Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill Debate
Full Debate: Read Full DebateBaroness Keeley
Main Page: Baroness Keeley (Labour - Life peer)Department Debates - View all Baroness Keeley's debates with the Department of Health and Social Care
(1 week, 6 days ago)
Lords ChamberMy Lords, I am speaking on behalf of my noble and learned friend Lady Scotland, who made clear last Friday that she could not attend today’s Committee debate. I very much appreciate what my noble and learned friend Lord Falconer has just said, but it is worth me explaining Amendment 87A a little and making another couple of points.
The purpose of Amendment 87A is simple—to retain a safeguard that prevents a person becoming eligible for assisted dying by choosing to stop or limit their drinking. We have heard about what happens around that.
I certainly welcome the intention behind Amendment 87, which rightly seeks to protect people with anorexia nervosa, whose restricted intake cannot truly be considered voluntary. On that point, there is welcome consensus. But there are some points that are still worth making.
As drafted, Amendment 87 would inadvertently dismantle another essential safeguard that would ensure that people who are not terminally ill cannot make themselves terminally ill by deliberately ceasing food and fluids. This issue is entirely distinct from anorexia. The other place added Clause 2(2) specifically to prevent that.
Amendment 87A restores that protection so that Amendment 87 would safeguard both groups—those whose mental disorder limits eating and drinking and those who might deliberately restrict intake. This is not a theoretical concern. The case of Cody Sontag in Oregon shows us that what we fear may happen is already happening in one of the jurisdictions that we keep hearing has not experienced significant challenges with assisted dying. Cody was a woman with mild cognitive impairment who feared future cognitive decline after watching her father die of Alzheimer’s disease. After being advised by an end-of-life organisation that by voluntarily stopping eating and drinking she could bring herself within the eligibility for an assisted death without a waiting period, she did so. Within five days, her doctor concluded that she was terminally ill due to dehydration. Two days later, she died by assisted death.
The American Academy of Aid-in-Dying Medicine acknowledges that this loophole is a legal grey zone. I am sure that noble Lords agree there must be no grey zones when dealing with irreversible decisions about life and death.
Even if amended by Amendment 87A, Amendment 87 would not fully protect people with eating disorders, because many people with eating disorders do not restrict their eating and drinking. For example, people with type 1 diabetes and an eating disorder will manipulate insulin, and people with bulimia binge and purge. Both behaviours can be life threatening—particularly where treatment is refused or unavailable—despite being treatable conditions. Under Clause 2(1), such individuals could still meet the definition of terminal illness.
Throughout the Bill’s passage, as my noble and learned friend Lord Falconer acknowledged, concerns about protecting people with eating disorders have repeatedly resurfaced. Concerns were raised repeatedly in the other place, in oral evidence, in line-by-line scrutiny on Report, and at Third Reading, and we are raising them again here. It is abundantly clear that we have not yet got this right, so my noble and learned friend’s comments about accepting Amendment 87A are very welcome.
The Bill does not yet protect this vulnerable and growing group of people, illustrating how easily complex conditions can fall outside intended protections. For that reason, I support Amendment 101 in the name of the noble Baroness, Lady Parminter, which would explicitly rule out the physical effects of any mental illness, including eating disorders, from qualifying the person for assisted dying.
Evidence from other jurisdictions shows that more than 60 people with eating disorders have already died by assisted death—all women, and the majority aged under 40. We must not repeat those mistakes here.
I also support Amendment 92 in the name of my noble friend Lady Debbonaire, which addresses the serious risk posed when someone with a treatable condition refuses or withdraws consent to treatment. Long, difficult treatment journeys can leave people despairing. Under the Bill as drafted, refusal of treatment would become a straightforward route to eligibility. The amendment from the noble Baroness, Lady Parminter, would close that loophole for eating disorders, and Amendment 92 would extend protection to all treatable conditions. We should adopt both. This is fundamentally a matter of sequencing.
Someone who is terminally ill and chooses an assisted death is entirely different from someone who makes themselves terminally ill by refusing treatment due to suicidal feelings. The Bill was never intended to allow the latter.
Our purpose is to make the Bill safer, and adopting all these amendments is essential to doing so. There can be no grey areas in matters of life and death and the protection of vulnerable people.
My Lords, I will speak to Amendment 89. I think that everybody in the Committee is more or less on the same page in what we are trying to achieve here. This amendment would add,
“or withdrawing medication, hydration, or life-sustaining devices”
to Clause 2(2). This has perhaps been forgotten about, but people sometimes rely on ventilators and other equipment to sustain their lives, so it is not a big leap forward to add this to the legislation. It is simple and straightforward, and amending Clause 2(2) seems to make sense. I cannot think of any reason why the noble and learned Lord should not adopt the amendment as a sensible way forward. It indicates—we have had this conversation a number of times, but we have to bear it in mind—that there are still significant weaknesses. We have to make the Bill safe.
On the hostile reaction to what we are trying to do here, I gently remind the Committee that when we last discussed this subject on 22 October 2021, at the Second Reading of the Assisted Dying Bill that Baroness Meacher brought forward, her Private Member’s Bill had 10 pages and 13 clauses. The Bill before us has 51 pages and 59 clauses. People have to understand that this is a massive Private Member’s Bill and is not normal in terms of how we deal with such Bills—it is much bigger. With that, I hope that the noble and learned Lord will have no difficulty in accepting Amendment 89.