Poll Results Don’t Support the End of Life Choice Bill – Euthanasia Free NZ

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“There is a vast difference between support for an abstract concept and support for a particular Bill with all its practical difficulties,” says Renรฉe Joubert, Executive Officer of Euthanasia-Free NZ.

“It is no surprise that more than 35,000 doctors, lawyers, mental health workers and other New Zealanders cared enough to write submissions against the End of Life Choice Bill. It is deeply flawed and unworkable,”

โ€œDavid Seymour is not only dismissive of Parliamentโ€™s submission process in general. He is also discrediting the Care Allianceโ€™s quantitative and qualitative report on their analysis of 38,707 submissions while promoting a report which was written based on having read a mere 226 of them,โ€

The cited review of 20 yearsโ€™ research on New Zealandersโ€™ attitudes to โ€˜assisted dyingโ€™ analysed polling only up to August 2017.

A subsequent Curia Market Research Poll of 894 respondents in November 2017 found that New Zealanders confuse โ€˜assisted dyingโ€™ with end-of-life practices that are legal and available.

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โ€œThis ground-breaking poll challenges the validity of most other polls on the issue. It shows that support for euphemisms such as โ€˜assisted dyingโ€™, โ€˜aid in dyingโ€™ or โ€˜assistance to end their lifeโ€™ should not be taken as support for a law change or as support for any particular Bill,โ€ says Ms Joubert.

First, respondents were asked whether they supported โ€˜assisted dyingโ€™.

โ€œIt has been proposed that people with a terminal or irremediable condition should be allowed assistance to end their lives, also called assisted dying. To what extent do you support or oppose assisted dying?โ€

62% supported it, 22% opposed it, 11% were neutral and 6% were unsure.

Second, respondents were asked what they thought โ€˜assisted dyingโ€™ includes.

66% of respondents thought assisted dying includes the removal of life support.

Only 62% thought that โ€˜assisted dyingโ€™ includes receiving deadly drugs to swallow or self-administer.

Only 68% thought that โ€˜assisted dyingโ€™ includes receiving deadly drugs by injection.

The more strongly a person supported โ€˜assisted dyingโ€™, the more likely they were confused about what it includes.

Of those who strongly supported โ€˜assisted dyingโ€™:
ยท 85% thought it includes turning off life support
ยท 79% thought it includes โ€˜do not resuscitateโ€™ (no CPR) requests
ยท 67% thought it includes the stopping of medical tests, treatments and surgeries.

Finally, respondents were told that the proposed bill includes only โ€˜assisted dyingโ€™ by deadly drugs.*

After hearing which practices the proposed Bill would be limited to, support for โ€˜assisted dyingโ€™ dropped from 62% to 55%, opposition rose from 22% to 26% and unsure/refuse responses rose from 6% to 11%.

The full report and graphs are available at https://euthanasiadebate.org.nz/poll-widespread-confusion-about-assisted-dying/

*The End of Life Choice Bill proposes assisted dying by either of four โ€œmethods for the administration of a lethal dose of medicationโ€ (Section 15): (i) ingestion, triggered by the person; (ii) intravenous delivery, triggered by the person; (iii) ingestion through a tube; or (iv) injection.

The first two methods are commonly known as โ€œassisted suicideโ€ because the person who dies takes the final action that ends their life. The latter two are commonly known as โ€œeuthanasiaโ€ because the final action that ends the personโ€™s life is taken by a person other than the person who dies. The Bill therefore includes both euthanasia and assisted suicide under the umbrella term โ€œassisted dyingโ€.

1 COMMENT

  1. Would this be the Renee Joubert who can be seen on her website hanging out with the Pope and visiting catholic churches ? I prefer to read reports that are not written by people with religious axis to grind!!!

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