Voici un résumé de la conférence donnée par le Dr Michael Irwin, le 16 avril 2019 au Centre Cornerstone à Brighton and Hove:

Of everything that someone can ever experience, nothing is really more overwhelming than the thought of one’s death.  Most people try to keep this final event out of their minds for as long as possible, but, while we should not have a morbid preoccupation with death, I believe everybody, especially after they have retired, should plan ahead, carefully considering, in the hope that they will have a choice, how they might want to die.  And, equally important, they should be willing to talk about this subject (especially when they are relatively healthy) with their nearest relatives and close friends – after all, it is a collective destiny for all of us who live on this tiny planet, rushing through this vast Universe.

Society gives copious advice on how to bring a baby into this world.  Why do we not provide equal guidance, and perhaps even greater assistance, about how we can safely leave this existence?  While we generally have a very good palliative care system throughout the UK – which can provide one form of « assisted dying » – which will be adequate for many people, there are many other individuals who do not want to live « to the bitter end ».  Surely most thoughtful people would prefer to die relatively comfortably of their final medical conditions rather than die from the often unpleasant side-effects or complications of their final treatments?  From my own knowledge, very few retired doctors – like myself – cling to life against all the odds, undergoing unrealistic treatment.

I do not want my family and best friends remembering me as an increasingly decrepit person, especially if I become more and more dependent on others, even those who love me, for my basic needs.

In 1991, Huib Drion, a former Dutch Supreme Court judge, stated that he thought « many old people would find great reassurance if they could have a means to end their lives in an acceptable manner at a moment that to them appears suitable », and he proposed that those who were 75 years and older should have access to such a suicide pill – and so the « Drion pill » became a popular concept at that time.  This talk will be developing the concept of the possibility of a legalized Old Age Rational Suicide from the age of ninety onwards (however, as it is reckoned that one in three people, in the UK today, will reach their 100th birthday, perhaps this figure will have to be raised later this century?)..

Being born in 1931, and still alive, means that I am now past my sell-by date.  Like everyone else, I did not ask to be born.  Like everyone else, I have no idea why I am presently living on Earth (or should we not call it « Water » as this substance covers about seventy percent of the surface of our planet?).  There is no recovery from being very old.  When one is young, living to a ripe old age would always seem to be a cause for celebration.  But, many very elderly people live in fear of how they will endure it as the extra years will often become more of a curse than a blessing.  It is a harsh reality that, once someone reaches ninety today, their futures will be relatively short.  Dying soon after getting to ninety, still in fair control of my life and faculties, may mean sacrificing a very modest period of simple existence, but at least I will be spared the humiliation of a progressively deteriorating body.

Nowadays, many of us die slowly, with different parts of our bodies breaking down at varying rates.  My father died at ninety, and my mother at ninety-five – so, regarding longevity, I have good genes.  But, both of them, like many other elderly individuals, experienced several years of chronic ill-health before they finally died.  My main medical problems, at present, are increasingly difficulty in walking (due to a lower spine injury sustained in a major car accident in 2007), controlled hypertension (which, even when well treated, predisposes me to a heart attack or a stroke), gout, and a gradual dwindling energy.  Ageing is beginning to diminish me slowly.  In fact, when my death does come, it will take away only part of my original adult self (of course, the « original me » fortunately lives on in the genes existing in my three children and my eight grandchildren – my evolutionary legacy).

During the 1980s, when I was the Medical Director of the United Nations, in New York, I became aware of Living Wills (now, in the UK, known as Advance Decisions), and I have had such a document (regularly revised) for myself since those days.  Thus, if I lose my mental faculties, my relatives will know the degree of medical care that I would want to receive (essentially, none!).

