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Euthanasia and assisted suicide: a physician’s and ethicist’s perspectives

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http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/MB.S59303
Euthanasia and assisted suicide: a physician’s
and ethicist’s perspectives
J Donald Boudreau1
Margaret A Somerville2
1Faculty of Medicine, Department of
Medicine, McGill University, Montreal,
QC, Canada; 2Faculty of Law, Faculty
of Medicine, and Centre for Medicine,
Ethics and Law, McGill University,
Montreal, QC, Canada
Correspondence: J Donald Boudreau
Center for Medical Education, Faculty
of Medicine, McGill University,
1110 Pine Ave West, Montreal,
QC, H3A 1A3, Canada
Tel +1 514 398 5613
Fax +1 514 398 7246
Email donald.boudreau@mcgill.ca
Abstract: The debate on legalizing euthanasia and assisted suicide has a broad range of
participants including physicians, scholars in ethics and health law, politicians, and the general
public. It is conflictual, and despite its importance, participants are often poorly informed or
confused. It is essential that health care practitioners are not among the latter. This review
responds to the need for an up-to-date and comprehensive survey of salient ethical issues.
Written in a narrative style, it is intended to impart basic information and review foundational
principles helpful in ethical decision-making in relation to end-of-life medical care. The
authors, a physician and an ethicist, provide complementary perspectives. They examine the
standard arguments advanced by both proponents and opponents of legalizing euthanasia and
note some recent legal developments in the matter. They consider an aspect of the debate often
underappreciated; that is, the wider consequences that legalizing euthanasia might have on the
medical profession, the institutions of law and medicine, and society as a whole. The line of
argument that connects this narrative and supports their rejection of euthanasia is the belief
that intentionally inflicting death on another human being is inherently wrong. Even if it were
not, the risks and harms of legalizing euthanasia outweigh any benefits. Ethical alternatives to
euthanasia are available, or should be, and euthanasia is absolutely incompatible with physi-
cians’ primary mandate of healing.
Keywords: euthanasia, physician assisted-suicide, healing, suffering, palliative care, palliative
sedation
Introduction
One of us (JDB) was recently attending on a clinical service where a situation arose
that prompted a discussion concerning assisted suicide. It revealed a surprising lack
of consensus among physicians regarding the difference between assisted suicide and
euthanasia, as well as an appalling level of confusion about basic facts. Such a situation
is disconcerting, given that good ethical decision-making requires “getting the facts
straight” as an essential first step. It may be understandable that personal perspectives
will vary on matters such as physician-assisted suicide (PAS) and euthanasia, particularly
in our pluralistic societies. However, it is unacceptable that conversations of a profes-
sional nature would proceed in the absence of agreement on relevant first principles
and without a shared knowledge base. It would be akin to a cadre of interventional
cardiologists, equipped with a shaky grasp of the vascular anatomy of the myocardium,
debating the merits of an innovative approach to intracoronary stenting.
This article addresses such lacunae in relation to euthanasia and PAS. (We will use
the word euthanasia to include PAS except where we state otherwise or it is clear we
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are dealing with the issues separately). We define euthanasia
and assisted suicide, reveal common misconceptions in
this regard, and expose euphemisms that, regrettably, often
serve to confuse and deceive. We review the main argu-
ments advanced by proponents and opponents of legalizing
euthanasia. The philosophical assumptions guiding our per-
spectives are laid out. We consider the effect of legalization
on patients and their families, physicians (as individuals and
a collectivity), hospitals, the law, and society at large. Our
goal is to provide a vade mecum useful in end-of-life care
and ethical decision-making in that context.
Denitions
Euthanasia
Euthanasia is an emotionally charged word, and definitional
confusion has been fermented by characterizations such as
passive versus active euthanasia. Some have suggested avoid-
ing using the word altogether.1,2 We believe it would be a
mistake to abandon the word, but we need to clarify it.
The word’s etymology is straightforward: eu means good
and Thanatos means death. Originally, euthanasia meant the
condition of a good, gentle, and easy death. Later, it took on
aspects of performativity; that is, helping someone die gently.
An 1826 Latin manuscript referred to medical euthanasia as
the “skillful alleviation of suffering”, in which the physician
was expected to provide conditions that would facilitate a
gentle death but “least of all should he be permitted, prompted
either by other people’s request or his own sense of mercy,
to end the patient’s pitiful condition by purposefully and
deliberately hastening death”.3 This understanding of eutha-
nasia is closely mirrored in the philosophy and practice of
contemporary palliative care. Its practitioners have strongly
rejected euthanasia.4
Recently, the noun has morphed into the transitive verb
“to euthanize”. The sense in which physicians encounter it
today, as a request for the active and intentional hastening of
a patient’s demise, is a modern phenomenon; the first sample
sentence given by the Oxford English Dictionary to illustrate
the use of the verb is dated 1975.5 The notion of inducing,
causing, or delivering a (good) death, so thoroughly ensconced
in our contemporary, so-called “progressive values” cultural
ethos, is a new reality. That fact should raise the question:
“Why now?” The causes go well beyond responding to the
suffering person who seeks euthanasia, are broad and varied,
and result from major institutional and societal changes.6
Physicians need a clear definition of euthanasia. We
recommend the one used by the Canadian Senate in its
1995 report: “The deliberate act undertaken by one person
with the intention of ending the life of another person in order
to relieve that person’s suffering.”7
Terms such as active and passive euthanasia should be
banished from our vocabulary. An action either is or is not
euthanasia, and these qualifying adjectives only serve to
confuse. When a patient has given informed consent to a
lethal injection, the term “voluntary euthanasia” is often
used; when they have not done so, it is characterized as
“involuntary euthanasia”. As our discussion of “slippery
slopes” later explains, jurisdictions that start by restricting
legalized euthanasia to its voluntary form find that it expands
into the involuntary procedure, whether through legalizing the
latter or because of abuse of the permitted procedure.
