Defending the indefensible? Psychiatry, assisted suicide and human freedom

Int J Law Psychiatry. 2013 Sep-Dec;36(5-6):485-97. doi: 10.1016/j.ijlp.2013.06.007. Epub 2013 Jul 9.

Abstract

The siege guns of the forces for change to euthanasia and assisted suicide laws have been pounding for decades, but the longstanding proscription on these practices has held out in all but a few jurisdictions. A few psychiatrists have enlisted with the challengers, but many remain on the battlements, defending the impermissibility of active assistance in dying. Given the long history of the separation of church and state and the significant secularisation of society; the recognition by the law of both acts and omissions as legal causes; lenient sentences for mercy killers; critiques of the "psychiatriatisation" of different aspects of life; and the consistency of public opinion, this recalcitrant stand bespeaks undercurrents and positions that are often by rationalised or camouflaged, and which call for exploration. In this paper, I examine connections between psychiatry and conceptualisations of harm, suffering and natural death; medicalisation, psychiatrisation and medical paternalism; decision-making capacity, rationality and diagnosis; recent legal developments; social pluralism; and religious intuitionism. I conclude that psychiatrists and the psychiatry profession, concerned as they are with enlarging the province of human freedom, should begin a more transparent rapprochement with those they would repel.

Keywords: Acts and omissions; Euthanasia; Freedom; Medicalisation; Psychiatry; Religion.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Medicalization
  • Pain / psychology
  • Personal Autonomy*
  • Psychiatry*
  • Stress, Psychological / psychology
  • Suicide, Assisted / psychology*