The Prague Post - 'Dying with dignity': Dutch mark 20 years of euthanasia

EUR -
AED 4.268611
AFN 77.699497
ALL 96.501714
AMD 445.223816
ANG 2.081016
AOA 1065.845323
ARS 1661.866026
AUD 1.770584
AWG 2.092171
AZN 2.000711
BAM 1.949773
BBD 2.344055
BDT 141.692031
BGN 1.953919
BHD 0.438137
BIF 3428.901289
BMD 1.162317
BND 1.504549
BOB 8.059089
BRL 6.223745
BSD 1.163803
BTN 103.24188
BWP 15.482145
BYN 3.957069
BYR 22781.418786
BZD 2.340665
CAD 1.623008
CDF 2882.546935
CHF 0.93058
CLF 0.028432
CLP 1115.37094
CNY 8.275176
CNH 8.306244
COP 4505.722955
CRC 585.587434
CUC 1.162317
CUP 30.801408
CVE 109.925222
CZK 24.39204
DJF 207.249394
DKK 7.466033
DOP 72.864463
DZD 150.951309
EGP 55.294454
ERN 17.434759
ETB 169.193596
FJD 2.634566
FKP 0.862597
GBP 0.867711
GEL 3.15564
GGP 0.862597
GHS 14.548032
GIP 0.862597
GMD 83.687062
GNF 10093.800131
GTQ 8.917436
GYD 243.447505
HKD 9.047367
HNL 30.556419
HRK 7.534258
HTG 152.289275
HUF 393.075978
IDR 19306.090104
ILS 3.811705
IMP 0.862597
INR 103.165364
IQD 1522.635643
IRR 48887.065111
ISK 141.604887
JEP 0.862597
JMD 186.283398
JOD 0.824039
JPY 177.277211
KES 150.427155
KGS 101.645188
KHR 4672.557157
KMF 491.660102
KPW 1046.081539
KRW 1649.513832
KWD 0.356087
KYD 0.969902
KZT 629.09547
LAK 25238.986461
LBP 104562.365043
LKR 352.021903
LRD 212.393493
LSL 20.038637
LTL 3.432021
LVL 0.703074
LYD 6.309497
MAD 10.616185
MDL 19.411998
MGA 5183.976363
MKD 61.62194
MMK 2440.329477
MNT 4180.721866
MOP 9.329762
MRU 46.424303
MUR 52.827104
MVR 17.7866
MWK 2017.663416
MXN 21.415726
MYR 4.905238
MZN 74.275077
NAD 20.038417
NGN 1705.747222
NIO 42.82762
NOK 11.616908
NPR 165.186698
NZD 2.02281
OMR 0.446896
PAB 1.163803
PEN 4.028348
PGK 4.883883
PHP 67.470775
PKR 329.668098
PLN 4.254296
PYG 8139.839809
QAR 4.253851
RON 5.098618
RSD 117.173276
RUB 95.397174
RWF 1683.035429
SAR 4.360002
SBD 9.566501
SCR 17.056966
SDG 699.137696
SEK 10.973618
SGD 1.5057
SHP 0.913399
SLE 27.104916
SLL 24373.216567
SOS 664.257349
SRD 44.2413
STD 24057.62109
STN 24.908459
SVC 10.183523
SYP 15112.292241
SZL 20.038672
THB 37.728905
TJS 10.794434
TMT 4.06811
TND 3.394545
TOP 2.722263
TRY 48.486532
TTD 7.904567
TWD 35.517509
TZS 2855.323082
UAH 48.096235
UGX 4002.627904
USD 1.162317
UYU 46.456404
UZS 13993.745426
VES 219.692874
VND 30635.196681
VUV 140.56109
WST 3.229536
XAF 653.932885
XAG 0.024016
XAU 0.00029
XCD 3.141221
XCG 2.097517
XDR 0.813286
XOF 653.935689
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.839618
ZAR 20.047531
ZMK 10462.253267
ZMW 27.611653
ZWL 374.265692
  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.4

