Right to Die



The debate in France over assisted dying or euthanasia is also heating up and this article from The Times reports on a recent case involving a French doctor, Nicholas Bonnemaison, who has been acquitted of foul play after giving lethal injections to seven terminally ill who wanted to end their lives. 

Several relatives of the doctor's patients gave evidence on his behalf presumably to testify about their family member's wishes and the only sour note is that the doctor has apparently been struck off the medical register, which to my mind is vindictive and outrageous. 
The other case reported by the newspaper is that of a Mr Lambert whose parents are challenging a decision to end life support after a motorbike accident which has left him in an tetraplegic state.

Now if you ask me this, like another 'family dispute' comes down to the person's wishes and the person best placed to advise on that is a person's wife, husband or civil partner - not the parents or other family members, especially if they are motivated by a religious belief which the person or patient does not share.

The bottom line is that this is a personal decision and those who bring their religious baggage to the table should simply 'butt out' and respect other people's beliefs and wishes as we respect theirs.

French doctor acquitted of 'mercy killing' charges

Nicolas Bonnemaison's case drew attention to the growing debate on legalising euthanasia in France

A French doctor has been acquitted of poisoning charges after giving lethal injections to help seven of his terminally ill patients die.

Lawyers for doctor Nicolas Bonnemaison hailed the decision, describing it as a "monumental verdict".

Several relatives of the victims testified on the doctor's behalf.

Earlier, the European Court of Human Rights overruled France's highest court and said that a man in a six-year coma must keep receiving medical treatment.

It suspended the Council of State's earlier ruling in favour of ending life support for Vincent Lambert, 39, in a landmark decision that divided his family.

The case is seen as unprecedented in France, where euthanasia is illegal though doctors can withdraw care.


'Vulnerable people'

In Mr Bonnemaison's case, he was accused of "poisoning particularly vulnerable people" - five women and two men - who died between March 2010 and July 2011 after being admitted to a hospital in the south-western city of Bayonne.

The courtroom erupted in applause when the judge read out the verdict on Wednesday, Reuters reports.
Anti-euthanasia protesters in Paris on Tuesday

Mr Bonnemaison, who has already been struck off the medical register, would have faced life imprisonment if found guilty.

"There's no hero or martyr here," his lawyer, Benoit Ducos-Ader, said after leaving the court house in Pau, south-western France.

"This will force politicians to move a bit faster," he added, in reference to the growing debate in France on legalising euthanasia.


Passive euthanasia

When a patient dies because medical professionals either do not do something necessary to keep the patient alive, or stop doing something that keeps patient alive. Examples are:


  • switching off life-support machines
  • disconnecting a feeding tube
  • not carrying out a life-extending operation
  • not giving life-extending drugs


Doctors in France are entitled to withdraw care from a patient under a 2005 law that says life should not be prolonged "artificially" through "unnecessary or disproportionate treatment".

President Francois Hollande aims to change the law next year to allow "medical assistance to end one's life in dignity".

Mr Bonnemaison's acquittal came hours after the European court blocked a French court ruling in favour of ending life support for Mr Lambert, who was left a tetraplegic after a motorcycle accident.
Vincent Lambert's nephew backs the decision to end treatment but other members of the family disagree

The case was brought by his parents and some siblings, who challenged the decision to end his life after doctors in the hospital in Reims, north-east France, decided that feeding and hydration through tubes should stop.

The doctors were also supported by Mr Lambert's wife and some of his brothers and sisters.

Mr Lambert will be kept alive while the European court - which has the power to implement urgent, temporary measures "where there is an imminent risk of irreparable harm" - considers a full review of the case.

Separately on Wednesday, campaigners lost their appeal in the UK's highest court, the Supreme Court, over the right to die concerning two severely disabled men.

The cases involve the family of the late Tony Nicklinson, from Wiltshire, who had locked-in syndrome, and Paul Lamb, of Leeds, who was paralysed in a road crash.

However, five of the judges concluded that the court had the power to declare that the current law breaches the right to a private family life, a move euthanasia campaigners said was a positive development.

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