Dignitas (euthanasia group)
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Dignitas is a Swiss assisted suicide group that helps those with incurable physical and mental illnesses to die with the aid of doctors and nurses. The exact qualifications of the staff are disputed by some who have interacted with them (see below). It was founded in 1998 by the Swiss lawyer, Ludwig Minelli. Swiss laws on assisted suicide hold that a person who assists in an assisted suicide can only be prosecuted if they are motivated by self-interest.
Dignitas not only helps those with incurable physical illnesses such as cancer to commit suicide, but now also provides euthanasia to those with incurable mental illnesses, provided that they are of sound judgment and submit an in-depth medical report prepared by a psychiatrist that establishes the patients condition as fulfilling the specifications of the Federal (Supreme) Court of Switzerland.
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[edit] Statistics
Ludwig Minelli said in one interview [1] in March 2008 that Dignitas assisted 840 people, 60% of them were Germans.
Most people coming to Dignitas do not plan to die but need an "insurance" in case their illness becomes intolerable. Of those who receive "green light", 70% never return to Dignitas [1].
[edit] Criticism
The Daily Mail of London has chronicled examples of alleged shortcomings by Dignitas. According to a January 26, 2007 article:
Paul Clifford, 40, said the family had had a ‘terrible’ experience and likened the [Dignitas] flat where his mother died to a ‘backstreet abortion place’ with graffiti-covered walls. To add to his shock, when Mrs Coombes raised concerns that her son might struggle to cope with her death, a member of staff said he, too, could die at a ‘cut price’ rate. ... ‘He wanted us to go out of the room while he checked she was dead. We had to sit on a flight of stairs which stank of urine. ‘We went back in but two police officers, the state prosecutor and two staff and a medical examiner arrived. We were asked loads of questions, with my mum still slumped there, at the same coffee table, in her wheelchair. We were there for at least two and a half hours.’[2]
It should be noted, however, that Dignitas moved to a new location in a village of Schwerzenbach [3] since the article was written.
[edit] High costs and non-transparent finances
According to Ludwig Minelli [1], Dignitas charges its patients EUR 4000 for preparation and suicide assistance, and EUR 7000 in case when it takes family duties over, including funerals, doctor costs and official fees.
Despite being a non-profit organization, Dignitas repeatedly refused to open its finances to the public [4].
[edit] Suicide tourism
Right-wing politicians in Switzerland repeatedly criticized suicide assistance for foreigners, labeled as Suicide Tourism (Sterbetourismus in German). New regulations were proposed to limit possibilities of legal suicide assistance for foreigners in Switzerland. [5] The law primarily targeted Dignitas, the only right-to-die group in Switzerland assisting foreigners.
Swiss government rejected proposed stricter regulations in 2006, maintaining status quo [6] as regulated by Paragraph 115 of Swiss Criminal Code.
[edit] Use of non-standard suicide methods
In a few cases in 2008, Dignitas used breathing helium [1] as a suicide method instead of Nembutal overdose. Normally Dignitas uses overdose of a sleeping pill Nembutal, as most other right-to-die organizations worldwide do.
Some people believe that hypoxic death caused by Helium is less peaceful than Nembutal ingestion and causes severe twitching [3]. The reason for this decision was, according to Dignitas, a new regulation imposed by medical authorities of Canton Zurich in Switzerland. This regulation prohibits doctor to write a prescription for Nembutal after a single consultation. Some people are so ill that they cannot travel to Zurich several times.
[edit] Other organizations in Switzerland
EXIT is another Swiss organization providing assisted suicide. In 2008, it has 50'000 members. However, EXIT strictly denies suicide assistance for people from abroad [7].
EXIT Switzerland is not affiliated with Exit International, similarly named voluntary euthanasia organization founded by Philip Nitschke.
[edit] References
- ^ a b c d Wenn Sie das trinken, gibt es kein Zurück Tagesspiegel.de Retrieved 2008-04-12
- ^ Swiss suicide clinic like a backstreet abortionist's Daily Mail
- ^ a b Euthanasia group Dignitas films gas and plastic bag deaths Daily Mail
- ^ Branching Out to Serve a Growing but Dying Market Washington Post
- ^ Swiss to crack down on suicide tourism Telegraph
- ^ Kein Gesetz gegen Sterbetourismus Neue Zürcher Zeitung
- ^ Dignitas und Exit leisten Hilfe bei der Selbsttötung Deutsche Radio Schweiz
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Dignitas website (In German) (some information in english)
- Dignitas: Swiss suicide helpers (BBC news article about Dignitas, Last Updated: Monday, 20 January 2003, 14:38 GMT)
- Exit home page
- DIGNITAS in Switzerland - its philosophy, the legal situation, actual problems, & possibilities for Britons who wish to end their lives A Talk given to a meeting of Friends at the End, in London