UPDATE: Draft euthanasia bill tabled in Senate.
A draft bill has been tabled in the Senate, that would legalise euthanasia for people dying of terminal diseases.
The campaign behind the bill is about ‘dying with dignity’, and would make it possible for doctor’s to administer euthanasia – as long as two doctors and a psychiatrist has signed off the drug.
Greens health spokesman Senator Richard Di Natale tabled the bill, and said that opinion polls had shown there was 80 per cent support for the reform.
Previously, Peter Short wrote about his experiences on Mamamia…
My story is simple. I was diagnosed with oesophageal cancer five years ago and made a full recovery. Or so I thought.
On 28 January this year, my 57th birthday, I was told it had returned – terminally. At the time of writing, I have a prognosis of five months. I am hoping for a bit more than that, but it is clear I will die within months.
And I will die at the time I select. I respect those who believe it is better to hold on until the very end, whatever suffering that entails. Both paths are dignified. What is undignified is not having the choice.
I have become intimately aware of the debate raging around physician-assisted death and the right for people to choose the timing. Recently, Dr Rodney Syme, in The Age and elsewhere, has declared he has, in contravention to laws that should be changed, helped many terminally ill people end their lives.
Dr Syme is taking risks as he fights for decent and enlightened change. His advocacy has inspired me.
Dr Syme has, for the first time, admitted he gave a man called Steve Guest the drug Nembutal and the information on how to use it to end his life about 10 years ago. The case has eerie parallels for me. I have the same cancer Mr Guest suffered, and I even had a holiday house at Point Lonsdale, where he lived.