Title: Case Presentation: An ethical dilemma
1Case Presentation An ethical dilemma
- Dr Rosalind Powell
- GPST1 Psychiatry
2Overview of Presentation
- Case presentation
- Suicide and assisted suicide
- Discussion should assisted suicide be legalised
in the UK?
3Case presentationPresenting complaint
- I was asked to see 61 year old man as part of
liason duty at KCH - Expressed suicidal ideation to medical team
- To assess patient for underlying psychiatric
illness
4History of presenting complaint
- Diagnosed 3 years ago as having metastatic
prostate cancer on drug trial - 1 week progressive weakness in legs and unable to
walk - Admitted to KCH diagnosed with spinal cord
compression - Confided in junior doctor would take own life
when discharged.
5History of presenting complaint
- Long term supporter of voluntary euthanasia
- 3 years ago decided when time came he may choose
to end his life - Considered Zurich
- 6/12 found exit international website promoting
euthanasia. - Bought recommended book
- Purchased tablets
- Daughter aware and supportive
6Exit International
- The Peaceful Pill eHandbook (by Dr Philip
Nitschke Dr Fiona Stewart) a "video book" that
sets a new international standard in the
provision of information detailing how a
(seriously ill or elderly) person might obtain a
peaceful and dignified death, at a time and place
of their choosing.
www.exitinternational.net
7Past Medical History
- Diagnosed with metastatic prostate cancer 2006
- Had debulking operation and chemotherapy with no
effect - Having radiotherapy
- Steroid induced diabetes mellitus
- Restless legs
8Past psychiatric history
Family History
9Drug history
- Lansoprazole
- Prednisolone 10mg od
- Tamsulosin
- Diclofenac
- Gliclazide
- Pramipexole (dopamine agonist)
- Abiraterone/placebo drug trial
10Personal History
- Happy childhood, made friends easily
- Attended primary and secondary school gained
O-levels and A-levels - Degree and Masters in History
- Immigration officer
- 2 marriages 1st ended amicably, 2 daughters,
good relationship - Married Latvian woman recently, applying for
residency. Unaware of his plans
11Forensic History
Social History
- Lives with wife, daughters nearby
- Denied alcohol / illicit drug use
12Mental state exam
- Appearance lying in hospital bed, kempt
- Appropriate eye contact and behaviour
- Restless legs
- Speech normal in tone/volume/rate/quality/fluency
- Mood subjectively ok
- objectively euthymic
13Mental state exam
- Risk
- Thoughts of suicide
- Plan in place, chosen method (pills)
- Family members aware (except wife)
- An option
- Sense of control over destiny
- No thoughts for other acts DSH/harm to others
14Mental state exam
- Denied any obsessions/compulsions
- Denied any altered perception
- Denied any thought disorder
- Cognition and orientation good
- Insight - good
15Biological markers depression
- Sleep normal until restless legs
- Appetite good
- Weight loss none recently
- No loss emotional reactivity (able to laugh)
- No early morning wakening
- No anhedonia able to read books
- Good concentration
16Dilemma
- Patient revealed if at home and unable to take
his tablets, would get daughter to assist him. - Aware she may face prosecution but thought this
would be unlikely
17Impression
- Adverse life events
- Diagnosis prostate cancer
- Not improving on drug trial, now unable to walk
- Long-held belief in euthanasia
- At high risk of suicide/ assisted suicide
- No psychiatric diagnosis not depressed
- had capacity to choose method of ending his life
18Plan
- Unable to offer any psychiatric treatment as no
psychiatric condition - Advise that daughter could face prosecution if
assisted him - Advise should tell wife / have open family
discussion - Advise team to contact legal department
- Contact MPS
19MPS advice
- Contacted that day
- Discussed case and admission that patients
daughter may assist him - As no crime had yet been committed , nothing more
I could do. - Conversation logged for future
20Suicide
- Self destruction as a deliberate act oxford
concise medical dictionary 1998 - Incidence 1 of all deaths (may be under
reported) - Three times higher rate in men than women
- Suicide rates in young men rising
- Highest rates suicide found in the elderly
Psychiatry at a glance second edition C.Katona M.
Robertson 2000
21Suicide Aetiology
- 1. Associated psychiatric disorders
- Major depressive disorder (50)
- Schizophrenia personality disorder
- Alcoholism substance misuse
- 2. Biochemical abnormalities 5HT underactivity
- 3. Sociological factors
- Social disintegration (higher rates in
unemployment, lower in wartime) - Isolation from society (living alone,
divorced/single, moving house) - For good of society/ altruistic
Psychiatry at a glance second edition C.Katona M.
