If only Margaret Drabble’s want (When it truly is time to go, let me go, with a whisky and a pill, two January) could be realised, but not only for the previous, despite the fact that that is now my individual, selfish concern. My son was forced to starve himself to death two and a half years in the past, a lengthy, drawn-out procedure which took determination and courage and which was particularly harrowing for his loved ones. He had suffered from a notably aggressive form of MS for numerous many years, a illness which is progressive and incurable. When he could no longer move himself from his bed to his wheelchair he made the decision that we had all had ample.
His doctor was sympathetic but could do nothing at all to support and it was too late to get Seamus to Switzerland had he not wished, anyway, to die in his own bed. Margaret Drabble is correct that we deal with individuals with much less humanity than we do our animals. I had been in a position to put a much-loved dog out of her suffering a number of months just before I had to observe my son finish his own lifestyle. It would surely be a signal of an adult and civilised society to be capable to do for our loved ones what we can do for our pets.
Primrose Kirkman
Warminster, Wiltshire
• Margaret Drabble says that, when it comes to euthanasia, “the politicians will not allow us, the bishops will not allow us and the wellness specialists are not allowed to allow us”. We can not communicate for politicians or bishops, but we can say that the vast majority of practising doctors have no want to be licensed by law to destroy their patients or to provide them with the means to kill themselves. That is not why we became medical doctors, and the suggestion that it is only the law that is avoiding us from practising euthanasia is entirely groundless.
Ms Drabble trundles out the nicely-worn argument that “you would not allow a dog endure”. She seems unaware that folks often consider their pets to be place down for other causes than suffering. Her idealised image of dying with “a great glass of whisky and a pleasing pill” might appeal to the properly-heeled and self-possessed, but as doctors we have to care for a considerably wider variety of individuals, several of them vulnerable. We have laws to safeguard us, specifically individuals amongst us who are significantly less able to communicate up for themselves, not to oblige the strong-willed and self-assured.
Dr Idris Baker Consultant in palliative medicine, Prof Rob George Vice-president, Association for Palliative Medication
• Margaret Drabble suggests that the healthcare occupation will not be permitted to be concerned in assisted dying even however the bulk of the public would now like to see this available to people who are terminally unwell. In reality the BMA (which represents all Uk physicians) manufactured binding policy towards assisted dying at its recent AGM. Given the significance of the concern, the RCGP and RCN have previously surveyed their wider membership, but the BMA has not. Why is this so on a topic of this kind of vital importance? If the bulk of medical doctors are without a doubt towards the idea then the BMA’s place will be strengthened. If the majority are neutral or in favour of assisted dying then it is only honest that this reality is produced identified to the wider public.
Interestingly, a current poll of GPs (Pulse, twenty November 2013) located that only 31% of respondents felt that their own Royal University need to be opposed to legalisation of assisted dying.
Dr David Wrigley Carnforth, Lancashire, Dr Jacky Davis London
• Margaret Drabble certainly did not study Chris Huhne’s post (An individual demands to fight the selfish, short-sighted outdated, 23 December) that was heavily criticised (Letters, 27 December). How can a cost-free choice concerning euthanasia be arrived at in the context of deep-seated age discrimination towards older men and women, as exemplified by Huhne? While commentators this kind of as him falsely accuse the older population of getting a burden on the youthful, it is impossible to have a balanced discussion about the right to die. Contrary to Margaret Drabble’s no doubt sincere wish, legal euthanasia would not grant every single particular person the electrical power to choose, because that freedom would be topic to societal and possibly household pressures. Prior to we debate euthanasia, let’s abolish age discrimination.
Alan Walker
Professor of social policy and social gerontology, University of Sheffield
• Dignity in dying, of course. But what about dignity in residing? This issue affects not just the frail elderly, but any person whose destiny is to turn out to be very previous or chronically infirm, and of course their beleaguered families and amateur carers. Margaret Drabble is appropriate that sections of the NHS fail hopelessly to recognize the ideal interests of older people. It’s also accurate that the way in which help is delivered to elderly men and women in their personal houses is a scandal, and that much of the tragedy of dementia is hidden, barely comprehended outside the walls of care residences. The whisky-and-pill alternative is of no service to most of people outdated and ailing, no matter what the ethical rights and wrongs. The time is in no way right – until finally it is, and then it truly is too late for informed consent.
But the peace of mind of realizing that when we need dignified care and support, it truly is there, and proportionate, and reasonably priced, and will take account of the particular demands of ageing men and women – now that would be an end well worth campaigning for.
Dr Gill Cookson
Castleton, North Yorkshire
• I agreed with every thing Margaret Drabble explained in her write-up. I am now 75, so outdated age is near up and personal. From the mid-1990s to 2005 I was nurse, carer and mourner for my father, my sister-in-law, my brother-in-law and my beloved husband. I noticed (and felt) what dementia, cancer and heart difficulties do to otherwise robust and balanced individuals. Their ultimate months were agonizing and undignified, and I had not the strength of mind or character to assist them out of a life which had become a burden. I come to feel that there is a time to die, and if we are kept alive beyond that level we ought to be able to say when sufficient is adequate. Vegetative breathing is not living.
Diana Lord
Cranfield, Bedfordshire
• I was delighted to go through Margaret Drabble’s polemic on doctor assisted suicide in today’s Guardian. It is a welcome commence to the 12 months 2014.
I would not agree with every single suggestion she helps make, but she raises the dilemma that the existing cruel and anachronistic law poses. A modify in this law is supported by a excellent majority of the population but is constantly blocked by a religious minority, by fearful politicians and, most sadly, by several members of the so-named caring profession of medicine.
