Life Legal Defense Foundation (LLDF) attorneys
appeared in court last week to challenge California’s assisted suicide law. They filed the lawsuit one year ago, shortly
before the ‘End of Life Option Act’ went into effect. Their opponents, California Attorney General
Xavier Becerra and the Director of the California Department of Public Health,
filed a motion to dismiss the case. The
judge denied the motion to dismiss … which means the case moves forward!
The ‘End of Life Option Act’ strips
vital legal protections from patients who have been diagnosed with a terminal
illness. The Act does not require
patients seeking so-called “aid-in-dying” drugs to undergo a mental health
evaluation … even though the majority of individuals who receive a terminal
diagnosis experience depression, anxiety, and other treatable mental health
conditions that could lead them to seek suicide.
LLDF is also concerned that the
assisted suicide law has encouraged some physicians to set up niche clinics
that only dispense prescriptions for lethal drugs. These physicians do not have any meaningful relationships
with their patients apart from facilitating their deaths. Moreover, there have been numerous cases of individuals
who have long outlived their ‘terminal diagnoses.’
State-sanctioned suicide sends the
message that some lives are not worth living. California law now pits the financial
interests of health care providers … especially in cases where the provider and
insurer are the same entity … against the needs of patients. There have been cases where insurance
companies will pay for lethal drugs but not for life-prolonging treatment.
Listen: The ‘End of Life Option Act’
is a dangerous law that exposes vulnerable individuals to direct and indirect pressure
to commit suicide. LLDF represents hundreds
of physicians who are committed to walking through life’s challenges as
advocates for their patients, yet who are concerned that those patients could
succumb to pressure from family, insurers, and other health care providers to
cut their lives short. The Executive
Director for LLDF, Alexandra Snyder, said, “Today’s ruling is confirmation that
our claims have merit and deserve a fair hearing.”
Rev.
Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain
(Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor,
Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel
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