The Health and Social Care Committee is launching a new inquiry
to examine different perspectives in the debate on assisted
dying/assisted suicide.
The inquiry will explore the arguments across the debate with a
focus on the healthcare aspects of assisted dying/assisted
suicide. It intends to consider the role of medical
professionals, access to palliative care, what protections would
be needed to safeguard against coercion and the criteria for
eligibility to access assisted dying/assisted suicide services.
MPs will also look at what can be learnt from international
experiences.
Evidence sessions are expected to begin in the new year. MPs will
make their recommendations to government on next steps in a
report following the inquiry.
Health and Social Care Committee Chair said:
“The debate on assisted dying and assisted suicide understandably
arouses passionate views with many different and equally valid
perspectives. It’s an issue that has vexed parliamentarians who
have sought a way through the many ethical, moral, practical and
humane considerations involved.
“What has changed in recent years is that there is now real-world
evidence to look at. Some form of assisted dying or assisted
suicide is legal in at least 27 jurisdictions worldwide. It
became legal in Canada in 2015; the Netherlands in 2001;
Oregon in the United States in 1994. So it is time to review the
actual impact of changes in the law in other countries in order
to inform the debate in our own. Our inquiry will examine that
evidence, hearing from all sides of the debate. The government
has stated it is for parliament to decide on the issue so our
purpose is to inform parliament in any debate.
“I will be approaching this inquiry with compassion and an open
mind, as I know will my select committee colleagues. We want to
hear from campaigners, members of the medical profession and
members of the public and we will look at the moral, ethical and
practical concerns raised in a way that is informed by actual
evidence.”
ENDS
TERMS OF REFERENCE:
Further information about submitting evidence will follow on
the website from
Monday 5 December. Members of the public will be invited to
submit their views online while written submissions from
organisations and campaigning groups are also invited on any, or
all, of the following points. Evidence should be submitted
by 20 January 2023.
· To what extent do
people in England and Wales have access to good palliative care?
o How can palliative care be improved, and would
such improvements negate some of the arguments for assisted
dying/assisted suicide?
· What can be learnt
from the evidence in countries where assisted dying/assisted
suicide is legal?
· What are the
professional and ethical considerations involved in allowing
physicians to assist someone to end their life?
· What, if any, are the
physical and mental health criteria which would make an
individual eligible to access assisted dying/assisted
suicide services?
· What protections could
be put in place to protect people from coercion and how effective
would these be?
· What information,
advice and guidance would people need in order to be able to make
an informed decision about whether to access assisted
dying/assisted suicide services?
· What capabilities
would a person need to be able to consent to assisted
dying/assisted suicide?
· What should the
Government’s role be in relation to the debate?
Note to Editors:
Fewer than 200 cases of assisted dying/assisted suicide have been
referred to the Crown Prosecution Service by the police over the
last 13 years with just four successful prosecutions. 23 people
travelled from the UK to the Digitas clinic in Switzerland to end
their lives last year.
Assisted dying refers to the involvement of healthcare
professionals in the provision of lethal drugs intended to end a
patient’s life at their voluntary request, subject to eligibility
criteria and safeguards. It includes healthcare professionals
prescribing lethal drugs for the patient to self-administer
(‘physician-assisted suicide’) and healthcare professionals
administering lethal drugs (‘euthanasia’). It is an offence (in
England and Wales) to assist or encourage another person’s
suicide under section 2(1) of the Suicide Act 1961. Euthanasia is
illegal across the UK under the Homicide Act 1957 and could be
prosecuted as murder or manslaughter.
A Private Member’s
Bill on assisted dying was introduced by in May 2021 and received
its second reading in the House of Lords but failed to progress
before the end of the parliamentary session.
Most recently a debate on assisted dying was held in Parliament
on 4 July 2022.