New law allowing assisted suicide takes effect in Austriaon January 1, 2022 at 1:51 pm

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

The new law allows chronically or terminally ill adults to make provisions for an assisted suicide.

Hand-holding

Image source, Getty Images

A law allowing assisted suicide has taken effect in Austria.

From Saturday, adults who are terminally ill or have a permanent, debilitating condition, can opt to make provisions for an assisted death.

Parliament approved the new law in December, following a constitutional court ruling on the issue.

The practice will be tightly regulated, with each case assessed by two doctors – one of whom would have to be a palliative medicine expert.

Officials say the government has also allocated funds to develop palliative care to ensure no one chooses to die when other options are available.

Assisted suicide, in which somebody is given the means to end their own life, is legal in neighbouring Switzerland.

It’s also been decriminalised in several European countries, including Spain, Belgium and the Netherlands.

Active assistance to suicide will remain outlawed in Austria, and the new rules explicitly exclude minors or those with mental health conditions.

Adults who want to end their lives must produce a diagnosis and have confirmation that they are able to make their own decisions.

After gaining approval from two doctors, patients must wait for 12 weeks to reflect on their decision – or two weeks if they have a terminal illness.

If they still want to go ahead after this waiting period, they can then get lethal drugs at a pharmacy after giving notification to a lawyer or notary.

To prevent abuse, the names of pharmacies that sell these drugs will only be disclosed to lawyers and notaries who receive these notifications, and will not be advertised publicly.

Until now, under Austrian law, anyone who induced or helped someone to kill themselves faced up to five years in prison.

An absolute ban on assisted dying was lifted by a federal court last year, which ruled that it “violated the right of self-determination”.

But the same punishment will remain in place for those who kill another person at their “serious and emphatic request”.

Before the new rules were approved by parliament this year, some political opponents argued that it placed too many hurdles in the way of those seeking assisted dying.

Others argued that too few restrictions were to be put in place, saying that a psychiatric evaluation was not enough to assess patients’ decision-making ability.

1px transparent line

You might also be interested in:

This video can not be played

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

- Advertisement -

Discover

Sponsor

Latest

Elon Musk Twitter deal back on in surprise u-turnon October 4, 2022 at 7:40 pm

In a letter to Twitter, the billionaire said he would buy the business and honour his original deal.Image source, ReutersBillionaire Elon Musk has apparently...

Rishi Sunak refusing to budge on pay as strike action escalateson December 20, 2022 at 1:01 pm

The prime minister is under pressure to reopen nurses' pay talks, as ambulance workers prepare for walk outs.The prime minister is under pressure to...

Christopher Steele: Urgent need for laws to stop foreign influenceon March 11, 2021 at 5:48 am

Christopher Steele, who compiled the Trump-Russia dossier, says Russia and China are concerns.image copyrightPA MediaThe UK urgently needs new legislation to restrict foreign influence...

Four held in German-led raid on huge child sexual abuse networkon May 3, 2021 at 10:18 am

German police say a dark web club for sharing images of child sex abuse had more than 400,000 users.German police say three men detained...

Covid-19: Warning over flu season and surge in air travel bookingson October 8, 2021 at 6:37 am

Five things you need to know about the coronavirus pandemic this Friday morning.Here are five things you need to know about the coronavirus pandemic...