Oregon has rolled back one of the safeguards in the state’s assisted suicide law, doing away with a 15-day waiting period if a physician predicts a patient has fewer than 15 days to live.
“[Removing] the waiting period makes it even easier for a bad actor to coerce or force someone to end their own lives,” Liberty Pike, communications director for Oregon Right to Life, said. “And the number of reasons that somebody might want to do that are various and sundry to be sure, whether it’s financial motivation, or the caregiver is tired of being involved in the process, whatever it might be.”
Gov. Kate Brown, a Democrat, signed the new bill into law July 23.
Oregon Right to Life fought the legislation, even delivering a letter signed by 34 medical professionals to every member of the Legislature, saying that giving someone with a life expectancy shorter than two weeks a way to end his or her life even faster is, as Pike noted, “unnecessary and dangerous.”
Under the Oregon Death With Dignity Act, enacted in 1998, the state has seen an increase in lethal prescriptions nearly every year since. Last year 249 Oregonians died from ingesting lethal drugs prescribed under the act. The majority were cancer patients older than 65.
Nine states and the District of Columbia allow assisted suicide. (BP)
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