In the Netherlands, Belgium, and Lichtenstein, physi-
cians are legally authorized, subject to certain conditions, to
administer euthanasia. For the sake of clarity, we note here
that outside those jurisdictions, for a physician to administer
euthanasia would be first-degree murder, whether or not the
patient had consented to it.
Assisted suicide
Assisted suicide has the same goal as euthanasia: causing the
death of a person. The distinction resides in how that end is
achieved. In PAS, a physician, at the request of a competent
patient, prescribes a lethal quantity of medication, intending that
the patient will use the chemicals to commit suicide. In short,
in assisted suicide, the person takes the death-inducing product;
in euthanasia, another individual administers it. Both are self-
willed deaths. The former is self-willed and self-inflicted; the
latter is self-willed and other-inflicted. Although the means vary,
the intention to cause death is present in both cases.
Some will argue that agency is different in assisted suicide
and euthanasia; in the former, the physician is somewhat
removed from the actual act. To further this goal, two ethicists
from Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts,
USA, have proposed strategies for limiting physician involve-
ment in an active death-causing role.8 It is, indeed, the case
that patients provided with the necessary medication have
ultimate control over if, when, and how to proceed to use it;
they may change their mind and never resort to employing
it. However, in prescribing the means to commit suicide, the
physician’s complicity in causing death is still present. There
are, however, some limits on that complicity, even in the
jurisdictions where it has been legalized. For instance, even
supporters of PAS in those jurisdictions agree it is unethi-
cal for physicians to raise the topic with individuals, as that
might constitute subtle coercion or undue influence, whether
or not intended.
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Euthanasia and assisted suicide
PAS has been decriminalized in Oregon, Washington
State, Montana, and Vermont, and absent a “selfish motive”,
assisted suicide is not a crime in Switzerland.9 Even in these
jurisdictions, however, one cannot legitimately speak of
a “right” to suicide because no person has the obligation
to assist in the suicide. Rather, assisting suicide has been
decriminalized for physicians in the American states listed
and for any person in Switzerland; that is, it is not a criminal
offence for those who comply with the applicable laws and
regulations.
Terminal sedation and palliative sedation
A lethal injection can be classified as “fast euthanasia”.
Deeply sedating the patient and withholding food and flu-
ids, with the primary intention of causing death, is “slow
euthanasia”. The use of “deep sedation” at the end of life
has become a more common practice in the last decade and
has been the focus of controversy and conflict, especially
because of its probable abuse.
Certain terminology, such as “palliative terminal sedation”,
creates confusion between sedation that is not euthanasia and
sedation that is euthanasia. It was used, for example, by the
Quebec Legislative Assembly in drafting a bill to legalize
euthanasia.10 We note that creating such confusion might
constitute an intentional strategy to promote the legalization of
euthanasia. In the amended bill, the term “palliative terminal
sedation” was replaced by “continuous palliative sedation”,
which the patient must be told is irreversible, clearly indicat-
ing the legislature’s intention to authorize “slow euthanasia”,
although many people might not understand that is what it
means. The bill died on the order paper when a provincial
election was called before it was passed. Immediately after
the election the bill was reintroduced at third reading stage
by unanimous consent of all parties and passed by a large
majority. This new law allowing euthanasia in Quebec, the
only jurisdiction in North America to do so, remains the focus
of intense disagreement and is now being challenged as ultra
vires the constitutional jurisdiction of Quebec.
“Palliative sedation”, which is relatively rarely indicated
as an appropriate medical treatment for dying people, is used
when it is the only reasonable way to control pain and suf-
fering and is given with that intention. It is not euthanasia.
“Terminal sedation” refers to a situation in which the patient’s
death is not imminent and the patient is sedated with the
primary intention of precipitating their death. This is eutha-
nasia. The terms palliative terminal sedation and continuous
palliative sedation confound these two ethically and legally
different situations.
Euthanasia advocates have been arguing that we cannot
distinguish the intention with which these interventions are
undertaken, and therefore, this distinction is unworkable.
But the circumstances in which such an intervention is used
and its precise nature allow us to do so. For instance, if a
patient’s symptoms can be controlled without sedation, yet
they are sedated, and especially if the patient is not otherwise
dying and food and fluids are withheld with the intention of
causing death, this is clearly euthanasia. Needing to discern
the intention with which an act is carried out is not unusual.
For instance, because intention is central to determining cul-
pability in criminal law, judges must do so on a daily basis.
We note, also, that intention is often central in determining
the ethical and moral acceptability of conduct, in general.
Within the realm of decision-making in a medical context,
withdrawal of artificial hydration and nutrition has continued
to be a very contentious issue in situations in which persons
are not competent to decide for themselves about continuing
or withdrawing this treatment. The questions raised include:
When does its withdrawal constitute allowing a person to
die as the natural outcome of their disease (when it is not
euthanasia)? And when does its withdrawal constitute starving
and dehydrating a person to death (when it is euthanasia)?
Our key assumptions
In discussing an issue as contentious as euthanasia, which has
a foundational base in values as well as facts and knowledge,
it is incumbent on us to identify our underlying philosophical
beliefs and assumptions. This will orient the reader to the
line of logic that links the ensuing arguments.
People undertaking an ethical analysis belong in one or
other of two main camps: principle-based (or deontological)
ethics or utilitarian ethics. We belong to the first group. We
believe there exists a universal morality and that, at the very
least, there is significant intercultural agreement on core
concepts of ethics. It is important to recognize that agreement
when it exists, because we should try to start our ethical debates
from where we agree, not from our disagreements. Doing so
allows an experience of a shared morality, which gives a dif-
ferent tone to both the debate and our disagreements.
