(3 days, 9 hours ago)
Lords Chamber
Baroness Scotland of Asthal (Lab)
If we look at what Professor Foster and others have said, they say that the Mental Health Act 1983 is the sort of assessment that a psychiatrist should make as to whether they are in a position to make that decision. It is not just the MCA on its own—
Baroness Scotland of Asthal (Lab)
If I could just be allowed to finish, I would be most grateful, because I have taken only three minutes and 48 seconds, and I do not intend to trouble the Committee for very much longer.
This issue has to be looked at. We have to be serious about looking at the Mental Health Act 1983, looking at the Act on capacity and coming up with something that suits. This is too serious for us not to do it. All of us care deeply about those who suffer, care deeply about those who face a diagnosis about the end of their lives, and we have to get this right. So, I ask the Committee to be kind to each other, to listen, to understand that the pain that is suffered on all sides is real and that we are entrusted to do something quite extraordinary once in a generation and we cannot fail. And I know that the people in this Committee will not fail, because we will take our job seriously.
Lord Winston (Lab)
Before my noble and learned friend sits down, will she just recall some evidence that we took in the committee that we sat on together only a week or two ago? My noble and learned friend was very keen to have evidence from New Zealand, where they had a three-year follow-up which showed that three-quarters of the patients who had asked for assisted dying had already been on palliative care. The two things are not exclusive by any means, and it is certainly relevant to consider that. Palliative care, of course, was okay, but some patients finally decided that they did not want it any more—most of them, in fact. It was 2,880 patients.
Baroness Scotland of Asthal (Lab)
We were very grateful to receive evidence from New Zealand, and we heard from a practitioner about the challenges and the opportunities that there are. But we also heard that New Zealand had moved from being the third most successful in delivering palliative care to the 12th, and there was a direct correlation, we were told, between the reduction in the investment in palliative care and the existence of the new service. These are the realities, and there are many who have said that if there is to be a real choice—if I can just finish this sentence, I would be grateful—then the choice has to include a fully funded palliative care service to enable people to choose whether that is the course they want to go down, or another. Without that, the choice is not a real one.