    -0.16%

  • JRI

    -0.1100

    14.07

    -0.78%

  • BCE

    0.1000

    23.29

    +0.43%

  • SCS

    -0.1200

    16.86

    -0.71%

  • RIO

    -0.7300

    66.25

    -1.1%

  • BCC

    -0.6600

    74.52

    -0.89%

  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    23.74

    -0.25%

  • NGG

    -0.0200

    73.88

    -0.03%

  • GSK

    0.0500

    43.5

    +0.11%

  • BTI

    0.8000

    51.98

    +1.54%

  • RBGPF

    -1.0800

    77.14

    -1.4%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1900

    15.39

    -1.23%

  • AZN

    0.3800

    85.87

    +0.44%

  • RELX

    -0.9700

    45.44

    -2.13%

  • BP

    0.1400

    34.97

    +0.4%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    11.27

    -0.18%

'Dying with dignity': Dutch mark 20 years of euthanasia
'Dying with dignity': Dutch mark 20 years of euthanasia

'Dying with dignity': Dutch mark 20 years of euthanasia

Golden butterflies adorn the walls of the Netherland's only euthanasia expertise centre, put up in remembrance of thousands of patients who have chosen to die with dignity over the past two decades.

Text size:

Situated in a leafy upmarket suburb of The Hague, the Euthanasia Expertise Centre is the only one of its kind, giving information, assisting medical doctors and providing euthanasia as end-of-life care, which was legalised in a world first in the Netherlands on April 1, 2002.

Belgium soon followed later that year and Spain last year became the sixth country to adopt euthanasia -- the act of intentionally ending a life to relieve a person's suffering, for instance through a lethal injection given by a doctor.

The number of people seeking euthanasia is growing in the Netherlands, with some 7,666 last year, up by more than 10 percent from the year before, according to official figures.

The vast majority are aged 60 or over, suffering from cancer or other terminal illnesses.

"Twenty years ago, when the law was passed it was known, but certainly not used as often as today," said Sonja Kersten, director of the Euthanasia Expertise Centre.

The reasons are many: an ageing Dutch population; the fact that euthanasia is no longer a taboo subject and society has opened up to the issue.

"Dying with dignity is a debate that's growing within Dutch society, which is quite open to the subject," Kersten said.

- 'Existential question' -

Euthanasia is only authorised in a few countries around the world.

In Belgium, which will mark two decades of euthanasia in May, some 40 French citizens also benefitted from the practice last year.

The decision to ask for euthanasia as end-of-life care remains a "difficult and existential question", Kersten said.

"It's neither a patient's right, nor a doctor's duty," to have euthanasia, she added.

In the Netherlands, euthanasia can only be carried out under strict conditions set down in Dutch law.

Children aged up to 16 need the permission of their parents and guardians, while parents must be involved in the process for children aged 16 and 17. From 18, any Dutch citizen may ask for assisted death.

In all cases, the patient must have "unbearable suffering with no prospect of improvement" and must have requested to die in a way that is "voluntary, well considered and with full conviction".

Other criteria apply as well, like the absence of a reasonable alternative to the patient's situation.

Doctors, too, cannot be forced to perform euthanasia.

- 'Die at home' -

The Euthanasia Expertise Centre helps doctors through the process by sharing knowledge and providing guidance. At the same time, the centre helps patients whose doctors refuse to help them.

The centre, established in 2012, is a foundation but patient care is reimbursed by health insurers.

It first positioned itself as the "Levenseindekliniek", Dutch for "End-of-life clinic", offering on-site euthanasia.

But even before the start, it became apparent that most patients preferred to die at home, Kersten said.

Today, the centre can call upon a network of about 140 doctors and nurses around the country, employed by the Euthanasia Expertise Centre.

Most euthanasia requests, however, are handled by the patient's own physician, with whom they already have a relationship of trust. Last year, this was the case for 80 percent of euthanasias performed in the country.

"There are however still doctors in the Netherlands who are opposed to euthanasia," said Kersten, adding "they have every right".

The centre's medical team itself provided euthanasia to nearly 900 people in 2020, out of nearly 3,000 requests, with figures on the rise.

About 20 percent had dementia or psychiatric disorders.

The Netherlands' highest court ruled in 2020 that doctors can euthanise patients with severe dementia without the fear of prosecution.

It concerns patients with advanced dementia who are no longer mentally competent, but who previously had a clear request for euthanasia.

The decision followed a landmark case, not related to the Expertise centre, in which a doctor was acquitted of providing euthanasia on a woman in 2016 with severe Alzheimer's disease, who earlier requested the procedure.

W.Urban--TPP