(1 day, 8 hours ago)
Lords Chamber
Baroness Cass (CB)
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.
My Lords, I oppose the view of the noble Baroness, Lady Finlay, that we should have a completely separate service. That would target and isolate people who are dying. They will wish to be supported by the people who they have known through the course of their illness, so it is crucial that they be seen and examined by those people and not moved to another place. Yes, there will perhaps be separate people who take on this role, and they should be properly qualified and discuss it with the panel, but it is utterly crucial that, when patients are in the process of dying, we do not separate and reject their carers, who should be part of the palliative care provided to them.
In other countries, assisted dying usually happens as part of a palliative care service. That is how it is done, very successfully, in Oregon and Washington. We should not separate carers who are there to support patients during this process. These little nitpicking changes to the Bill will just make it worse.