Euthanasia Prevention Coalition-USA Statement in
STRONG OPPOSITION to S.2445:
Assisted Suicide–also known as “Medical Aid in Dying”
Dear Senator:
Please let S.2445 die this session. Assisted suicide laws disguised as legally contrived, confusing, and euphemistic term, "medical aid in dying" is not healthcare. Assisted suicide proponents are trying to sell you a "pig in a poke." It's not about pain or a quick, peaceful death. It spawns more suicides and provides less healthcare. EPC-USA's physicians and disability advocates express strong opposition to assisted suicide.
The Euthanasia Prevention Coalition USA supports
public policy that promotes positive measures to improve the quality of life of
people living with a terminal illness and their families; we oppose euthanasia and assisted suicide. We are aging and disability advocates, lawyers, doctors, nurses and politicians.
Any safeguards are part
of a deliberate bait and switch tactic by assisted suicide advocates to get a bill passed and
then come back to amend it by gutting those safeguards. This was openly
acknowledged by J.M. Sorrell, Executive Director of Massachusetts Death with
Dignity, who was quoted on a similar bill saying, “Once you get something
passed, you can always work on amendments later.” (Link) Oregon, Washington,
California, Vermont, Hawaii, and New Mexico all have provisions that
dramatically waive safeguards.
This incremental strategy to promote legal and
social acceptance of assisted suicide in the U.S. state by state since 1997 is
confirmed by the Compassion & Choices (Link) strategic plan.
It’s Not about Pain
“I’m often asked if I want people to die in
pain. You probably have been asked that question, too.” Dr. Lonny Shavelson, a
California assisted suicide provider
says promoting “aid in dying” as avoiding pain is a political sales pitch.
See webinar minutes 25:24-27:53. He says people choose assisted suicide
because they are low energy or afraid of losing control. A Review of Oregon’s
assisted dying law finds significant data gaps (Link). The review revealed that information on clinical
complications is often missing, while key information on the factors behind
medical decision-making, the effectiveness of the lethal drugs used, and the
extent of palliative care support is not collected.
It’s Not about a Peaceful or Quick Death
Dr. Shavelson says the idea that assisted
suicide creates a peaceful beautiful death is another myth. See webinar minutes
37:35-41:00.
No amount of bill language can change the fact that some people will suffer prolonged and agonizing deaths from the experimental lethal
drug cocktails, with some regaining consciousness only to die of their terminal illness. Medical science cannot guarantee the peaceful death proponents claim. If lethal injections administered for capital punishment have resulted in inhumane deaths, oral ingestion of lethal drug compounds is far more likely to do so.
Assisted Suicide Spawns More Suicides and Attempted Suicides.
Assisted suicide laws send a message that suicide is an acceptable way to solve problems. Publicity about suicide also leads to more suicides. This is called suicide contagion. A special concern with NY High School students, as discussed in an article on Centers for Latina Girls.
Legalization of Assisted Suicide also impacts
youths suicide. A 2019 report found teen suicides in California increased by
34% (Link) since that state legalized Assisted Suicide in 2016. Oregon’s youth suicides increased 79.3% from 2000 to 2018. Research about completed suicides in
four states that legalized Assisted Suicide (Oregon, Washington, Vermont and
Montana) found it was associated at least a 6.3% increase in the rate of all
suicide deaths (Link).
Insurance Companies Use Assisted Suicide to Deny Curative Life-Saving Treatment
Insurers stop covering certain treatments due to
the availability of Assisted Suicide. Dr. Brian Callister (Link) of Nevada says he
was stunned when insurance would not cover life saving treatment for his
patients who were transferring to California and Oregon, but offered to pay for
Assisted Suicide instead. These were people who could be cured with the denied
treatment (Link) rather than being rendered terminal. (Link) In effect, Assisted
Suicide is used to shunt people off the curative, restorative medicine track,
especially if they cannot afford to pay for treatments out of pocket.
People of color understand this will be
used to provide them poorer care.
Even with insurance, people of
color get poorer hospital care and pain relief. According to a New York Times (Link) article, people of color disproportionately died
of COVID-19. So, it is unsurprising Black and Latinx people oppose Assisted
Suicide by 2-1 margins. (Link) ... the voting results from Ballot Question 2 in 2012 show Assisted Suicide pits wealthier, whiter districts against those with poorer people of color according to Second Thoughts - Massachusetts.
EPC-USA's physicians remind us that Assisted Suicide laws exacerabate systematic inequalities that disabled people experience with respect to suicide prevention. A "Federal study found that the nation's assisted suicide laws are rife with dangers to people with disabilities" (Link)
EPC-USA’s physicians remind us that Physicians are fallible. Misdiagnoses
and unreliable terminal prognoses are documented in at least three cases: Jeanette hall (Link), John Norton, (Link) and Rahamim
Melamed an Rahamim Mlamed-Cohen (Link).
In 2023, American Association of Suicidology (AAS) national organizations recognized their mistake and retracted their support for assisted suicide and its legally constructed term“MAiD”:
In 2017, the American Association of Suicidology (AAS) published their statement that “MAiD” was not suicide. In 2023, the AAS retracted their 2017 statement because their 2017 statement was used by assisted suicide advocates in the 2019 Truchon decision that expanded assisted suicide to disabled Canadians. The Canadian Association for Suicide Prevention opposes the expansion of MAiD legislation to include mental illness.
EPC-USA’s Disability Rights Advocates remind us Assisted
Suicide for the terminally ill very clearly normalizes discussions about
whether it might be ok to help disabled people die by suicide. Without realizing
it we can be blind to the reality that supporting Assisted Suicide individually
and corporately is an example of ableism and perpetuates systemic racism for
the poor, disabled, lonely, vulnerable and marginalized young and elderly
individuals.
Highly educated advocates for assisted suicide laws like Christopher Riddler and Udo Schuklenk are known for their assisted suicide advocacy in New York and Canada while misrepresenting themselves as a "disability rights advocates" Their philosophy blinds NY legislators in the reality of their ableist philosophy.
No change in language alters the fact that
offering suicide prevention to most people while offering suicide assistance
(legally constructed as “medical aid in dying”) to an ever-widening subset of disabled people undermines disability rights and perpetuates lethal disability discrimination. Passing an assisted suicide law in New York is unwise and unjust.
As the cheapest state-sponsored “treatment,” assisted suicide
diminishes patient choice and takes away patient autonomy of the most
vulnerable. Assisted suicide combined with a broken health care and home care
system is a deadly mix for people who are economically poor, lonely, vulnerable,
elderly, disabled, and historically marginalized in the US healthcare
system.
Advocates of assisted suicide assert that there has
never been one case of abuse related to laws legalizing assisted suicide under the legally constructed and euphemistic term "medical aid in dying."
Setting aside the inherent flaw of making such a broad assertion, the Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund (DREDF) has catalogued a long list of abuse cases (Link).
We urge you to oppose policies that provide legal immunity to assisted suicide providers and allow them to use their medical license to legally harm / kill patients who are not yet at death's door by prescribing them lethal drugs.
We urge you to allow
S.2445 to die this session - a harmful, dangerous and deadly assisted suicide law.
Sincerely,
Colleen E. Barry, Chairperson 347-245-9476
Josephine L.A. Glaser, MD.,FAAFP
Kenneth Stevens, MD
William Toffler, MD
Gordon Friesen
Alex Schadenberg
Euthanasia Prevention Coalition USA
Epc_USA@yahoo.com