(LifeSiteNews) â Doctors in Colorado are pushing assisted suicide on hundreds of patients solely because they suffer from eating disorders, according to a patientsâ advocate sharing the harrowing story of one such case.
Writing in the Denver Post, Patient Rights Action Fund and Institute for Patient Rights executive director Matt Vallière tells the story of his friend Jane Allen, who battled anorexia âmost of her life,â who in 2018 was diagnosed with âterminal anorexia,â a relatively recent diagnosis which has been criticized as overly broad and dangerous.
Her eating disorder doctor, Jane wrote, âwould âmake an exceptionâ for me and âallowâ me to die, if that was my choice. It didnât feel like my choice â I felt coerced and spent an incredibly agonizing months in an assisted living facility.â She eventually received the suicide drugs, but was saved by her father winning a guardianship order and having the drugs destroyed.
âI ate just enough to not die right away. And then I ate more,â Jane wrote. âI weaned off the morphine and all the other hospice drugs that kept me in such a fog. I was getting better, and then I was told that I was too much of a liability and dropped from the clinic. I moved from Colorado to Oregon. I have a job that I love, a new puppy, and a great group of friends. Iâm able to fuel my body to hike and do the things I love. Iâm repairing my relationship with my family, and I have a great therapist who is helping me process all of this. Things obviously arenât perfect, and I still have hard days. But I also have balance, and flexibility, and a life that is so much more than I was told would ever be possible for me.â
Jane ultimately passed away due to complications from her years of anorexia, which Vallière wonders could have been prevented by not detouring her down the terminal anorexia route. Regardless, her story details how easily similar cases can end in suicide for people without people willing to fight to give them hope. Live Action notes that last year, Colorado saw a record number of people, 510, prescribed suicide drugs solely for dietary disorders.Â
âWhat we do know is that these laws are not so rosy as the propaganda would have you believe,â Vallière writes, adding âthere has been and will be more collateral damage in people like Jane or Coloradan Mary Gossman, who was told by a nationally renowned Denver eating disorder treatment facility, âthereâs nothing we can do for you,â which qualified her for lethal drugs under the law. Sheâs in a better place now and has joined as a plaintiff in a lawsuit to overturn the law. So, I ask: how many collateral deaths are acceptable to you?â
That lawsuit says that Coloradoâs so-called âmedical aid-in-dyingâ or assisted suicide law violates federal protections by allowing physicians to prescribe lethal drugs to some disabled patients under circumstances where others would be directed to mental health care, by âassum[ing] that a request for assisted suicide is not an indication of a mental disorder, when other Colorado laws make precisely the opposite assumption for virtually everyone else.â
Twelve U.S. states plus the District of Columbia allow assisted suicide. In April, however, a bill to legalize euthanasia failed in Maryland.
As Vallière has previously argued elsewhere, current euthanasia programs in the United States constitute discrimination against patients with life-threatening conditions in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act, as when a state will âwill pay for every instance of assisted suicideâ but not palliative care, âI donât call that autonomy, I call that eugenics.â
Live Actionâs Bridget Sielicki further notes that âbecause a paralytic is involved, a person can look peaceful, while they actually drown to death in their own bodily secretions. Experimental assisted suicide drugs have led to the âburning of patientsâ mouths and throats, causing some to scream in pain.â Furthermore, a study in the medical journal Anaesthesia found that a third of patients took up to 30 hours to die after ingesting assisted suicide drugs, while four percent took seven days to die.â
Support is available to talk to those struggling with thoughts of ending their lives. The Suicide & Crisis Lifeline can be reached by calling or texting 988.
News Source : https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/colorado-gave-over-500-people-assisted-suicide-drugs-solely-for-eating-disorders-in-2024/