Select Language

English

Down Icon

Select Country

France

Down Icon

Assisted Dying Act: Procedure for Requesting Assisted Dying Approved by MPs

Assisted Dying Act: Procedure for Requesting Assisted Dying Approved by MPs

Following the eligibility conditions , the terms under which a person can request assistance in dying from a doctor were approved by the deputies this Wednesday, during the marathon examination of the text relating to this new, much-debated right .

A person requesting access to assisted dying must do so from a doctor "who is neither their relative, their relative by marriage, their spouse, their common-law partner, their partner to whom they are bound by a civil solidarity pact, nor their beneficiary," according to the proposed law.

The deputies also wished to clarify, by adopting a government amendment, that the request made by the patient to the doctor must be expressed "in writing or by any other means of expression adapted to his or her abilities."

The initial version only mentioned an "express request," referring the details to a decree in the Council of State. The text provides that the same person cannot submit several requests simultaneously, and that a request cannot be submitted "during a teleconsultation."

An amendment by MPs from the independent Liot group was also adopted to clarify that the request may be collected at the person's "home" or "any place where care is being provided" if they are unable to visit their doctor. The doctor must inform the person of their state of health and that they are eligible for palliative care.

The text also provides that the doctor "should offer to refer the person and their loved ones to a psychologist or psychiatrist." Right-wing MPs have attempted to make consultation with a psychologist or psychiatrist systematic.

"Because we can have depressive disorders, particularly anxiety disorders, which can (…) impair judgment," argued MP Philippe Juvin (Les Républicains). "This is effectively putting the patient under guardianship, and putting them in the hands of a psychiatrist's decision," retorted Green MP Sandrine Rousseau.

Health Minister Catherine Vautrin emphasized that the government will introduce an amendment later in the text, requiring the doctor to seek the opinion of a psychiatrist "when there is serious doubt about the person's ability to act." MPs must now discuss the next steps in the procedure, including issues of collegiality in deciding whether or not to grant a request for assisted dying.

On Tuesday, MPs approved five cumulative conditions required for a patient to be eligible for assisted dying. The vote on the entire text, at first reading, is scheduled for Tuesday, May 27. Some 1,100 amendments are still under discussion.

Le Parisien

Le Parisien

Similar News

All News
Animated ArrowAnimated ArrowAnimated Arrow