Thursday, July 3, 2008
Assisted suicide in Germany
The New York Times reports on a recent doctor-assisted suicide in Germany, by an elderly woman who was not ill:
Ms. Schardt, 79, a retired X-ray technician from the Bavarian city of Würzburg, was neither sick nor dying. She simply did not want to move into a nursing home, and rather than face that prospect, she asked Mr. Kusch, a prominent German campaigner for assisted suicide, for a way out.
Her last words, after swallowing a deadly cocktail of the antimalaria drug chloroquine and the sedative diazepam, were “auf Wiedersehen,” Mr. Kusch recounted at a news conference on Monday.
It was hardly the last word on her case, however. Ms. Schardt’s suicide — and Mr. Kusch’s energetic publicizing of it — have set off a national furor over the limits on the right to die, in a country that has struggled with this issue more than most because of the Nazi’s euthanizing of at least 100,000 mentally disabled and incurably ill people.
Not that the Times wants to be judgmental. After all . . .
While Ms. Schardt was not suffering from a life-threatening disease, or in acute pain, her life was hardly pleasant, Mr. Kusch said. She had trouble moving around her apartment, where she lived alone. Having never married, she had no family. She also had few friends, and rarely ventured out.
In such circumstances, a nursing home seemed likely to be the next stop. And for Ms. Schardt, who Mr. Kusch said feared strangers and had a low tolerance for those less clever than she was, that was an unbearable prospect.
You know, I joke sometimes that some "less clever" people's remarks make me "want to kill myself" . . . but, it's a joke.
Meanwhile, a push for "death with dignity" in Washington. Don't worry, though . . . Oregon's "safeguards work."
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2008/07/assisted-suicid.html