New assisted-suicide law lets doctors help dying Californians end their lives
Now, the
If it comes down to it, the retired notary public will take advantage of a new state law that begins Thursday allowing doctors to prescribe lethal doses of drugs to hasten death. She'll grab control of her fate and spare her adult son and other loved ones the anguish of witnessing what threatens to be an unpleasant end.
"My mother died a horrible death," said Etzler, 67, who was diagnosed with Stage 4 breast cancer in January and, without the treatment she receives, was given six months to a year to live. "I remember her pain. I don't want my son and friends to see me suffer. If there's an option to help you end your life with dignity, that's what I'll do."
Etzler and others will now have that choice under the state's End of Life Option Act, which allows physicians to prescribe life-ending medication to mentally competent adults with six months or less to live.
The controversial legislation is modeled on
Maynard's family pleaded with Gov.
Brown, a former Jesuit seminary student who struggled with the decision, signed Assembly Bill 15 after a period of reflection.
"I do not know what I would do if I were dying in prolonged and excruciating pain," he said. "I am certain, however, that it would be a comfort to be able to consider the options afforded by this bill. And I wouldn't deny that right to others."
The idea, which is opposed by the
Some fear it will cause the early death of vulnerable people while diminishing the use of palliative services. Others oppose it on moral or religious grounds, saying it undermines the sanctity of life. In addition, some doctors maintain it's a violation of their professional duties.
"It fills me with great sadness that people feel this is somehow their best option," said Bishop
But advocates say the law will provide much-needed relief for people suffering incurable diseases that have sapped enjoyment from their lives.
"These people are terminally ill," said Maynard's widower,
Statistics from
Based on participation rates in
The number could be lower because
"It's a little bit tricky," Cain said. "What has been true in
Local family members said the case of
Zlotnick, who died in 2014 at age 63, developed such a tolerance for pain medication that doctors had to continually increase his dosage of morphine and other drugs as he battled metastatic prostate cancer. The lifelong athlete considered moving to
Despite his struggle, Zlotnick didn't make it. Sometime after
"He felt so bad," said his wife,
After her husband's death, Lebell and her son, now a college freshman, went to
A version of the original bill passed during a special session of the Assembly and was signed by the governor in October. By law, it couldn't take effect until 90 days after the end of the session on
"There are those who say every family is one bad death away from needing this bill," Lebell said. "I believe it to be true."
To qualify under the law, a patient must be at least 18 years old and terminally ill with no more than six months to live. Two separate requests must be made to a doctor, at least 15 days apart, with a third request in writing.
The doctor must determine the patient has the mental capacity to ask for the drugs and discuss alternatives such as pain control. That physician must refer the patient to a second doctor to confirm the diagnosis and determine mental competence.
Two witnesses, including one non-family member, must attest to the voluntary request for life-ending drugs. Patients with dementia or severe Alzheimer's disease likely would be precluded.
If both physicians sign off, the original doctor writes a prescription, likely for secobarbital, sold under the brand name Seconal, which the patient may fill at a pharmacy. A fatal dosage is around 90 capsules. Patients can get help emptying capsules into a liquid such as juice but must be able to drink the lethal cocktail on their own.
Within minutes, they will fall asleep and die soon after. Death certificates will list the cause as the underlying illness, not suicide. Most are expected to end their lives at home. A doctor need not be present.
The deaths will be recorded and tracked by the state
It's unclear if insurance companies will pay for Seconal, which skyrocketed to about
Dr.
In
"A lot of people just like having it available," said Pocekay. "They like that they are not totally at the mercy of their disease."
He speaks from experience. Pocekay was prescribed morphine years ago while battling non-Hotchkins lymphoma and estimated at one point he had enough to kill himself if symptoms worsened. Knowing he could do it "lifted the load" off dying, he said.
"It was just the idea," Pocekay said. "Feeling like I had control over the last few days if it got bad."
The
Although a number of health care providers back the new law, doctors are not required to prescribe life-ending drugs and pharmacies are not required to sell them. Identifying beforehand who will support the option will help avoid a scramble at the end, Pocekay said. He vowed to come out of retirement if there's a shortage of willing doctors.
"I have always been supportive of this idea," Pocekay said. "To me, it seems natural to interpret the Hippocratic oath as not just to prevent death at all costs but to prevent suffering at all costs."
To that end, Dr.
"Our goal is to minimize the need for doctor-assisted suicide," Johanson said. "We seek pain management so patients can pass naturally."
However, Memorial doctors will be barred from helping patients trigger their own deaths, referring them instead to someone outside the St. Joseph system, Johanson said.
Meanwhile, Etzler said she'll turn to her oncologist for a prescription if the cancer that has metastasized into her bones gets worse.
She doesn't want to die. Etzler works out at a gym, and between chemotherapy treatments hikes the scenic
But she doesn't see the point of living in extreme pain and is grateful for a dignified way to die.
"It's a big commitment to play God with yourself," said Etzler. "I might find it a blessing just to check out."
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