It is beyond the scope of this article to discuss in depth
the putative origins of this human moral sense. For religious
people, it is to be found in their religious beliefs. Perhaps it
is a result of Darwinian natural selection and has come to
be written in our genetic code and reflected in our common
neurobiological apparatus. Perhaps it is a product of the power-
ful reasoning capabilities of Homo sapiens, culminating in a
rationalization process that recognizes the survival and other
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Boudreau and Somerville
advantages of cultivating virtues such as altruism and fairness
over greed and injustice. Perhaps its origins will forever elude
us and we must be content with describing it through concepts
such as moral intuition. Perhaps it is some combination of all
of these factors and others. Regardless, it has often been said
that even in secular societies, close to 100% of its citizens
adhere to moral codes, whether implicit (eg, the ethical “yuck”
factor) or explicit (eg, the Ten Commandments).
As a consequence, we endorse the view that the practice
of medicine is necessarily constrained by moral absolutes.
In other words, we categorically reject moral relativism, the
utilitarian view that what is right or wrong depends just on
weighing whether benefits outweigh risks and harms, and in
particular, that this is only a matter of personal judgment. Some
things ought never to be done to patients by their physicians.
In relation to euthanasia, physician–philosopher Edmund
Pellegrino states it well: “Physicians must never kill. Nothing
is more fundamental or uncompromising”.11 We strongly agree,
and this central tenet informs our entire line of argument.
We believe that future generations looking back on the
twenty-first century euthanasia debate (which is taking place
in most Western democracies) will see it as the major values
debate of the century and determinative of the most important
foundational values of the world they will have inherited.
Basic concepts related
to euthanasia and PAS
The right to die
The “right to die” terminology is used in the euthanasia
debate to propose there is a right to have death inflicted.
Death is inherent to the human body, vulnerable and inexo-
rably aging; death can be accelerated or temporarily delayed,
but never thwarted. The inevitability of death is an explicit,
necessary, noncontingent, and universalizable phenomenon
true for all living beings. There is no “right to die”. In con-
tradistinction, there are fundamental human rights to “life,
liberty and security of the person”.
Where there is a right, there is an obligation; therefore,
were a “right to die” to exist, a logical consequence would be
that some other person or agent would have a duty to inflict
death (especially if the requisitioner were physically inca-
pable of accomplishing the act themselves). Pro-euthanasia
advocates rely heavily on this line of logic and have used it
to impose responsibility for carrying out euthanasia onto the
medical profession.
The claim to a right to die must be distinguished from a
“right to be allowed to die”; for instance, by refusing life-
support treatment. The right to permit the dying process
to unfold unimpeded flows from and is a consequence of
persons’ exercise of their right to inviolability, the right not to
be touched without their informed consent. It does not estab-
lish any right to die in the sense of a “right to be killed”.
A recent case from British Columbia, Carter v. Canada
(Attorney General),12 illustrates the arguments that emerge
between those arguing for a right to die (legalized euthanasia)
and those opposing it. Gloria Taylor, a woman with amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis who was one of the plaintiffs, challenged the
constitutional validity of the prohibition on assisted suicide in
the Canadian Criminal Code.13 Suicide and attempted suicide
used to be crimes under the code, but these crimes were repealed
by the Canadian Parliament in 1972. However, the crime of
assisting suicide was not repealed. The trial judge in the Carter
case, Justice Lynn Smith, considered the reasons for that repeal.
She accepted that it was not done to give a personal choice to
die priority over “the state interest in protecting the lives of
citizens; rather, it was to recognize that attempted suicide did
not mandate a legal remedy”.12 With respect, we propose an
alternative explanation: The designation of those acts as crimes
was abolished to try to save the lives of suicidal people. It was
hoped that if society removed the threat of possibly being
charged with a criminal offence, they and their families would
be more likely to seek medical assistance.
In coming to her conclusions that PAS can be ethically
acceptable and ought to be legally allowed in certain cir-
cumstances, Justice Smith relied heavily on the fact that it
is no longer a crime to commit or attempt to commit suicide
and asked, why, then, is it a crime to assist it? “What is the
difference between suicide and assisted suicide that justifies
making the one lawful and the other a crime, that justifies
allowing some this choice, while denying it to others?”12
The answer is that decriminalizing suicide and attempted
suicide is intended to protect life; decriminalizing assisted
suicide does the opposite. As explained earlier, intentions are
often central in deciding what is and is not ethical.
Society tries to prevent suicide. Notwithstanding the influ-
ence of pro-euthanasia advocates, the preponderant societal
view is that suicide, at least outside the context of terminal
illness, must not be tolerated. Suicide is generally considered
a failure of sorts: the manifestation of inadequately treated
depression, a lapse in community support, a personal short-
coming, societal disgrace, or a combination thereof. Even if
in certain societies in ancient times suicide was not illegal,
it was generally frowned upon.14
Importantly, the decriminalization of suicide does not
establish any right to die by suicide. Furthermore, if there
were such a right, we would have a duty not to treat people
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who attempt suicide. In other words, if there were a right to
choose suicide, it would mean that we have correlative obliga-
tions (perhaps subject to certain conditions such as ensuring
the absence of coercion) not to prevent people from mak-
ing that choice. Hospital emergency rooms and health care
professionals faced with a patient who has attempted suicide
do not, at present, act on that basis. Psychiatrists who fail to
take reasonable care that their patients do not commit suicide,
including by failing to order their involuntary hospitaliza-
tion to prevent them committing suicide, when a reasonably
careful psychiatrist would not have failed to do so, can be
liable for medical malpractice, unprofessional conduct, and
even, in extreme cases, criminal negligence.
Another distinguishing feature between suicide and assisted
suicide must be underlined. Suicide is a solitary act carried
out by an individual (usually in despair). PAS is a social act in
which medical personnel licensed and compensated by society
are involved in the termination of the life of a person. It asks
not that we attempt to preserve life, the normal role of medicine
and the state, but that we accept and act communally on a per-
son’s judgment that his or her life is unworthy of continuance.
