From the BBC:
“Assisted dying: Australian
cancer patient first to use new law”
An Australian woman with terminal
cancer has become the first person to end their life under new assisted dying
laws, a charity says. Kerry Robertson, 61, died at a nursing home in the state
of Victoria in July. She was granted permission to use the controversial
legislation - which exists only in Victoria but is being considered in other
states - after a 26-day approval process. Her family said she was able to have
"the empowered death that she wanted". Ms Robertson was diagnosed
with breast cancer in 2010, and it later spread to her bones, lungs, brain and
liver. She decided to stop chemotherapy and radiation treatment in March after
the side effects and pain became "intolerable", her family said. Victoria's
legislation, which came into effect in June, allows terminally ill patients who
meet certain requirements the right to access lethal drugs. "We were beside her, David Bowie playing
in the background, surrounded by love, with final words spoken, simple and
dignified," said her daughter, Nicole Robertson, in a statement released
by charity Go Gentle Australia. "To me that is the greatest part: the
knowledge that we did everything we could to make her happy in life and
comfortable in death."
Who is eligible?
The state's law has 68 safeguards
and is designed for people who are in severe pain. It requires the person to
make three requests to end their life to specially trained doctors. The person
must be aged at least 18 and have less than six months to live. The bill was
passed in 2017 after more than 100 hours of parliamentary debate that deeply
divided state lawmakers. Ms Robertson's family said she
had applied to utilise the legislation on the day it came into effect in June. Western
Australia and Queensland are considering similar laws. In 1995, Australia's
Northern Territory introduced the world's first voluntary euthanasia law, but
it was overturned by federal authorities in Canberra eight months later. The
federal government does not have the same power over states. Laws allowing terminally ill patients to
legally end their lives with a doctor's supervision have been passed in
countries including Canada, the Netherlands and Belgium.
^ I know this is a sensitive
topic, but I hope that the different Australian States and the Australian
Federal Government (for the Australian Territories) will make assisted-dying
legal. Assisted-dying should be legal everywhere for the terminally-ill that
wish to use it. As long as there are different safe-guards and protocols to be
followed and that are strictly followed then this is a humane way to ease the
suffering of the people who want to use it. ^
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