
|
|

 |

|
Saturday, February 03, 2007 |

Swiss court extends physician-assisted suicide to incurable mental patients
Bernard Hibbitts at 12:31 PM ET

[JURIST] The Federal Supreme Court of Switzerland [official website, in German] ruled Friday that people with serious mental illnesses may be permitted to commit physician-assisted suicide under certain conditions. The decision recognized "that an incurable, permanent, serious mental disorder can cause similar suffering as a physical [disorder]" and extended Switzerland's current physician-assisted suicide for the terminally ill for such patients. Patients suffering from serious mental illnesses will be required to demonstrate that the desire is not the "expression of a curable, psychiatric disorder" but a "well-considered and permanent decision" based on rational judgment. Basler Zeitung has local coverage [in German].
Netherlands legalized euthanasia [JURIST news archive; BBC report] in 2001 and Belgium in 2002. Under Article 115 [text, in German] of the Swiss penal code, assisting another in suicide is not criminal unless the assistance was rendered with a "selfish" motive. AP has more.


Link |
e-mail | print | subscribe |
JURIST news archive | © JURIST

| For a one-stop snapshot of the latest legal news that matters, with breaking documents, new legal videos, live law-related webcasts, commentary by expert law professors and more - all updated through the day in real time, with no ads and no registration barriers - visit JURIST's homepage and check back often... |
|
|

ABOUT | |
|
 | 
This is the emergency backup of JURIST's flagship Paper Chase legal news weblog. It's only active when the main service is disrupted by technical difficulties and is only maintained for that duration. We apologize for any inconvenience and hope to have regular service restored soon.
|
|
|