by
Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
February 23,
2009
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Olympia,
WA (LifeNews.com) -- Officials with the state health department
in Washington have filed the rules that must be followed under the
new assisted suicide law. Voters in Washington approved making the
state the second to legalize the grisly practice of assisted suicide
by a narrow margin on a ballot
vote last year.
The assisted suicide law, which takes effect March 5, makes it so physicians can legally write a lethal prescription for their patients that they can use to kill themselves.
The rules include the forms doctors must complete beforehand as well as papers for consulting physicians, psychological consultants and pharmacists who participate in authorizing the deadly cocktail.
Under the law, the lethal drugs can only be given to a patient who is terminally ill and expected to die within six months, although that hasn't always been the case in Oregon. The patients must administer the drugs themselves.
Responding to the new law, assisted suicide opponents have been organizing doctors and hospitals to resist the measure.
The Coalition Against Assisted Suicide has been working to get medical professionals to create assisted suicide free zones.
Eileen
Geller and Carrie Herring previously told LifeNews.com they are hearing
from Washington citizens who want to patronize doctors and medical
centers committed to refusing to be involved in assisted suicides.
To that end, they are working with medical centers and staff to gain
commitments that they will not be places that will agree to a patient's
request for a lethal cocktail. The pair say some physicians and healthcare
facilities don't know that Initiative 1000 allows them to assert their
right to refrain from involvement in the practice.
On the other side, Robb Miller, executive director of the pro-euthanasia Compassion & Choices of Washington, tells the Bellingham Herald that his group is compiling lists of doctors and medical centers where patients can go to take their lives.
"I'm telling people don't worry so much. We'll help you," he said. "[The opt-out clause] isn't that much of a deterrent to a person who is determined to use the law."
Although some private and Catholic health care systems, like PeaceHealth, will not be offering assisted suicides, patients under the care of a Catholic health center have found ways to get doctors to kill them.
George Eighmey, executive director of the Oregon affiliate of the pro-euthanasia group, says 40 of the 341 people who took their own lives under that state's law were under the care of a Catholic health system or doctor working in one.
Related
web sites:
Coalition Against Assisted Suicide - http://www.noassistedsuicide.com
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