Soon after I retired back to the UK in 1993, I became active in the Voluntary Euthanasia Society, becoming its Chairman in 1996 (until 1999) and again in 2001 (until 2003).  Then, I began campaigning to change the law in this country « to make it legal for a competent adult, who is suffering unbearably from an incurable illness, to receive medical help to die at their own considered and persistent request ».  Unfortunately, soon after the VES was reorganized as Dignity in Dying, in 2005, it was decided to limit its objective to only providing such assistance for those who are « terminally ill » (that is, expected to die within six months).  But, mainly because of strong opposition from religious organizations and, to a lesser extent, from the « medical establishment » and various disability groups, even this limited objective is unlikely to happen soon in the UK.

Fortunately, it is important to realize that competent, suffering British adults, especially when they become ninety, do have access to a doctor-assisted suicide – it just happens to be offshore at present, in Switzerland, where organizations such as Dignitas (in Zurich) and Lifecircle (near Basel) exist.  Some people are naturally concerned about the cost involved in travelling to Switzerland for a doctor-assisted suicide.  In general terms, the total expense (for the travel and hotel costs; the fees to the Swiss doctors and those handling the actual suicide; and the necessary cremation which happens in Switzerland) is about £10,000 – but, it must be remembered that a cremation, in the UK, can cost at least a third of this sum.  Since 2005, I have accompanied five determined individuals to this country to witness them end their lives there (only one was terminally-ill).

Surely the decision to decide, say, from the age of ninety onwards, that enough is enough, and avoiding further suffering, to have a dignified death is the ultimate human right for all very elderly, mentally competent individuals.  They have satisfactorily completed their lives.

Unfortunately, nowadays, death for the very elderly is rarely dignified, especially for those who die in hospitals or care homes where their lives are often depersonalized, shaped by rules and regulations.  Therefore, on December 10, 2009 (a date annually observed globally as Human Rights Day), assisted by Angela Farmer, Nan Maitland, and Liz Nichols, I founded the Society for Old Age Rational Suicide (SOARS).  Our logo was the derelict West Pier in Brighton and Hove, once a place of great excitement and pleasure (like so many elderly people!).

Supporting the rationale for SOARS was an April 29, 2002 statement from the European Court of Human Rights which noted that, « In an era of growing medical sophistication, combined with longer life expectancies, many people are concerned that they should not be forced to linger on in old age or in states of advanced physical or mental decrepitude which conflict with strongly held ideas of self and personal identity ».

(On February 28, 2011, I travelled to Switzerland with Nan Maitland and Liz Nichols.  Nan, in her late eighties, was increasingly suffering from extensive osteoarthritis.  It was amazing to see how someone, determined to die, can be so relaxed.  For example, about twenty minutes before she drank the lethal nembutal solution, Nan asked Liz for a nail file as the edge of one of her fingernails was « rather sharp » (fortunately, Liz had a file).  Then, I sat next to Nan prepared to offer her some sweet chocolate to take, if required, when she had drunk the rather bitter nembutal – but, she did not want this (« it is not too bad » were her final words).

Public opinion, in the UK, generally agrees with the possibility of old age rational suicide.  In July 2010, an ICM Direct national poll, commissioned by SOARS, showed that 67%, of the 1,009 adults surveyed, supported this.  In March 2011, another national ICM Direct poll, of 1,008 individuals, revealed that 66% were in agreement.  And, in March 2013, a further national poll, of 1,002 adults, showed that 70% of those interviewed agreed with the idea of old age rational suicide.

In April 2016, following an extensive consultation among its members, it was decided that there should be a broadening of its objectives, and so SOARS was renamed as My Death My Decision – with its main objective being « To campaign for a change in the law in the UK to allow medical assistance to die to be given to mentally competent adults, with incurable health problems that result in their perceived quality of life falling permanently below the level they are able to accept, providing this is their own persistent request (most of the people who the proposed change in law will apply to will be relatively elderly, feeling that their life is complete) ».

Today, doctor-assisted suicide and/or voluntary euthanasia is legally possible in Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and Switzerland for the terminally-ill, the severely disabled and the very elderly with medical problems (elsewhere, such as in several US States, only those who are terminally-ill can be helped this way).  Are we so different to the Dutch or the Swiss?  Of course, we are not.  But, unfortunately, I do not see the UK legalizing assisted dying (apart from good palliative care) for the very old for several decades.

