DutchNews, September 28,
2017
The public prosecution department
has opened a criminal investigation into a doctor who performed euthanasia on a
woman who had severe dementia.
It is the first time since the law legalising
euthanasia came into effect in 2002 that there has been a formal criminal probe
into a doctor’s actions. The doctor has already been formally reprimanded for
breaking euthanasia guidelines.
The case centres on a 74-year-old woman, who
was diagnosed with dementia five years ago. At the time she completed a living
will, saying she did not want to go into a home and that she wished to die when
she considered the time was right.
After her condition deteriorated, she was
placed in a nursing home where she became fearful and angry and took to
wandering through the corridors at night. The nursing home doctor reviewed her
case and decided that the woman was suffering unbearably, which would justify
her wish to die.
The doctor put a drug designed to make her sleep into her
coffee which is against the rules. She also pressed ahead with inserting a drip
into the woman’s arm despite her protests and asked her family to hold her
down, according to the official report on the death. This too contravenes the
guidelines.
Once the public prosecution department has finished its
investigation it will decide whether or not the doctor, a specialist in
geriatric medicine, should face criminal charges.
Severe dementia
Last year,
the justice and health ministries relaxed the guidelines for performing
euthanasia on people with severe dementia a little so that patients can be
helped to die even if they incapable of making their current feelings known.
However, they do have to have signed a euthanasia declaration with their family
doctor before they become too seriously ill to be considered for help in dying.
Euthanasia is legal in the Netherlands under strict conditions. For example,
the patient must be suffering unbearable pain and the doctor must be convinced
the patient is making an informed choice. The opinion of a second doctor is
also required.
In 2015 some 5,500 people, mainly cancer sufferers, were helped
to die under the euthanasia legislation. Of them, 109 were suffering dementia
and were in the early stages of the disease. Since the legislation was
introduced in 2002, there have been a number of controversial cases, including
a woman suffering severe tinnitus and a serious alcoholic.

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