Debates between Baroness Cass and Baroness Finlay of Llandaff during the 2024 Parliament

Fri 13th Mar 2026

Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

Debate between Baroness Cass and Baroness Finlay of Llandaff
Baroness Finlay of Llandaff Portrait Baroness Finlay of Llandaff (CB)
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They will not be involved in the judgment as to whether the person is eligible for lethal drugs; they are providing their clinical expertise and knowledge. It is the panel who, separately, independently and through a process that can be completely scrutinised and documented, would make that assessment. That would mean that the patient’s care could not be contaminated by pressures causing the doctor to be burnt out, financial pressures on the system in which that patient is being treated, or even administrative pressures, such as the patient’s discharge becoming difficult and the hospital needing beds because patients are being treated in corridors—which we know is happening all the time. It provides separation and a degree of clarity over the assessment and judgment.

Baroness Cass Portrait Baroness Cass (CB)
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To clarify, whether we take the system proposed by my noble friend or the original system with the series of doctors, it is very unlikely under any circumstance that the clinician who is providing primary care for the patient will also be in one of those formal roles specified by the Bill. The reason is that, as we have discussed, people will need to opt in to that kind of role and have very specific training for it. Given the number of people who are predicted to be required to grant an assisted death, that will be quite a small cadre of clinicians. Therefore, although I understand the aspiration of the sponsor in the other place, and certain Members here, for there to be close integration between the team providing normal care and those involved in the dying process, in practice I do not see how that would be feasible in either system.