Editorial: A Public Death, A Lasting Gift
By None, The Concord Monitor, Nov. 9, 2005
Editorial
Death is part of life, but a natural death seldom receives the attention that Beverly Leo's did. She wanted it that way, and strong-willed person that she was, she got it.
Bev died of a rare lung disease Monday night at the Hospice House in Concord. We're grateful to Bev's caregivers and to her family for acceding to her wishes to allow a Monitor photographer and reporter to be professional witnesses at her bedside. Lori Duff and Joelle Farrell spent six weeks chronicling her decline.
The death-with-dignity movement has able shepherds in Concord. Pleasant View Center and the Hospice House both provided cutting-edge care, allowing Bev the death she desired and the prerogatives all terminally ill people deserve in death. This meant yielding to the quirks and whims of a remarkable woman who didn't mind a little clutter, who had accepted what disease did to her body and who liked chocolates to the end.
Bev's decision to invite the community to her deathbed through the Monitor also had a profound effect on her family. It exposed her husband, Bill Hatt, and her ex-husband, Roger Leo, for example, to a public recounting of their relationships. What they shared was real family experience, not some television version of it.
In life, Beverly Leo gave her talents to her community in a difficult job that few are called to. Her final gift to a world she loved was to let go of life in a most public way. She wanted to demystify the act of dying, and that is precisely what she did.
- A Monitor Editorial
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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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The Death with Dignity National Center partners with the Oregon Death with Dignity Political Action Fund (the Fund) to conduct lobbying and political activities in order to achieve the enactment of Death with Dignity laws in other states. The partnership resulted in tremendous success with the resounding win in the 2008 Washington Death with Dignity campaign.
Learn more about the Fund's efforts to bring dignity to people around the nation.
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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