Robertson 2000
22Risk Factors
- S ex
- A ge
- D epression
- P revious attempts
- E thanol abuse
- R ational thinking loss
- S ocial support lacking
- O rganised plan
- N o pastimes
- S ickness
23Legality of suicide
- Suicide was illegal under English law until the
passing of the Suicide Act 1961. - The same act makes it an offence to assist
suicide. - Assisted Dying for the Terminally Ill Bill
blocked in the House of Lords May 2006 Bill
presented by Lord Joffe with focus on Physician
Assisted Suicide
http//news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4763067.stm
24Assisted Dying for the Terminally Ill Bill
- The Joffe Bill would enable an adult who has
capacity and who is suffering unbearably as a
result of a terminal illness to receive medical
assistance to die at his own considered and
persistent request (House of Lords, 2005). - The doctor who agrees to participate in PAS is
responsible for determining the following the
patient has a terminal illness that will cause
death within six months, the request is voluntary
(uncoerced), the patient has mental capacity, and
his or her unbearable suffering (subjectively
defined by the patient and either mental or
physical) arises from the terminal illness,
regardless of whether suffering can be relieved
or treated.
25Reaction of RCPsych
-
- We recognise that the proposed Bill has been
conceived with compassionate intent to help
individuals who experience intolerable suffering
under very specific circumstances. - However, the Royal College of Psychiatrists is
deeply worried about the possible unintended
effects of the Assisted Dying for the Terminally
Ill Bill if it were to be enacted. - Concerns re. role of doctor, assessment capacity,
depression and suicide, coercion. Usually work to
prevent suicide.
- http//www.rcpsych.ac.uk/pressparliament/collegere
sponses
26Should assisted suicide be legalised?
- Arguments for
- Autonomy just as a person has the right to
determine the course of their life, a person has
the right to decide the course of their own dying
Gordijin and Janssens the prevention of
euthanasia through palliative care New
developments in the Netherlands Elsevier Science
2000
27Should assisted suicide be legalised?
- Arguments for
- 2. Relieve suffering
- 3. Dying with dignity article 8 European
Convention on Human rights right to respect for
private life - e.g. Dianne Pretty, Debbie Purdy
28Should assisted suicide be legalised?
- Arguments against
- Slippery slope may end in non-voluntary
euthanasia - Difficult to legislate
- Focus will shift away from palliative care
- PAS against Hippocratic oath
- Sanctity of life
29Who has the answers?
- Netherlands
- 1995 2.4 deaths result voluntary euthanasia
- 0.8 deaths result non-voluntary euthanasia
- Termination of life on request and Assisted
Suicide Act 2002. - Euthanasia and PAS legalised in specific cases
Voluntary euthanasia under control?J. Med.
Ethics 19992516-21H Jochemsen and J Keown
30Non- Voluntary euthanasia in Netherlands
Slippery slope?
- Neonates
- In 1995 90 neonates were administered a drug for
intentional termination of life. 1000 neonates
die before 1st birthday (all causes) 9 of all
neonatal deaths.1 - Psychiatric patients
- Psychiatrist Dr Chabot helped a depressed
(physically healthy) 50 year old woman to commit
suicide. Found in favor by Supreme Court. Later
reprimanded by medical disciplinary board. - 4 cases of psychiatric patients assisted suicide
each year2
1. Voluntary euthanasia under control?J. Med.
Ethics 19992516-21H Jochemsen and J Keown 2.
BMJ 1995310894-895 (8 April) Reprimand for
Dutch doctor who assisted suicide
31U.S.A.
- Death with dignity act 1997 Oregon
- Washington Death with Dignity Act 2008
- Allows terminally ill residents to end their
lives with prescribed medication - Patient administers own medication
http//www.oregon.gov/DHS/ph/pas/docs/year11.pdf
32Oregon Death with dignity
http//www.oregon.gov/DHS/ph/pas/docs/year11.pdf
33Oregon Death with dignity
- During 2008, 88 prescriptions for lethal
medications - total of 60 DWDA deaths
- corresponds to estimated 19.4 DWDA deaths per
10,000 total deaths. (0.19)
http//www.oregon.gov/DHS/ph/pas/docs/year11.pdf
34Conclusion
- A difficult case
- PAS and assisted suicide illegal in UK
- Current case in House of Lords
- Multiple arguments for and against assisted
suicide - Model in Netherlands may confirm slippery slope
- Emotive area of medicine
35Discussion
- Who is for and who is against assisted suicide?
36Any Questions?