Conscientious objection : will doctors be able to opt out of assisted dying?

Article indépendant

DEAN, Erin

The potential for a new assisted dying law has pushed a medically divisive issue back up the news agenda, reports Erin Dean On 15 October the backbench Labour MP Kim Leadbeater introduced the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill,1 which would give terminally ill people in England and Wales the right to end their lives. The text of the bill is yet to be published: this will come before its second reading at the end of November. However, it’s expected to be similar to a bill tabled in the House of Lords by the former Labour lord chancellor Charlie Falconer,2 and it would allow terminally ill adults believed to have no more than six months to live to receive medical help to die. Falconer’s bill also includes a clause on conscientious objection, which states that “a person is not under any duty (whether by contract or arising from any statutory or other legal requirement) to participate in anything authorised by this Act to which that person has a conscientious objection.” Previous bills to legalise assisted dying in the British Isles—including the last attempt in England and Wales in 2015, as well as legislation currently being considered in Scotland, the Isle of Man, and Jersey—also include clauses on conscientious objection. Internationally, countries with assisted dying legislation also include such a caveat, says the BMA.3 Conscientious objection allows a professional to opt out of a practice that they regard as morally wrong, says Mary Neal, a reader in law at the University of Strathclyde who has previously advised the Scottish parliament on assisted dying. The best known example in medicine relates to termination of pregnancy, as a doctor’s right not to participate is enshrined in the 1967 Abortion Act.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.q2358

Voir la revue «BMJ (Clinical research ed.), 387»

Autres numéros de la revue «BMJ (Clinical research ed.)»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Conscientious objection : will doctors be abl...

Article | DEAN, Erin | BMJ (Clinical research ed.) | vol.387

The potential for a new assisted dying law has pushed a medically divisive issue back up the news agenda, reports Erin Dean On 15 October the backbench Labour MP Kim Leadbeater introduced the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bi...

Conscientious objection : will doctors be abl...

Article indépendant | DEAN, Erin | BMJ (Clinical research ed.) | vol.387

The potential for a new assisted dying law has pushed a medically divisive issue back up the news agenda, reports Erin Dean On 15 October the backbench Labour MP Kim Leadbeater introduced the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bi...

De la même série

Assisted dying : disability advocates launch ...

Article indépendant | DYER, Owen | BMJ (Clinical research ed.) | vol.387

A group of organisations advocating for Canadians with disabilities has launched a court challenge against a key provision of Canada’s law on medical assistance in dying (MAID) that currently allows people to apply for the s...

Assisted dying : doctors told they can voice ...

Article indépendant | LIMB, Matthew | BMJ (Clinical research ed.) | vol.387

NHS medical chiefs have cleared doctors to voice their personal opinions on the assisted dying bill, saying that it’s what the public would expect in the current debate. But they have also warned doctors not to directly enga...

What is it like for doctors working under ass...

Article indépendant | CHOWN, Sammy | BMJ (Clinical research ed.) | vol.387

Doctors and patients in different countries where a form of voluntary assisted dying law is in place tell The BMJ about their experiences. My first case under Australia’s assisted dying law Victoria was the first Australian ...

Conscientious objection : will doctors be abl...

Article indépendant | DEAN, Erin | BMJ (Clinical research ed.) | vol.387

The potential for a new assisted dying law has pushed a medically divisive issue back up the news agenda, reports Erin Dean On 15 October the backbench Labour MP Kim Leadbeater introduced the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bi...

Isle of man's parliament votes to progress as...

Article indépendant | KMIETOWICZ, Zosia | BMJ (Clinical research ed.) | vol.386

Politicians on the Isle of Man have voted by 16:8 to progress the Assisted Dying Bill, which could make assisted dying available from 2027 to residents who are mentally competent and have less than 12 months to live. The bill now ...

Chargement des enrichissements...