(We are indebted to Canadian bioethicist Dr Tom Koch for this
particular formulation of the issue.)
Autonomy
Advocates of euthanasia rely heavily on giving priority to the
value of respect for individuals’ rights to autonomy and self-
determination. Respect for autonomy is the first requirement
listed in the principlism approach to biomedical ethics, known
as the “Georgetown mantra”, which strongly influenced the
early development of applied ethics in the 1980s.15 It refers
to a person’s right to self-determination, to the inherent right
of individuals to make decisions based on their constructions
of what is good and right for themselves. The autonomous
personal self is seen to rule supreme. It washes over the
relational self, the self that is in connection with others in
the family and community. Autonomy is often treated as an
“uber” right trumping all other rights. It renders moot many
obligations, commitments, and considerations beyond the
risks, harms, and benefits to the individual involved. The
inclination to attribute primary importance to autonomy
may be alluring at first glance; clearly, no physician educated
in today’s ethical zeitgeist (patient-centered, partnership-
seeking, and consent-venerating) would want to be seen to
be violating someone’s autonomy by disrespecting their right
to make personal choices. That would smack of paternalism
or authoritarianism, which are seen by “progressives” as
heinous wrongs.
The way in which respect for autonomy is implemented
in practice and in law is through the doctrine of informed
consent. Among many requirements, it demands that the
patient be fully informed of all risks, harms, benefits, and
potential benefits of the proposed procedure and its reason-
able alternatives. As a consequence, to obtain legally valid
informed consent to euthanasia, the patient must be offered
fully adequate palliative care. As well, the patient must be
legally and factually mentally competent, and their con-
sent must be voluntary: free of coercion, duress, or undue
influence. We question whether these conditions can be ful-
filled, at least with respect to many terminally ill patients.
Individual autonomy and perspectives
from the individual’s family
It is useful to consider the historical roots of individual
autonomy and its possible links to the movement to legalize
euthanasia. The belief that one has the right to die at the time,
place, and in the conditions of one’s choosing is based on
the conviction that one owns one’s body and that one can
do with it as one pleases. It is an idea deeply rooted in the
humanist worldview.
The notion of a personal self emerged in the Renaissance,
where it was thought that the personal self could be worked
on and perfected. It was quite distinct from more ancient
concepts of humans as part of a greater and unified whole.
Pica della Mirandola (quoted in Proctor 1988)16 captures
the sentiment: “We have made thee neither of heaven nor of
earth, neither mortal nor immortal, so that with freedom
of choice and with honor, as though the maker and molder
of thyself, thou mayest fashion thyself in whatever shape thou
shalt prefer.” It does not require a huge conceptual leap to
appreciate that if the self can be created, the process should
be reversible: self-making balanced with self-annihilation.
Self-determinationism is a type of solipsism discernible at
the very core of most philosophical arguments in favor of
euthanasia.
The concept of autonomy can be problematized. It is,
as ethicist Alfred Tauber has suggested, two-faced.17 He
describes two conceptions of autonomy: one that is depen-
dent on radical self-direction and human separateness and
another that is other-entwined and constitutive of social
identities. He places interdependence, interpersonal respon-
sibility, and mutual trust as counterpoints to free choice. He
argues that both are necessary for society to thrive and for
medicine to fulfill its moral imperative. Autonomy is also
being rethought by some feminist scholars through a concept
called “relational autonomy”.18 This recognizes that, hermits
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aside, we do not live as solitary individuals but, rather, in a
web of relationships that influence our decisions, and that
these must be taken into account in assessing whether or
not our decisions are autonomous. The role that respect for
autonomy should play in relation to the decision whether
to legalize euthanasia must be examined not only from the
perspective of the patient but also from the perspective of
the patient’s relations. In the current debate, the latter have
often been neglected.
It is ethically necessary to consider the effects on a
person’s loved ones of that person’s decision to request
euthanasia. We illustrate this by making reference to the
BBC television program “Coronation Street”, the longest-
running television soap opera in history. It recently focused
on a character named Hayley Cropper. In a series of episodes
in early 2014, Hayley was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer
and subsequently resorted to suicide in the presence of her
husband, Roy Cropper. The producers of the show succeeded
in plucking at heart strings and eliciting empathic responses
from the audience. The character had a complex personal
narrative that permitted one to appreciate why she might have
wanted to hasten her own death: she was a transsexual woman
who feared reverting to her previous male identity as her
dying process progressed. The producers, always attuned to
contemporary societal issues, made sure to balance Hayley’s
suffering with a reciprocal harm, wrought on her husband
Roy and another character, Fiona (Fiz) Brown. Roy became
tormented with guilt by association, and Fiz was seriously
traumatized because she was deprived of the opportunity to
say goodbye to Hayley, her foster mother. The point made
was that self-willed death may be merciful to oneself and
simultaneously cruel to others. There is an essential reci-
procity in human life. We are neither islands in the seas nor
autonomous, self-sufficient planets in the skies.
We must also examine the effect of legalizing euthanasia
from the perspective of physicians’ and other health care pro-
fessionals’ autonomy with respect to freedom of conscience
and belief, and the effect it would have on institutions and
society as a whole. The overwhelming thrust of the euthanasia
debate in the public square has been at the level of individual
persons who desire euthanasia. Although that perspective is
an essential consideration, it is not sufficient. Even if eutha-
nasia could be justified at the level of an individual person
who wants it (a stance with which we do not agree), the harm
it would do to the institutions of medicine and law and to
important societal values, not just in the present but in the
future, when euthanasia might become the norm, means it
cannot be justified.