Most of the fears raised by the opponents of modify have been proven to be unwarranted. In those jurisdictions in which assisted suicide is legal, the numbers searching for the facility remain small. The main result is the enhanced comfort and relief given to individuals with progressive disorders who would know that if palliative care did not eliminate unacceptable struggling (as is not uncommon), the final way out of the circumstance was obtainable. The fact that the selection was possible would probably delay proceeding with excessive choices such as opting to go to Switzerland whilst it is still achievable.
Offered my very own disability, a change in the law in 2014 would be the best existing that I could be given, even although it is not essential however.
Dr Clive Tonks
London
• At final, an individual who speaks my language! Nearing 80 and with failing faculties, I wish rational suicide (see the web site of the Society for Previous Age Rational Suicide) could be acknowledged as a wise step to stay away from one’s personal decline into helplessness and heartbreaking fear for one’s young children. But the means of release are difficult to come by.
1 pal wrote: “Personally, I consider that every person at the age of 75 ought to be issued with a small velvet box with the required pill for them to be able to use when they want.” What a great notion!
Of course, giving every person this kind of a pill would offend some mightily, but I do consider we ought to be issued with a prescription to be “cashed” without concerns when we consider the time is proper. This would stay away from the horrible heart-searching which physicians have to go via for each and each would-be suicide who asks for their help. My very own GP objects strongly to getting thought of as “medical doctor death” with the electrical power to dispense this kind of tablets.
Marion Bolton
Middlesbrough
• I agree wholeheartedly with Margaret Drabble that the individual’s wishes should be paramount when it comes to the approach and timing of one’s death. But several men and women discover that, when the moment of approaching death really comes, one thing in them – be it their thoughts, their body, or their spirit – seems to urge them to hang on. The moment passes and they wander into some variety of limbo. Then a half-life drags on for months or many years, with all its cost for the well being and care providers, not to mention household and close friends.
What can we do to consider our possibility to die when it presents itself? I believe there are several items we can do. Firstly, we can total an advance directive (also identified as advance decision), go over it with our loved ones and friends, have it countersigned by our GP, and lodge it with a solicitor. Secondly, we can deliver this intention into general conversation, so that those about us get utilised to the reality that at some stage we might refuse health-related intervention, and may inquire their assistance in performing so. Lastly, we can maintain our intention in the forefront of our personal minds, practise the phrases to be said at the essential stage, and put together ourselves to be firm and clear when the time comes.
Alison Leonard
Chester
• Margaret Drabble rightly raises the fraught issue of the impact of medication on old age, and how it can lead to artificial prolongation of existence when this may possibly not be to the best (or even any) advantage for those concerned. In that light, it is challenging to realize why she wishes to replace one artificial procedure with another, the taking of one’s own life using an suitable drug.
Both factors of this debate would advantage from taking artificiality out of the equation totally, and knowing better the organic end-of-existence processes that our bodies go by way of. In undertaking so, we can find out to greater define what is proper and valid health care intervention to help with dealing with these, and also prepare people for their very own death with out the terrors that Ms Drabble highlights that outcome from artificial intervention. Medication and politicians seem to be remarkably reluctant to give this the significant attention it deserves.
The reasoning provided by Ms Drabble for wishing a alter in the law appear also to highlight one particular of the major causes why it ought to not be transformed. The way in which she experiences and observes negative reactions to elderly people suggests to her that she and other folks be given a legal way of dealing with this by currently being able to pick to die. This is a horrible damning of how society views its elderly members. Changing the law to permit folks to consider their own lives will only make this worse, and Ms Drabble’s see appears to reinforce the situation that any such law could drive men and women to make a decision that is itself artificial.
Christopher Awre
Hull
• On my 81st birthday, I read with heartfelt recognition Margaret Drabble’s article. For some, a lengthy existence, irrespective of the top quality of that daily life, could be acceptable, even welcomed. For others it could effectively be a nightmare of helpless indignity. With Drabble, I truly feel the option must be mine and mine alone. If I knew with certainty that I could phase out of lifestyle when I wished, I may well view the years ahead with pleasure rather than apprehension.
BJ Cairns
London
• The New Year’s gift from which an ageing population would most benefit is not “the proper to die” as Margaret Drabble suggests, but an end to the damaging ageism that however her write-up promotes.
Tricia Cusack
Birmingham
• Margaret Drabble very rightly reminds us of the significance of selection when it comes to dying, but probably misses the opportunity to highlight the importance of option when it comes to the act of residing for older men and women. Escalating quantities of loneliness, poverty, alcohol and prescription abuse, and a sense of purposelessness, are more and more the encounter of many older folks, and would indicate a stark absence of choice. It could be recommended that a decent quality of life, and a sense of wellbeing, in the course of an older person’s “final decade”, as Margaret Drabble puts it, ought to be a fundamental right, and our concern should target on why this is not appropriately existing appropriate up to the point of dying. Probably our attention will be jolted by the big boost in the numbers of us soon to be arriving at old age.
Jon Bowra
Assistant director, Residing Properly Dying Nicely
• I enjoyed Margaret Drabble’s post, and I agree about the widespread worry of not being permitted to die in peace. I would like to make a tiny correction about “their archaic Hippocratic oath”. This was go through out to us when we certified in medication in 1957, obviously stating that “thou shalt not destroy, but need’st not strive officiously to maintain alive”. In individuals days death was often eased by the gradual, gentle readjustment of the dosage of medicines with the agreement of the family. This is now almost unattainable with the very true threat of misunderstanding and litigation. What we aimed for was to cure often, to relieve often and to comfort usually.
Patricia Tomlinson
Retired GP, Alton, Hampshire
Humanity and dignity at the finish of our lives | @guardianletters
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