• Palliative medicine · Apr 2014

    Why do older people oppose physician-assisted dying? A qualitative study.

    • Phillipa J Malpas, Maria K R Wilson, Nicola Rae, and Malcolm Johnson.
    • 1Department of Psychological Medicine, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
    • Palliat Med. 2014 Apr 1;28(4):353-9.

    BackgroundPhysician-assisted dying at the end of life has become a significant issue of public discussion. While legally available in a number of countries and jurisdictions, it remains controversial and illegal in New Zealand.AimThe study aimed to explore the reasons some healthy older New Zealanders oppose physician-assisted dying in order to inform current debate.DesignRecorded interviews were transcribed and analysed by the authors after some edits had been made by respondents.Setting/ParticipantsIn all, 11 older participants (over 65 years) who responded to advertisements placed in Grey Power magazines and a University of Auckland email list were interviewed for around 1 h and asked a number of open-ended questions.ResultsFour central themes opposing physician-assisted dying were identified from the interviews: one's personal experience with health care and dying and death, religious reasoning and beliefs, slippery slope worries and concern about potential abuses if physician-assisted dying were legalised.ConclusionsAn important finding of the study suggests that how some older individuals think about physician-assisted dying is strongly influenced by their past experiences of dying and death. While some participants had witnessed good, well-managed dying and death experiences which confirmed for them the view that physician-assisted dying was unnecessary, those who had witnessed poor dying and death experiences opposed physician-assisted dying on the grounds that such practices could come to be abused by others.

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