• Bmc Med · Dec 2017

    Advice and care for patients who die by voluntarily stopping eating and drinking is not assisted suicide.

    • Andrew McGee and Franklin G Miller.
    • Australian Centre for Health Law Research, Faculty of Law, Queensland University of Technology, 2 George St, Brisbane, Qld, 4001, Australia. a.mcgee@qut.edu.au.
    • Bmc Med. 2017 Dec 27; 15 (1): 222.

    BackgroundA competent patient has the right to refuse foods and fluids even if the patient will die. The exercise of this right, known as voluntarily stopping eating and drinking (VSED), is sometimes proposed as an alternative to physician assisted suicide. However, there is ethical and legal uncertainty about physician involvement in VSED. Are physicians advising of this option, or making patients comfortable while they undertake VSED, assisting suicide? This paper attempts to resolve this ethical and legal uncertainty.DiscussionThe standard approach to resolving this conundrum has been to determine whether VSED itself is suicide. Those who claim that VSED is suicide invariably claim that physician involvement in VSED amounts to assisting suicide. Those who claim that VSED is not suicide claim that physician involvement in VSED does not amount to assisting suicide. We reject this standard approach.ConclusionWe instead argue that, even if VSED is classified as a kind of suicide, physician involvement in VSED is not a form of assisted suicide. Physician involvement in VSED does not therefore fall within legal provisions that prohibit VSED.

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