Loss of autonomy, experienced or anticipated, is one of
the reasons that might prompt a patient to request death from
their physician. Other reasons include pain, but it is not the
most important. Thankfully, modern medicine is, with few
exceptions, effective at relieving physical symptoms, par-
ticularly pain. These other sources of suffering are largely
in the psychosocial domain, as the recent annual report by
Oregon’s Public Health Division (released on January 28,
2014) demonstrates. During a 14-year period (1998–2012),
the three most frequently mentioned end-of-life concerns
were loss of autonomy (91.4%), decreasing ability to par-
ticipate in activities that made life enjoyable (88.9%), and
loss of dignity (80.9%).19 A loss in bodily function is linked
to the fear of becoming a burden on loved ones and is often
experienced as an assault on human dignity. It is important
to note that depression can represent either an indication
or a contraindication for euthanasia. A list of end-of-life
concerns that can be linked to requesting euthanasia is pre-
sented in Table 1.
We turn now to another critically important value, respect
for life, which, in the context of euthanasia, is in conflict with
respect for autonomy. In discussing euthanasia, the one can-
not be properly considered in isolation from the other.
Respect for human life
Respect for human life must be maintained at two levels:
respect for each individual human life and respect for human
life in general. Even if it were correct, as pro-euthanasia
advocates argue, that when a competent adult person gives
Table 1 List of common reasons for requested death
Reason
Loss of autonomy and independence (eg, loss of control over decisions,
inability to make decisions, loss of self-care abilities)
Less able to engage in activities making life enjoyable
Perceived loss of human dignity; this is often related to an impairment
of physiological functions in basic body systems (eg, bowel functioning,
swallowing, speech, reproduction) or preoccupations with bodily
appearance
A fear of becoming a burden on family, friends, and community
Cognitive impairment or fear of cognitive impairment
Depression, hopelessness (nothing to look forward to), or
demoralization*
Feeling useless, unwanted, or unloved; social isolation
Inadequate pain control or concern about it
Existentialist angst or terror, mortality salience, fear of the unknown
Intractable symptoms other than pain (eg, pruritus, seizures,
paresthesias, nausea, dyspnea)
Financial implications of treatment
Notes: This list is not presented in the order of frequency. *Some experts deny
that demoralization actually exists as a mental disorder separate from clinical
depression.
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informed consent to euthanasia there is no breach of respect
for human life at the level of the individual, there is still a
breach of respect for human life in general. If euthanasia is
involved, how one person dies affects more than just that
person; it affects how we all will die.
Respect for life is implemented through establishing a
right to life. We return to the trial judgment in the Carter case
because it illustrates how such a right can be distorted and
co-opted in the service of legalizing PAS or even euthanasia.
In applying the right to life in section 7 of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms20 to Ms Taylor’s situation,
Justice Smith says:
[T]he [Criminal Code] legislation [prohibiting assisted
suicide] affects her right to life because it may shorten her
life. Ms Taylor’s reduced lifespan would occur if she con-
cludes that she needs to take her own life while she is still
physically able to do so, at an earlier date than she would
find necessary if she could be assisted.12
What is astonishing is the novel, to say the least, way
in which Justice Smith constructs a breach of Ms Taylor’s
Charter right to life. In effect, Justice Smith’s reasoning
converts the right to life to a right to death by PAS or eutha-
nasia. Justice Smith’s judgment was overturned by a two to
one majority in the British Columbia Court of Appeal, as
contrary to a Supreme Court of Canada precedent ruling
that the prohibition of assisted suicide is constitutionally
valid.21 It is now on appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada;
we note its liberty to override its previous precedents.
Obfuscations and the main arguments
of proponents and opponents
Proponents of euthanasia often use rhetorical devices to foster
agreement with their stance by making it more palatable. One
of these is to eliminate the use of words that have a negative
emotional valance. As mentioned previously, “suicide” has
been a taboo for many cultures and across time. Some com-
mentators have described concepts such as suicide clusters,
suicidal contagion, and suicide scripting; none of these are
considered beneficial to society. As a consequence, there have
been efforts at replacing the terminology of assisted suicide
with assisted dying. A former editor of the New England
Journal of Medicine, Marcia Angell, has stated that the latter
expression is more appropriate because it describes some-
one “who is near death from natural causes anyway while
the former refers to something occurring in someone with
a normal life expectancy”.22 We doubt that she was actually
meaning to imply that human lives have less intrinsic worth
as persons approach death; however, that interpretation is
logical and inevitable.
Another strategy to whitewash “death talk” is to
figuratively wrap it within the white coat of medicine.
Cloaking these acts in medical terms softens them and
confers legitimacy. This has spawned a host of euphemisms
such as “medically assisted death”, “medical-aid-in-dying”,
and “death with dignity”. After all, we all want good medi-
cal care when we are dying. A strategy that may escape
scrutiny is to link assisted suicide with physicians; that
is, PAS. However, assisted suicide and euthanasia are not
necessarily glued to physicians. Nurses could perform
these procedures, although most recoil at the prospect. In
theory, almost anyone (ambulance drivers, veterinarians,
pharmacists, lawyers) could be empowered and trained
to euthanize. We have argued elsewhere that if society is
going to legalize euthanasia (which we oppose it doing), it
could equip itself with a new occupation of euthanology,23
thereby relieving physicians of having to contravene their
ancient guiding principle of primum non nocere.
One must also be wary of euphemisms because they
dull our moral intuitions and emotional responses that warn
us of unethical conduct. In our world of desktops, laptops,
and smartphones, where one’s existence is proclaimed and
validated on computer screens and intersubjectivity is chan-
nelled in cyberspace, we would not be surprised to see some
enterprising euthanologist of the future advertise a gentle
“logging-off”. Although fanciful, this prediction is well
aligned with a conception of the world that views persons as
reducible to bodies with complex networks of neurological
circuits wherein the entire range of human experiences can
be created, recorded, interpreted, and terminated.
