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Physician-assisted suicide is a controversial topic in the United States. Some people believe that a terminally ill person should have the right to end their life if they choose without government interference or religious beliefs coming into play. This is also referred to as the "right to die.".
In some U.S. states, the government agrees with this and has implemented death with dignity laws. There are safeguards in place that go along with these laws to prevent misuse. For example, two physicians must confirm the patient’s diagnosis and prognosis. Waiting periods are also required before the prescription will be filled. Perhaps most importantly, the decision falls on the patient, and doctors must confirm the mental competency before moving forward with administering the medication.
In the United States, states that have death with dignity laws make it legal for adults with terminal illnesses to receive prescription medication that assists in their death. This is also known as physician-assisted suicide. Even states that have legalized this form of death have several conditions that patients must meet.
Physician-assisted suicide is only allowed for mentally competent adults who have been given six months or less to live because of terminal illnesses. In other words, death must be inevitable for a person to receive the medication that ends the patient’s pain and suffering. This has been a hotly debated topic across the nation. Some believe that it’s a person’s right to choose, and the government shouldn’t have a say in how someone ends their own life. On the flip-side, some religious leaders advocate against death with dignity laws, believing that suicide is a sin.
The majority of the states in the U.S. have made physician-assisted suicide illegal. Eight states and Washington, D.C., have passed death with dignity laws. Many of these laws have been passed only within the last couple of years. The states that have death with dignity laws are California, Colorado, District of Columbia, Hawaii, Maine, New Jersey, Oregon, Vermont, and Washington.
Oregon was the first state in the U.S. to pass death with dignity laws through the Death With Dignity Act of 1994 and 1997.
The next laws weren’t passed until over ten years later, under Washington’s Death With Dignity Act of 2008.
In Vermont, physician-assisted suicide was legalized under the Patient Choice and Control at the End of Life Act, passed in 2013.
In 2015, California passed the End of Life Option Act, although the laws didn’t go into effect until the next year.
In 2016, Colorado and the District of Columbia passed laws – the End of Life Options Act and the D.C. Death with Dignity Act, respectively. The most recent laws were passed in 2018 and 2019.
Hawaii passed its Our Care, Our Choice Act in 2018 and 2019, Maine passed its Death with Dignity Act in 2019, and New Jersey passed the Aid in Dying for the Terminally Ill Act in 2019.
State | Death with Dignity Status |
---|---|
Massachusetts | Under consideration |
New York | Under consideration |
North Carolina | Under consideration |
Pennsylvania | Under consideration |
Alabama | No Active Legislation |
Alaska | No Active Legislation |
Arizona | No Active Legislation |
Arkansas | No Active Legislation |
Connecticut | No Active Legislation |
Delaware | No Active Legislation |
Florida | No Active Legislation |
Georgia | No Active Legislation |
Idaho | No Active Legislation |
Illinois | No Active Legislation |
Indiana | No Active Legislation |
Iowa | No Active Legislation |
Kansas | No Active Legislation |
Kentucky | No Active Legislation |
Louisiana | No Active Legislation |
Maryland | No Active Legislation |
Michigan | No Active Legislation |
Minnesota | No Active Legislation |
Mississippi | No Active Legislation |
Missouri | No Active Legislation |
Nebraska | No Active Legislation |
Nevada | No Active Legislation |
New Hampshire | No Active Legislation |
North Dakota | No Active Legislation |
Ohio | No Active Legislation |
Oklahoma | No Active Legislation |
Rhode Island | No Active Legislation |
South Carolina | No Active Legislation |
South Dakota | No Active Legislation |
Tennessee | No Active Legislation |
Texas | No Active Legislation |
Utah | No Active Legislation |
Virginia | No Active Legislation |
West Virginia | No Active Legislation |
Wisconsin | No Active Legislation |
Wyoming | No Active Legislation |
California | Legal |
Colorado | Legal |
District of Columbia | Legal |
Hawaii | Legal |
Maine | Legal |
Montana | Legal |
New Jersey | Legal |
New Mexico | Legal |
Oregon | Legal |
Vermont | Legal |
Washington | Legal |