Posted on 01/10/2024 8:07:51 PM PST by Morgana
A recently released report from the Vermont Department of Health indicates that the number of assisted suicide deaths in the state has more than quadrupled in the last two years.
Per the report, there were 84 “reportable events” between July 1, 2021 and June 30, 2023, though the report later clarifies that 72 of those 85 were actually via assisted suicide, while the other deaths were caused by the underlying disease or another cause. Seventy-three percent (73%) of the people who chose assisted suicide did so because they had cancer.
In contrast, the state’s previous report issued in January 2022 revealed 17 assisted suicide deaths between July 1, 2019 and June 30, 2021. There have been 203 assisted suicide deaths in total since it was first legalized in the state in 2013. However, per law, the state of Vermont lists all of these deaths as “natural” on a death certificate, and notes the cause as the underlying disease that prompted the person to seek assisted death.
Though the number of assisted suicide deaths in the state has skyrocketed, lawmakers are continually looking to loosen the reins. In 2022, lawmakers legalized telemed assisted suicide appointments, which allowed a physician to sign off on a patient’s request to die without ever meeting that patient face-to-face. Last May, the state passed a bill allowing non-residents to come to the state to receive assisted suicide. Lynda Bluestein, the Connecticut woman who pushed for Vermont legislators to change the law, ended her life via lethal injection in the state last week.
Mary Beerworth, executive director of Vermont Right to Life, has warned that legalizing such “death tourism” could have a snowball effect on the status of assisted suicide in the country.
“Remove the residency requirement on enough states that have assisted suicide laws, and you’ve pretty much got the whole United States,” she told the National Catholic Register last year.
Assisted suicide is currently allowed in 11 states, including California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Vermont, Washington, and the District of Columbia.
“Seventy-three percent (73%) of the people who chose assisted suicide did so because they had cancer.”
Having witnessed my mother die from cancer, I can understand this. It is an insidious disease.
I am for giving cancer patients all the morphine even smoking weed all they want. I draw the line at suicide. I won’t get into it but I draw the line at it.
One of the unspoken aspects of the medical profession it that doctors will often provide family members the option of increasing the morphine to the point of expiration. A humane way to end the extreme suffering that often accompanies the final stages of cancer.
British Columbia had 2500+ assisted suicides in 2022.
Vancouver Island (800K population, similar to Vermont) had over half of them.
This is what happens when Christianity collapses.
It’s 2022 and Susie just voted for Biden in November of 2021. Biden takes office and starts acting like Biden. Susie thinks “Oh no, what do I do now?”
btt
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