.Read more about the drugs that may be suitable for the purposes of assisted dying: Dying a good death: what we need from drugs that are meant to end life
Politicians regularly express their support for palliative care. Yet, there is often a chasm between such positive rhetoric and actual delivery.Assisted dying is one thing, but governments must ensure palliative care is available to all who need it The Conversation also has a palliative care series that explains end-of-life care in Australia. You can read these articles here. Sasha Petrova, Deputy Editor: Health + Medicine, The Conversation This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.