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'Deeply dangerous' assisted dying bill should be scrapped, says leading care consultant

A leading British palliative care consultant has described the assisted dying bill as "not fit for purpose" and is urging MPs to stop the bill from progressing any further.

Rejecting assurances from supporters of assisted dying who claim the proposed British version would be based on the scheme used in the American state of Oregon - widely regarded as the model with the most safeguards - Dr Amy Proffitt said "it's far from a safe system". "The majority, 80% of the people that have assisted death have government insurance with Medicaid or Medicare suggesting that the vulnerable in society are not worth it," she said.

"Put that into our NHS and what does it say about us as a society... those with disability, those with learning disabilities, those with social deprivation?" Dr Proffitt added: "I think it's deeply dangerous for the bill that has been proposed and it needs to be scrapped and we go back and look again." She and other leading palliative care doctors have expressed concern about the erosion of end of life care if the bill passes.

It is a fear expressed by Britain's hospice sector. Read more:Why is assisted dying so controversial - and where is it already legal? Dr David Grube, a retired Oregon doctor who has assisted numerous assisted deaths, says those fears have not been realised and the state's hospice sector has strengthened since the introduction of assisted dying in Oregon in 1994.

He says he has never had any doubts about his role as a physician who assists a patient's death. "I've never been conflicted," he explains.

"I've attended a number of them. "Each of the ones I've attended has been almost sacred if you will, it's hard to explain but with the family there, the family dog in the bed, with the music playing that they want.

"Everyone's sad, everyone's crying, it's not a joyful moment but in a way it's kind of a sacred moment." Oregon's assisted dying laws have not seen the same number of changes to widen the cohort groups who would qualify for an assisted death in the way, for example, Canada has. So it has managed to steer clear of the "slippery slope" criticism levelled at other programmes.

Dr Grube also said the assisted death scheme in Oregon had enhanced the patient-physician relationship. "The role of the doctor who is attending the dying patient is one of listening and paying attention to what the needs of the dying patient are and it's eroded when the patient can't trust the doctor," he said.

"When I've seen a patient who has tried to talk to a doctor about aid in dying and they're like 'oh, I won't do that, I'm opposed to it'... well that doesn't enhance a doctor-patient relationship, it will be enhanced when a doctor says let's talk about why you want to ask that." Read more from Sky News:Assisted dying law 'unworkable, unaffordable and naive'MPs criticise Esther Rantzen's assisted dying intervention Oregon's assisted death model is the closest to what is being proposed in the UK.

Both require it to apply only to adults who are terminally ill, mentally competent, and have six months to live or less, and to take the drugs themselves. But while Oregon cases are reviewed by two doctors, in the UK they would be reviewed by a panel including a psychiatrist, a social worker and a legal professional.

In Oregon, the drugs are posted to the individual for them to take when ready, whereas in the UK, a healthcare professional would bring them on the day of the planned death. Marcy Lehman's father Ted was "her hero, the person I looked up to'.

An Oregon doctor, he chose to have an assisted death at home in Portland surrounded by his family. Marcy was there by his side.

And it was for her, her mother and ultimately her father, the right decision. "This was my hero, the person I looked up to, and now the roles were switched and I was taking care of him, and I had to be his hero," Marcy said.

She explained that his stomach cancer "was starting to work up his system so he couldn't eat." "My dad was a strong person and stronger even up until his death," Marcy added. "He didn't want someone to have to go to the bathroom with him to help with that or to feed him that wasn't what he wanted - yeah, he was in pain, he could endure the pain, but it was really more the dignified way he wanted to leave this Earth." Ted's family are grateful that they live in a state where assisted death is allowed.

It's a choice they would make again if they had to. Now the UK must soon decide if that same choice is made available over here.

The Terminally Ill Adults (End Of Life) Bill was introduced to the House of Commons last October. Later this month, MPs will be asked to vote again in a ballot that will decide the fate of the proposed legislation..

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