NY releases rules for doctor-assisted patient suicide — as critics cry of 'new and frightening era'

These are guidelines that could be life-threatening!

New York’s health department has unveiled regulations for the state’s contentious new doctor-assisted suicide legislation. Critics argue that this marks the beginning of a “new and frightening era,” where individuals may be perceived as disposable by the government and corporations.

The regulations are designed to enforce stringent criteria for patients choosing to “self-administer” life-ending medications. This includes a requirement for two verbal requests and a mandatory waiting period.

However, both the regulations and the broader medical euthanasia law—which is set to take effect on August 5 and is anticipated to face legal challenges—have faced criticism. New York Archdiocese Archbishop Ronald Hicks has denounced them as part of an emerging “throwaway culture” that undervalues life.

“Tragically, the notion that every life is valuable and worthy of care, protection, and dignity is fading from our society,” Hicks expressed in a recent column for the Catholic Journal First Things, as well as a segment on the Catholic Faith Network.

This legislation effectively transforms New York into an enhanced version of “Doctor Death”—the moniker given to the late Dr. Jack Kevorkian. Kevorkian was known for his pioneering efforts in assisting patients to end their lives during the 1990s, becoming a prominent figure in the death with dignity movement.

But whereas Kevorkian skirted the law, New York is now one of 13 states plus the District of Columbia — nearly all liberal blue jurisdictions — that officially approved doctor-assisted suicide.

Supporters have branded the law with a euphemism: “Medical Aid in Dying” or MAID.

The law allows terminally ill New Yorkers with less than six months to live to make a voluntary, informed decision to request medication to end their lives via suicide.

Hicks said the law presents a dangerous “slippery slope,” expressing concern it could expand from covering patients with incurable illness to other maladies such as chronic or mental illness or people with disabilities.

He cited the expansion of the doctor-assisted law in Canada as example that the policy could be expanded to cover a huge swath of people who are sick but not incurably ill.

“It is the latest assault on human life, the next step toward a complete throwaway mentality,” the Archbishop said.

“When this law becomes effective, a new and frightening era begins in New York. How long before this so-called compassion” for the terminally ill’ evolves… into an expectation to kill oneself for all sorts of vulnerable individuals, including those with disabilities, the elderly, and those in impoverished and medically underserved communities?”

He worried that government agencies or insurance companies might determine that patients are expensive and therefore expendable and “begin to influence or even dictate end-of-life decisions.”

Advances in palliative or hospice care used in facilities such as the Catholic Calvary hospital in The Bronx make doctor-assisted suicide unnecessary, Hicks asserted.

The American Medical Society opposes doctor-assisted suicide as “fundamentally incompatible with the physician’s role as healer, would be difficult or impossible to control, and would pose serious societal risks.”

But the New York State Medical Society backs MAID.

Under the law, the ill patient must “self-administer” the suicidal medication prescribed by a doctor.

“A patient may use a tool or assistive device to help self-administer the medication, but the patient must perform a final, physical act to self-administer it. The medication may not be administered by a person other than the patient,” the rules say.

The regulations don’t specify what drugs can be used for doctor assisted suicide.

Under the law, the “underlying terminal illness or condition” of the patient must be listed as the cause of death, not the suicide drugs.

The rules pushed by state health officials are:

  • The patient must make an verbal request requesting doctor-assisted suicide, recorded by video or audio as well as a signed, written request with two witnesses.
  • A mandatory mental health evaluation of the patient must be done by a psychologist or psychiatrist to determine decision-making capacity.
  • The attending doctor and a consulting physician must agree that the patient has a terminal illness and a decision-making capacity.
  • A mandatory waiting period of five days between when a prescription is written and filled.
  • A prohibition against anyone who may benefit financially from the death of a patient from serving as a witness or an interpreter for the patient.
  • A requirement that the attending doctor fully inform the patient of feasible alternatives and appropriate treatment options, including palliative care and hospice care.

Participation in medical aid in dying is voluntary. No physician, pharmacist, other healthcare provider or other person shall be subject to liability, penalty, or disciplinary action for refusing to participate in prescribing suicide drugs.

A doctor or other healthcare provider who declines to honor a patient’s request for suicide drugs must arrange for transfer of the patient.

State Health Commissioner Dr. James McDonald said MAID addresses “deeply personal decisions” of patients facing terminal illness and their loves ones.

“The Department is committed to implementing the law thoughtfully and responsibly. As the effective date approaches, it is important that New Yorkers have the opportunity to review and understand measures designed to provide dignity and comfort at the end of life.”

Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Catholic, insisted she and lawmakers “made the right decision” by approving doctor-assisted suicide when approving the law on Feb. 6.

“Our state will always stand firm in safeguarding New Yorkers’ freedoms and right to bodily autonomy, which includes the right for the terminally ill to peacefully and comfortably end their lives with dignity and compassion,” Hochul said.

Se recalled the pain of watching her mother suffer from ALS.

“New Yorkers deserve the choice to endure less suffering, not by shortening their lives, but by shortening their deaths — I firmly believe we made the right decision,” Hochul said.

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