For old age rational suicide to become legalized, for those who have reached ninety, it will be essential to have very strict safeguards.  For this option to be possible, these will include:

Two doctors (one being a consultant geriatrician) agreeing that the individual is mentally competent, and has carefully considered all the possible other options

An interview with an independent legal expert, experienced in family matters, to ensure that they are acting on their own free will, and not being pressured by relatives, or others, to seek this medical solution.

A waiting period of at least two months between a written request being made and the necessary medication being provided (which must be taken in the presence of an experienced healthcare professional).

Finally, a report must be provided to a central government office which is signed by all those involved.

Because I have been so impressed from my own very personal experiences, by what is possible today in Switzerland, this is where I will go when I have passed the ninety threshold, and I am burdened with various medical problems – if I have not already died suddenly, or had need to rely upon my Advance Decision, before that age.

I have been a member of Dignitas since November 7, 2003 when I first met Ludwig Minelli, its founder, at his home in Forch, a suburb of Zurich.  In addition, I also joined Lifecircle soon after it was established in early 2012.  When a friend heard that I was now a member of these two Swiss organizations, willing to help foreigners with a doctor-assisted suicide, he joked that I was like a man who wears both braces and a belt to hold up his trousers – a form of double insurance!

In recent years, especially in right-to-die organizations, the expression « A Completed Life » has been developed.  During 2015, following an extensive discussion among several members of MDMD, there was agreement on the following definition of a « Completed Life » – « Elderly, mentally competent individuals may consider that their lives are complete when they have a chronic health problem (or a combination of more than one condition) which is causing them increasingly unbearable, irreversible suffering, with the additional loss of independance, purpose and meaning in their lives, so that they would now prefer to die rather than stay alive, especially as they dread what the future will soon bring ».

The following list identifies the factors that someone should consider when making their own personal decision regarding, whether or not, their life may have reached the stage of being « complete ».  Of course, everybody’s situation is different.  This is not a « tick list », but, hopefully, it does provide some guidance when an individual wants to evaluate their own position.

(a) Elderly – It is difficult to decide how old is « elderly ».  An individual’s health and mental and physical ability can be separate to a specific number of years.  But, in general terms, one is thinking of someone eighty-five to ninety.

(b) Mentally Competent – An individual must be able to properly comprehend the nature of their medical conditions, and the expected progress of these.

(c) Loss of Energy – As one ages, it often becomes increasingly difficult to overcome a tendency to want to be physically less active.

(d) Chronic Health Problems – These can be mental as well as physical

(e) Increasingly Unbearable, Irreversible Suffering – Naturally, this is for an individual to determine as it is a very personal matter, and can be both physical as well as mental.

(f) Loss of Independence – This is a very variable factor, with some people not wanting to be « looked after » by others on anything other than a temporary basis (when perhaps they are recovering from a treatable illness).

(g) Loss of Purpose and Meaning – This is also a very personal matter and, of course, changes as someone ages with different responsibilities (a job, being a parent, and then a grandparent, etc).  When chronic health problems result in activities, which previously kept an individual busy and enjoying life, being no longer possible, and other pleasures cannot be found, then it is natural to feel something very important has been lost.

(h) Dreading what the Future will bring – Deteriorating gradually can be a very unpleasant and undignified experience (and, when someone’s partner dies, there can be an increased feeling of isolation).

This concept of a « Completed Life » can be useful when someone is elderly and wants to discuss their own end-of-life plans (ranging from the completion of an Advance Decision to considering a possible doctor-assisted suicide in Switzerland) with their family and close friends.

1 réflexion sur « Voici un résumé de la conférence donnée par le Dr Michael Irwin, le 16 avril 2019 au Centre Cornerstone à Brighton and Hove: »

Laisser un commentaire