Between 2022 and 2023,0.65 per cent of all registered deaths in Victoria were linked to voluntary assisted dying. This is almost half the rate of Western Australia during that scheme’s first year of operation,according to the Voluntary Assisted Dying Review Board’s latest publicly available annual report.
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“While it is not possible to be definitive about the reasons for this difference,the fact that health practitioners in WA are not prohibited from initiating discussions about voluntary assisted dying provided that they provide advice on all other options for treatment,may explain a higher access rate in the initial implementation period than experienced in Victoria,” the annual report states.
The so-called gag clause is not the only part of Victoria’s framework that some doctors want rewritten.
Elsternwick’sDr Harley Powell,from Doctors for Assisted Dying Choice,said Victoria should follow the ACT and drop the six-month life expectancy rule for non-neurodegenerative diseases.
“That would be a big change,” Powell said. “It would help people with progressive diseases that are going to cause death in a more distant time in the future.”
Carr agrees:“The reality is we doctors are hopeless at prognoses.”
The doubters
But emergency physician and former Australian Medical Association president Dr Stephen Parnis said he had strong reservations,particularly for patients vulnerable to exploitation by family members.
“The stakes are clearly so high that,if we get this wrong,then we have a wrongful death,” Parnis said.
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“There is so much attention on the practice of assisted dying that it has,I think,undermined and delayed improvement in the provision of palliative care – which should be more available and understood by the wider population. That can help so many more people.”
Asked about Barassi’s plight on Tuesday,Victorian Opposition Leader John Pesutto said he believed assisted dying laws should stay as they are.
“One of the challenges you face is that once you start to undo the safeguards that are in place,where does it end? It can’t just be a system that’s allowed to unravel.”
The upcoming campaign
Dying with Dignity board member Michelle Hindson said her organisation would bring forward a social media campaign and lobby MPs in the wake of Barassi telling her story.
“Dying with Dignity Victoria is turning 50 this month,which is also the five-year anniversary of the act. So we will be highlighting what we think are the most important areas the government needs to address to make the legislation fair,” she said.
Victoria is due to publish the findings of a review into its scheme later this year. However,those who support an expansion of current laws are concerned the review will focus only on the operation of those laws,and not the act itself – leaving little or no room for a legislative overhaul.
Health Minister Mary-Anne Thomas said on Tuesday that community members were consulted as part of the review.
“By speaking with those involved in voluntary assisted dying,this operational review will allow us to look at how the law has been implemented and consider ways to make the existing system work even better for those who need it,” she said.
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“This statutory review of the voluntary assisted dying laws will consider how the laws have been implemented and whether they are operating as intended.”
Greens MP Sarah Mansfield,a doctor before entering parliament,said Victoria was once a leader in this area but now lagged other states and territories.
“There is an urgent need for greater discussion about broadening eligibility to include more conditions so that those people who have fallen through the cracks aren’t forced to suffer.”