Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill (Tenth sitting) Debate

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Department: Ministry of Justice
Simon Opher Portrait Dr Simon Opher (Stroud) (Lab)
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I would like to bring the Committee back to a certain amount of reality. What we are talking about is how we can assist clinicians to assess coercion and pressure. I like the way we have discussed this in a very good way, trying to make the Bill safe, but would the hon. Lady’s amendment make that any easier for the clinician? I do not think it would. The Bill is very clear as it is. I do not think there will be any implications if there are further amendments, because the Bill provides a statement of what we do; as a clinician, I would understand and be able to apply that.

Rebecca Paul Portrait Rebecca Paul
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The hon. Member is absolutely right that the amendment would not make it easier for the clinician. My job is not to make it easier for the clinician to determine that someone is eligible for assisted death. It should be a robust, rigorous and well-considered process.

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“Manipulation” is a term that we have in law. It is mainly used in relation to fiscal crime, but also in relation to genetic science. I argue that “manipulation” should and could be included in the Bill.
Simon Opher Portrait Dr Opher
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We are all in this together. We all want the safest Bill possible, so we should defer to the legal side to form the safest language. I am not a specialist on this legal subject but we all want the same thing and we are arguing about words on which we perhaps just need to take advice, to make the safest possible Bill.