This conception of human existence can also breed rather
extreme points of view, such as the one that considers the
failing body as “unwanted life support”. David Shaw has
suggested that, “if a patient is mentally competent and wants
to die, his body itself constitutes unwarranted life support
unfairly prolonging his or her mental life”.24
Many current attitudes and values could affect how
terminally ill, dying, and vulnerable people are treated. For
example, if materialism and consumerism are priority val-
ues, euthanasia fits with the idea that, as one pro-euthanasia
Australian politician put it: “When you are past your ‘use by’
or ‘best before’ date, you should be checked out as quickly,
cheaply and efficiently as possible.” But we are not products
to be checked out of the supermarket of life. As this shows,
some who advocate in favor of euthanasia resort to intense
reductionism in buttressing their arguments. If one thinks of
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Boudreau and Somerville
a human being as having an essence comprised of more than
bodily tissues, then the intellectual, emotional, and social
barriers to euthanasia come to the fore.
Euphemizing euthanasia through choice of lan-
guage is not the only “legalizing euthanasia through
confusion” strategy.25 Another is the “no difference”
argument. The reasoning goes as follows: refusals of
treatment that result in a shortening of the patient’s life are
ethical and legal; this is tantamount to recognizing a right to
die. Euthanasia is no different from them, and it’s just another
way to implement the right to die. Therefore, if we are to act
consistently, that too should be seen as ethical and legal. The
further, related, argument is that euthanasia is simply another
form of medical treatment. However, as explained previously,
the right to refuse treatment is not based on a right to die,
and both the intention of the physician and the causation of
death are radically different in those cases compared with
euthanasia.
The main arguments in favor of and in opposition to
euthanasia are presented in Table 2. Prominent on the yea
side are the autonomy principle and the belief that putting
an end to suffering through euthanasia is merciful and justi-
fies euthanasia. Prominent on the nay side are the corrosive
consequences for upholding society’s respect for life, the
risks of abuse of vulnerable people, and the corruption of
the physician’s role in the healing process.
The role of the physician:
“doctor as healer”
An absolute barrier to physicians becoming involved with
acts that intentionally inflict death is that doing so would be
incompatible with their healer role. This statement requires
unpacking. The concept of “healing” is a challenging one
to define, and it is nearly impossible to explain it in reduc-
tionist and objectivist terms. By its very nature, healing is
holistic and intersubjective. Balfour Mount, the physician
who created the first palliative care unit in North America,
has defined it as “a relational process involving movement
towards an experience of integrity and wholeness”.26 Such a
description does not entirely clarify the situation; Dr Mount
once admitted: “When I try to explain what is healing I
invariably end up invoking notions such as ‘wholeness’ or
‘soul’ and, in the process, I often lose the attention of my
colleagues who have been enculturated in the positivist
paradigm of scientific methodology.A formulation that may
provide a more robust understanding of medicine’s healing
mandate is the notion that healing amounts to caring for the
whole person.
The historical roots that link medicine to healing run
deep. In ancient times, a physician’s training was repre-
sented as an initiation into sacred rites: Asclepius was
the healing god. Healers have existed across time and
cultures; this is an important focus of interest for medical
anthropologists. The Old French and Anglo-Norman word
“fisicien” derives from “fisique”, which denoted a practi-
tioner of the art of healing. Healing is inseparable from
the need of humans to cope with the bafflement, fear, and
suffering brought on by sickness. The problems of sick-
ness, accidents, unjustness, and evil are all central concerns
of professions with a pastoral function: the ministry and
medicine.
Some physicians may attempt to distance themselves
and their clinical method from any priestly role and reli-
gion as a whole. That resistance is understandable to some
extent. However, it has been argued that physicians, by the
nature of the clinical encounter, even if they are not neces-
sarily metaphorical shepherds tending their sheep, cannot
be considered to be morally neutral technicians.27 A fasci-
nating commentary on this aspect of medicine comes from
an unexpected source. The renowned Canadian novelist
Robertson Davies, a self-declared expert on magic, in
Table 2 Main arguments advanced by proponents and opponents
of euthanasia
Arguments
Arguments in favor of euthanasia
Persons have an inalienable right to self-determination; that is,
patients can decide how, where, and when they are going to die.
Euthanasia is a profoundly humane, merciful, and noble humanitarian
gesture because it relieves suffering.
Assistance in dying is a logical and reasonable extension to end-of-life
care and involves only an incremental expansion of practices that are
legal and seen as ethical.
It bypasses physicians’ reluctance to accept patients’ advanced
directives and their requests to limit interventions.
It can be carried out humanely and effectively, with negligible risk of
slippery slopes.
Arguments against euthanasia
Intentionally taking a human life, other than to save innocent human
life, is inherently wrong and a violation of a universal moral code.
The value of respect for autonomy must be balanced by other values,
particularly respect for individual human life and respect for human
life in general.
It is different in kind from other palliative care interventions aimed
at relieving suffering, such as pain management, and from respect for
patients’ refusals of life support treatment.
Slippery slopes are unavoidable.
It introduces an unacceptable potential for miscommunication within
the doctor–patient relationship.
It is incompatible with the role of the physician as healer and would
erode the character of the hospital as a safe refuge.
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describing the characteristics of a physician, once stated
to a medical audience at Johns Hopkins University:
[...] to the wretch who sits in the chair on the other side
of your desk. You look like a god [...] the detection and
identification of gods in modern life is mine, and I assure
you that you look like a god.28
We are not trying to suggest that physicians are priests,
let alone gods; we are merely pointing out that, whether or
not we are religious, the healing function requires attention
to notions of transcendence, and if they have them, patients’
theistic beliefs and their spiritual life. Not surprisingly,
indeed insightfully, healing has been described as the relief of
“soul sickness”.29 The late Dame Cicely Saunders, founder of
the modern hospice movement, has equated it to recognizing,
reaching, and alleviating “soul pain”. Although it is beyond the
scope of this article to consider the full breadth of healing as a
human phenomenon, a few additional points are in order.
