(1 week, 2 days ago)
Commons ChamberI will make progress.
Let me speak to the reality of my amendment with a story from a constituent who does not wish to be named. She wrote to me about her brother, who died at age 58 from MND. Prior to his diagnosis, he was strong, healthy and, as she put it, a lot of fun. He was a great family man, but it was dreadful to watch his illness progress, and it had a profound impact on the family. It took 18 months of effort, worry and deep distress before he finally passed away. He wanted to have control over the time of his death, knowing what was to come. My constituent wrote:
“A difficult subject for most of us to contemplate, but in his particular case the possibility of assisted dying would have given him much comfort.”
I will make a little progress, as I was in the middle of a quotation. It continues:
“Unless you are actually affected by something as desperate as MND, you cannot understand what it really means to have such an option.”
My constituent is right. We can debate legal safeguards, ethics and precedents all day in this Chamber, but for those who are living with devastating diseases, this is not theoretical; it is personal, it is urgent and it is real.