Death at Your Door: Dutch Group Pioneers Mobile Euthanasia
A pro-euthanasia lobbying group in the Netherlands has set up a suicide clinic and formed teams of doctors that make house calls to people who wish to die. Although euthanasia is legal in the country if certain conditions are met, critics say mobile suicide teams go too far.
When Petra de Jong first killed a person, she didn’t know what she was doing. The doctor was working as a lung specialist at a Dutch hospital, and her patient was suffering from cancer. It was a hopeless case, she says.
The man asked her to help him die. De Jong injected him with a drug that was supposed to be fast-acting — but it took nine hours for him to die because the dosage was too low. He wasn’t in any pain, de Jong says, but his wife remained at his bedside throughout the ordeal and was afraid that her husband could lie like that for the next 20 years. At the time, euthanasia was still illegal in the Netherlands, so the doctor wasn’t allowed to tell anyone what she’d done. Today, 20 years later, de Jong plays an influential role in the world of physician-assisted suicide.
When the Netherlands legalized euthanasia 10 years ago, it was also a victory for Right to Die-NL (NVVE), the organization that de Jong now directs. It calls itself the world’s largest association advocating voluntary euthanasia, and its members promote the right to a self-determined death. What’s more, they have just come one step closer to assuring that this option is available to everyone.
The World’s First Euthanasia Clinic
In early March, the NVVE opened the world’s first euthanasia clinic. It’s called the Levenseindekliniek, the “end of life clinic.” It serves as a point of contact for all Dutch people who want to die but don’t have a primary care physician prepared to help them do so. The clinic has mobile euthanasia teams, each of which consists of a doctor and a nurse. When an individual qualifies for the program after passing a screening, one of the teams makes a house call to inject two drugs. One puts the patient into a deep sleep, while the other stops all breathing, leading to death.
No outsiders are allowed into the clinic in The Hague. Until now, only an office worker has sat there and received applications. Since the beginning of the month, 70 patients have contacted the clinic, and the first two cases have already been selected and forwarded to the physicians.
There are also plans to eventually have beds for euthanasia patients in the building itself, but the doctors will still mostly make visits to patients, since most Dutch would prefer to die at home.
Legal, Though Still Controversial
According to the Dutch euthanasia law, people who ask their doctor for help in terminating their own life have to be terminally ill and subject to unbearable suffering with no prospect of improvement if they are to have any chance of being granted approval. If the attending physician is prepared to perform euthanasia, he or she must seek a second independent professional opinion and report the case. A special committee consisting of a legal expert, a physician and an ethicist review all cases to ensure that the regulations have been respected. Most applicants are cancer patients, but dementia and other cases of mental illness have also been given as reasons.
Dutch physicians performed euthanasia over 3,000 times in 2010. Roughly three times as many patients had requested that their lives be put to an end, but many primary care physicians turned down such appeals.
Some doctors oppose euthanasia on religious or ethical grounds, while others are afraid that something could go wrong. What’s more, many medical professionals feel that they can’t judge whether a patient is truly experiencing “unbearable suffering,” as stipulated by the Dutch euthanasia law.
Not Just for the Terminally Ill
These are some of the reasons why de Jong has lobbied so hard to establish a euthanasia clinic. She recalls the case of a 28-year-old woman who had suffered from depression from an early age and had been in therapy for years. The woman asked her psychiatrist for help in ending her life, but he declined. She eventually pulled a plastic bag over her head and suffocated herself.
De Jong says the new clinic has also been created to fulfill the death wishes of individuals who are not terminally ill, as was the case with this woman. Of course, the doctor adds, the euthanasia clinic will evaluate each case on its own particular merits. During her career as a practicing physician, she has personally terminated the lives of 16 patients, adding that it has always been a difficult decision.