Healing is a journey, rather than a destination, and it is a
process more than an epiphany. Recent work by Mount and
his collaborators has attempted to characterize healing by
contrasting it with wounding. On a quality-of-life continuum,
being in a healed state is at a pole marked by an experience of
wholeness and personal integrity. Being wounded is situated
at the opposite pole and represents an experience of suffering
and anguish. Healing is associated with the following perspec-
tives: a sense of connection to self, others, and a phenomenal
world (ie, a world experienced through the senses); an ability
to derive meaning in the context of suffering; a capacity to find
peace in the present moment; a nonadversarial connection to
the disease process; and the ability to relinquish the need for
control. Wounding is a movement in opposite directions. Suf-
fering is fundamentally a sense of one’s own disintegration, of
loss of control to prevent that, and an experience of meaning-
lessness.30 By counteracting those perceptions, a person can
be helped on a healing trajectory, even as death approaches.
Healing interventions are always possible. One can die healed.
As a consequence, the phrase, “There is nothing more that I
can do for you,” has no place in medicine.
What does healing look like at the bedside? The following
characteristics are frequently emphasized. Healing requires
recognizing, listening to, and responding to a patient’s story,
especially listening for trauma, shame, suffering, lament,
and listening in a way that generates “earned trust”: “Trust
me because I will show that you can trust me. It occurs
in the moment, in the present tense, in a series of “nows”.
There needs to be a profound recognition of and an attempt
to mitigate the power differential. There is a duty to nurture
hope, a deep sort of hope, and one that is understood as
“having agency to discover meaning”.31 Hope has been
described as “the oxygen of the human spirit. Without it,
our spirit dies. With it we can overcome even seemingly
insurmountable obstacles.”32
Alternatives to euthanasia
There are two great traditions in medicine: the prolongation
of life and the relief of suffering. The concept of suffering, the
fact that it is an affliction of whole persons, rather than bodies
only, was explicated several decades ago by the American
physician Eric Cassel in his seminal paper: “The Nature of
Suffering and the Goals of Medicine.33 This understand-
ing represents one of the central tenets of palliative care
medicine. The provision of high-quality care by individuals
who share in this belief and are able to act to address the
full range of human suffering is the most important goal
with respect to terminally ill patients. It also constitutes the
obvious and necessary alternative to euthanasia.
A specific approach to palliative care, with concep-
tual anchors in the concept of healing, has recently been
described and used by Canadian psychiatrist Harvey Max
Chochinov and colleagues; it is called “dignity therapy”.34
Although we prefer the original term, “dignity-conserving
care”, because it implies somewhat more modest goals and sug-
gests less of a transfer of agency from patient to physician, this
approach holds great promise for assisting patients at the end
of life. It provides an entry for a deep exploration of dignity:
How does the individual patient conceive of it? How is it threat-
ened? How does it link to vulnerability or a sense of “control”?
Where does one get the idea that we are ever in control? It is
focused on issues such as “intimate dependencies” (eg, eating,
bathing, and toileting) and “role preservation”. Chochinov has
described one’s social roles and their associated responsibilities
as “the bricks and mortar” of self.34 The therapeutic approach
described aims to preserve persons’ inherent dignity, in part
by helping them to see that their intimate dependencies can
be attended to without their losing self-respect and that they
can continue to play meaningful roles.
Consequences
A major disagreement between euthanasia advocates and
opponents revolves around the existence of slippery slopes.
There are two types: the logical slippery slope, the extension
of the circumstances in which euthanasia may be legally used,
and the practical slippery slope, its abuse (see Table 3). The
evidence during the last decade demonstrates that neither
slope can be avoided.35,36 For example, although access to
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euthanasia in the Netherlands has never required people to
be terminally ill, since its introduction it has been extended
to include people with mental, but not physical, illness, as
well as to newborns with disabilities and older children. In
Belgium, euthanasia has recently been extended to children,
it is being considered whether to do the same for people with
dementia, and organs are being taken from euthanized people
for transplantation.37 The logical and practical slippery slopes
are unavoidable because once we cross the clear line that we
must not intentionally kill another human being, there is no
logical stopping point.
When euthanasia is first legalized, the usual justification
for stepping over the “do not kill” line is a conjunctive one
composed of respect for individual autonomy and the relief
of suffering. This justification is taken as both necessary
and sufficient for euthanasia. But as people and physicians
become accustomed to euthanasia, the question arises, “Why
not just relief of suffering or respect for autonomy alone?”
and they become alternative justifications.
As a lone justification, relief of suffering allows eutha-
nasia of those unable to consent for themselves according to
this reasoning: If allowing euthanasia is to do good to those
mentally competent people who suffer, denying it to suffer-
ing people unable to consent for themselves is wrong; it is
discriminating against them on the basis of mental handicap.
So, suffering people with dementia or newborns with dis-
abilities should have access to euthanasia.
If one owns one’s own life, and no one else has the right
to interfere with what one decides for oneself in that regard
(as pro-euthanasia advocates claim), then respect for the
person’s autonomy as a sufficient justification means that
the person need not be suffering to access euthanasia. That
approach is manifested in the proposal in the Netherlands
that euthanasia should be available to those “over 70 and
tired of life”.38
Once the initial justification for euthanasia is expanded,
the question arises, “Why not some other justification, for
instance, saving on health care costs, especially with an aging
population?” Now, in stark contrast to the past when saving
health care costs through euthanasia was unspeakable, it is
a consideration being raised.
Familiarity with inflicting death causes us to lose the
awesomeness of what euthanasia entails; namely, inflicting
death. The same is true in making euthanasia a medical act.
