fact and fiction
There's a lot of misinformation that ideological opponents of death with dignity would have you accept as fact. Below, we've got their rhetoric and the reality organized topically with some quick links to the most frequently offered arguments against death with dignity. If you have a topic of concern you'd like to see addressed, email us here and watch for it in the future. Get the real story:
- The law is a slippery slope and people will use it when they may have years to live.
- Proper pain management makes death with dignity unnecessary
- It will undermine important health care and medical services
- Law will result in people taking their lives who are not terminally ill
- The law doesn't have adequate reporting and safeguards
- The law allows people to "play God"
- Federal laws already prohibit death with dignity
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The law is a slippery slope; people will use it when they may have years to live |
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Death with Dignity Opponents Say: |
The Truth: |
| Oregon's law is a slippery slope toward euthanasia | 1. It operates within the confines of the doctor-patient relationship 2. The patient is the driving force in the process, and 3. The person who ultimately administers medication. |
| Many people are told they have a few months to live but then are still alive years later; the law encourages people to act too soon. |
Nobody wants to die. The experience in Oregon has demonstrated that the terminally ill people, who sought help from a physician to hasten their deaths, did so while fighting to make the most of every day. If an extended recovery were possible, that individual would not even think of using the law, as they would want to make the most of the time they've been given. People in extreme situations for whom recovery is no longer possible use the law as a last resort when each day becomes more and more unbearable. |
| Outlawing physician-aid-in-dying will prevent it from happening. | Physician-hastened dying happens in every state, every day. Laws will not prevent terminally ill patients from seeking an end to their suffering, nor will they prevent some doctors from quietly helping. Laws can only be used to protect patients and physicians by regulating the practice - ensuring no abuse occurs. |
| Families will coerce terminally ill loved ones into using the law. | The law clearly states that if there is any evidence of coercion the process must be stopped. Physicians, working closely with terminally ill patients and their families ensure that this will not be a concern. |
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The law will undermine important health care and medical services |
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Death with Dignity Opponents Say: |
The Truth: |
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Hospice utilization will decrease as patients choose assisted dying. |
In |
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Patients will no longer be able to trust their physicians to do everything possible to cure them. |
In fact, many people in |
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Law will result in people taking their lives who are not terminally ill |
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Death with Dignity Opponents Say: |
The Truth: |
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| Disabled people will be encouraged to use the law. | No one is encouraged to use the law. The law is in place for terminally ill people whose suffering is intolerable and who wish a humane and dignified death. The law is rarely used in |
| The poor, undereducated, uninsured, racial minorities and other marginalized people will be encouraged to use the law. | No one is encouraged to use the law. |
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The law doesn't have adequate reporting and safeguards |
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Death with Dignity Opponents Say: |
The Truth: |
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Doctors don't have to report under the |
Doctors cannot qualify for the law's "safe harbor" provisions if they do not report use of the law to the Oregon Department of Human Services. A doctor that does not report to DHS would be subject to reprimand. |
| Every day in every state, doctors are quietly responding to patients' pleas for help in hastening death. The difference in |
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HMOs and insurance companies will encourage people to use the law. |
These decisions are made between patients and doctors, in consultation with family. No HMO or insurance company is ever involved with these decisions and were they to be, it would qualify as coercion, which is strictly prohibited under the law. |
| People will move to |
The law requires terminally ill patients to be residents of |
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The law allows people to "play God" |
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Death with Dignity Opponents Say: |
The Truth: |
| Dying is a process and |
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| Modern medicine has become adept at prolonging life and unfortunately, continues to treat death as a failure. With all the technology and treatment options in healthcare today, it is often only the suffering and death that is prolonged - not a superior quality of life. People who might be stuck in the prolonged suffering of a terminal illness and whose belief systems allow them to choose a hastened death, are no more playing God than the people who suggest that one more procedure, one more pill, one more tube might make the difference. | |
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People can hasten their deaths through terminal sedation and dehydration just as easily as with |
Terminal sedation and dehydration is a legal way to end your life in all 50 states. In this scenario, the patient stops eating and drinking. The doctor provides sedation so that the patient does not feel the effects of starvation and dehydration. The process can take up to two weeks and there is no consciousness due to the excessive sedation. The prescriptions used under |
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Federal laws already prohibit death with dignity |
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Death with Dignity Opponents Say: |
The Truth: |
| The Controlled Substance Act (CSA) enables the federal government to overturn |
The Controlled Substances Act is a federal law, which governs the trafficking of illegal substances like cocaine, and ensures that narcotics are used for legal medicinal purposes and not diverted for other use. |
| The U.S. Supreme Court ruled against physician-aid-in-dying in |
The U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear a challenge to |
Defend dignity. Take action.
For more than 14 years, the Death with Dignity National Center (DDNC), a 501(c)(3), non-partisan, non-profit organization, has been the leading advocate in the death with dignity movement. Leaders in our organization originally wrote and have continued advocating for the Oregon Death with Dignity Law. DDNC has met these challenges through extensive legal defense of the Oregon law, education and outreach programs, and by developing and nurturing diverse financial resources with one goal in mind: to ensure DDNC's financial vitality and its position as a leader in the death with dignity movement.
Your donation today will enable us to continue to advocate for the right of the terminally ill to die with dignity. Please click here to give a secure, online donation. Thank you.
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Washington: Yes on 1000
For two years, our highest organizational priority has been securing passage of the Washington Death with Dignity Act through the voter initiative process.
Our generous donors have helped us provide the campaign with over $300,000 in seed money and we have pledged to raise an additional $650,000 for the campaign. We were an instrumental part of the team that devised the campaign structure, and we will continue to provide political strategy and legal expertise throughout the campaign.
Read on for an insider's analysis of the Washington campaign.
About Death with Dignity
The greatest human freedom is to live, and die, according to one's own desires and beliefs. The most common desire among those with a terminal illness is to die with some measure of dignity. From advance directives to physician-assisted dying, death with dignity is a movement to provide options for the dying to control their own end-of-life care.
Death with Dignity National Center (DDNC) is the leader in this movement, successfully establishing, advancing and defending the landmark Oregon Death with Dignity Act -- a national catalyst for openly discussing and actively reforming end-of-life care for those who are terminally ill.
Learn more about the National Center and our family of organizations.
Patients & Families
The Death with Dignity National Center was formed out of a profound commitment to the idea that personal end-of-life decisions should be made solely between a patient and a physician. Based on this commitment, we are pleased to provide you with support and information as you face the difficult challenges ahead.
Research Center
We have compiled a comprehensive collection of legal briefs, journal articles, and newspaper clippings. We invite you to explore the wide array of information we have collected throughout our history.
In our Research Center you will find frequently asked questions, the history of the death with dignity movement, state monitoring statistics, and a copy of this groundbreaking statute.

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