Just six weeks to go: First European Symposium: Euthanasia in Europe, Edinburgh, 7-8 September

Please spread the news and come to this exciting and exclusive residential conference where academics, medics, campaigners and activists will be meeting for the First European Symposium on Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide. Day tickets are also available from £40 per day. Sign up here: http://bit.ly/Mau0kr

No Private Member’s Bills. The good news on 20 June was that neither Richard Ottaway MP nor Gavin Barwell MP, both members of the All-party Parliamentary Group on Choice at the End of Life, tabled bills that were anything to do with assisted suicide or euthanasia.

British Medical Association motion on assisted suicide defeated

Majority medical opinion remains opposed to assisted suicide and this vote was a victory for continuing caring and not killing. We hope that the BMA will now continue its valuable work in campaigning for high quality compassionate care for patients at the end of life. The BMA corrected Lord Falconer’s misrepresentation of its position in an article. See CNK statement here.

Lord Falconer’s new draft bill on assisted suicide

Lord Falconer has published a new draft bill calling for doctors to have the power to help mentally competent adults with less than one year to live to kill themselves. This follows on from his discredited ‘Commission on Assisted Dying.’ CNK will not be responding to his ‘unofficial’ consultation which closes on 20 November.

Dutch doctors turn to 'continuous deep sedation' to keep official euthanasia figures low

The Lancet has published an article claiming that euthanasia rates have not increased in the Netherlands since legalisation in 2002. It appears that Dutch doctors have kept the euthanasia figures low simply by choosing to end patients’ lives in ways other than administering paralysing drugs (muscle relaxants) or barbiturates. Alex Schadenberg, Chair of the International Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, has published a full analysis of the Lancet review of euthanasia deaths in the Netherlands.

British Medical Journal article argues that people with severe dementia should be starved and dehydrated to death to save money

There is an editorial in the BMJ by Raanan Gillon who reviews the case of M, a woman in minimally conscious state, who was the subject of a Court of Protection ruling last year. CNK believes people who are severely brain-damaged or suffering from dementia, but not imminently dying, should be given nutrition, hydration, symptom relief and warm human interaction until the day that they die peacefully and naturally. 

Why legalising assisted suicide for anyone at all will inevitably lead to incremental extension

Pro-euthanasia activists always assert that their proposals are modest and have ‘robust safeguards’. Yet their proposals would only be the beginning.

Why should we trust the pro-euthanasia lobby if they can't even agree amongst themselves about what they want? 

The euthanasia lobby has become more and more modest in their language yet at the same time they are so divided in agendas we do not know what they actually want.

Is the NHS really killing 130,000 patients a year with the Liverpool Care Pathway?

A review of the sometimes controversial Liverpool Care Pathway. How should it be used and how is it being misused?

The perils of following a progressive approach 

David Fieldsend from Care for Europe comments on the history of euthanasia in Europe.

The Canadian federal government will appeal an assisted suicide ruling from the British Columbia Supreme Court 

The Canadian federal government will appeal a British Columbia Supreme Court ruling which struck down Canada’s ban on assisted suicide, Justice Minister Rob Nicholson has said.

Canadian court ruling on assisted suicide reflects discriminatory attitudes to disabled people

Amy Hasbrouck comments on the recent court ruling in British Columbia to declare Canada's law against assisted suicide unconstitutional.

Personal Stories:

Being Careful what you wish for

Nikki Kenward expresses her opinion about what a law change would mean for those with serious disability.

Event: Debate on Assisted Suicide, 15 September, Oxford

In a debate at the Sheldonian Theatre in Oxford this autumn, Baroness Warnock, Baroness Finlay, Lord Harries, Sir Terence English and Sir Antony Kenny will speak. The event is organised by the Oxford Medical Alumni - Osler Discussion. You can sign up for it here (booking closes 31st August): http://bit.ly/NAUxZW

Care Not Killing DVDs 
Request our free DVDs and pass them on to your friends, families, colleagues, schools, places of worship, or organisations. Our most recent DVD ‘Disabled people speak on assisted dying’ and our earlier DVD ‘Doctors speak on assisted dying’ are both available. Email info@carenotkilling.org.uk

Speak out
Please keep writing your comments online in response to articles in the media. Engage in discussions and write letters to newspapers and politicians with your views. Medical members can write to BMA News and medical journals.

Personal Stories
As the risks of any weakening in the law in relation to assisted suicide become increasingly highlighted, a number of you are writing to the Care Not Killing Alliance with your own experience of why you feel the law is best kept as it is. Send us your own story to info@carenotkilling.org.uk. Please include whether or not you are happy for your story to feature on our website, and visit our Personal Stories page.

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