And both familiarity with inflicting death and making eutha-
nasia a medical act make its extension, and probably abuse,
much more likely, indeed, we believe inevitable, were it to
be legalized. We need to stay firmly behind the clear line that
establishes that we must not intentionally kill one another.
Those most at risk from the abuse of euthanasia are vulner-
able people: those who are old and frail or people with mental
or physical disabilities. We have obligations to protect them,
and euthanasia does the opposite, it places them in danger.
We need, also, to consider the cumulative effect of how we
treat vulnerable people. What would be the effect of that on
the shared values that bind us as a society and in setting its
“ethical tone”? As one of us (MAS) has repeatedly pointed
out, we should not judge the ethical tone of a society by how it
treats its strongest, most privileged, most powerful members,
but rather by how it treats its weakest, most vulnerable and
most in need. Dying people belong to the latter group.
Among the most dangerous aspects of legalizing eutha-
nasia are the unintended boomerang effects it will have
on the medical profession. The concept of “unanticipated
consequences of purposive social action” is a well-described
phenomenon in sociology.39 In his classic paper, American
sociologist Robert Merton distinguishes between the conse-
quences of purposive actions that are exclusively the result
of the action and those, unpredictable and often unintended,
that are mediated by social structures, changing conditions,
chance, and error. For example, with respect to euthanasia,
there is really no guarantee that the legal and administrative
policies erected today, even if currently they functioned as
intended, which is doubtful, will be as effective in a different
cultural context decades hence.
Then there are the insidious changes induced by the
force of habit: the unexamined and autonomic modes of
Table 3 Slippery slopes
Slopes
The practical slippery slope
Performing euthanasia without informed consent or any consent
Persons administering euthanasia who are not legally authorized to do so
Failure of reporting euthanasia or physician assisted suicide as
required
Misclassifying euthanasia as “palliative sedation”
Noncompliance with safeguard protocols (eg, not obtaining psychiatric
evaluations of competence, circumventing policies for mandatory
second opinions, functioning as “willing providers” without having had
a previous clinical relationship with the patient)
The logical slippery slope
Euthanasia offered to those with existentialist angst, mental illness,
anorexia nervosa, depression
Euthanasia expanded to include patients with dementia
Euthanasia expanded to persons who are neither physically nor
mentally ill: “over 70 and tired of life”
Extending legislation to include children
Euthanasia becomes accepted as medical care, as a sort of
“therapeutic homicide”
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human behavior. How will the legitimatization of euthanasia
and its insertion in the everyday professional vernacular
and practice alter the ethos of medicine? The risks are of a
grave nature and are immeasurable. How will the involve-
ment of physicians in inflicting death affect their thinking,
decisions, and day-to-day practice? Given that euthanasia
may be routinized and expedient, there is a distinct possibil-
ity that death will become trivialized and that avenues for
dignity-preserving care will remain unexplored. What are
the potential corrosive effects on hospitals of accepting the
language of euthanasia and in implementing that mandate?
The language we use not only reflects reality but constructs
reality. As German philosopher Martin Heidegger has said,
“Language is the house of Being. In its home man dwells”.40
One can imagine that “H”, currently a symbol of hospice
and hope, will become conflated with an “H” that stands
for hollowness and hastened death. We have little doubt
that the slippery slopes include a language of abandonment,
generating medical practices that will vitiate hope, and a
profession that will struggle to identify a true north on its
moral compass.
Conclusion
We have introduced an ethical issue that is frequently over-
looked in the euthanasia debate: the effects and unintended
consequences of legalizing it on the medical profession and
on the institutions of law and medicine. Religion used to
be the principal carrier of the value of respect for life for
society, but in secular societies, that role has fallen to law
and medicine, which are “value-creating, value-carrying
and consensus-forming for society as a whole”.41 The law
prohibits killing another person, and physicians take an oath
not to inflict death. These imperatives must never be abro-
gated, which legalizing euthanasia, accepting the notion of
“therapeutic homicide”,42 would necessarily do.
This article is the product of two individuals who bring
complementary modes of thinking to the issues raised by
euthanasia. One (JDB), a specialist physician, has developed
his practical knowledge from years of accompanying patients
throughout the trajectory of illness, including at the end of
life. The other (MAS), an ethicist and lawyer, has fine-tuned
her epistemic logic through considered deliberation, during
a 35 year academic career, of the issues raised by euthanasia
in light of accepted first principles. The former has acquired
knowledge through “reflection in action”, the latter out of
purposeful “reflection on action”.
A dual conception of reflective thought has recently been
expanded to include two additional elements. Occupational
therapist and education theorist Anne Kinsella43 has argued
that there is a “pre-reflective and receptive” stance in which
one human, unconstrained by the means of language, rec-
ognizes another human affectively and precognitively, and,
as well, a stance of “reflexivity”. Reflexivity involves “the
act of interrogating interpretive systems”; it assumes that
meaning-making is a collective endeavor influenced by his-
torical conditions and contexts. This is more far-reaching than
the internal and individual contemplation usually equated
with reflective thought. In a spirit of reflexivity, we have
considered and analyzed the phenomenon of euthanasia.
Our analyses and investigations of both practical and
theoretical issues raised by euthanasia, have culminated in
a profound belief that euthanasia is harmful to individuals,
especially vulnerable people, physicians, the institutions of
law and medicine, and society, and that the healing role of
physicians and euthanasia are simply not miscible; indeed,
they are antithetical.
Further information
Readers who require more detailed information concerning
the reference list and cited texts should contact the corres-
ponding author by email.
Disclosure
The authors report no conflict of interest in this work.
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Dominant conceptions of professional knowledge appear to have largely forgotten Aristotle’s conception of phronesis and its place in considerations of what it means to know in professional life. Aristotle draws attention to phronesis as a form of reflective practical wisdom that complements techne, technically oriented approaches, and episteme, scientifically oriented approaches, in considerations of what it might mean to develop and enact professional knowledge.