Alongside access to high quality care and treatment, mentally competent, terminally ill adults should have the choice of an assisted death, within strict legal safeguards, if they feel their suffering has become unbearable.
An assisted death is where a doctor prescribes a life-ending dose of medication to a mentally competent, terminally ill adult at their request and subject to safeguards, and the patient then chooses to administer the medication themselves.
At present Parliament is out of step with public opinion. The 2007 British Social Attitudes Report found that four out of five people in Britain believe that the law should allow a doctor to end someone's life at the person's request if they have an incurable and painful illness from which they will die.
Sadly the law at the moment is not working. Other countries have given terminally ill people the choice to end their suffering if it becomes unbearable, and research shows that a safeguarded and regulated approach to end-of-life decision making gives greater protection to vulnerable people, not less.
It’s time to change the law. Act now to make your voice heard so that people do not have to suffer unnecessarily against their wishes.
























