First-year complications with assisted suicide
Reports show some patients had troubles with end-of-life procedures, but complications were rare. Advocates say they'll work to better publicize proper methods.
There may need to be some tinkering with the machinery of death.
Opponents of Washington’s and Oregon’s physician-assisted suicide laws had warned that there would be botched procedures leading to drawn-out suffering of terminally ill patients ending their lives. Newly released annual reports on the use of the Death with Dignity laws in Washington and Oregon in 2009 show there were two or three complications in Washington and one in Oregon. It’s believed that one Washington patient accounted for two of the reported complications.
Leaders of Compassion & Choices, a nonprofit group which sends volunteers to support and monitor patients using the laws, say these complications were minor and that they occurred in a tiny percentage of the total cases. “We’re concerned because we want this to work well and properly,” said Dr. Tom Preston, a retired Seattle cardiologist who serves as Compassion’s medical director in Washington. “The more we can get information out there on doing it correctly, particularly to doctors, the better it works out.”
But the leader of a group that strongly opposes Washington’s law — approved by 58 percent of voters in a 2008 ballot initiative — has a darker view of these complications. “This is marketed by Compassion and Dr. Preston as a peaceful means of dying,” said Eileen Geller, a Seattle hospice nurse who heads True Compassion Advocates, which tries to steer people away from assisted suicide. “But this type of death is cruel and unusual.”
One terminally ill Washington patient who took the lethal prescription vomited up part of it because he had swilled six cans of Pepsi, his favorite drink, in the hour before taking the drug, Preston said. He got that information from the patient’s physician, who wasn’t there but heard it from people who were present. The patient woke up and fell back asleep several times before finally dying 28 hours later — the longest time to death reported among the 36 Washingtonians who died in 2009 after ingesting the drug.
The other Washington case with complications was a terminally ill woman who swallowed the drug too slowly because she kept stopping to say goodbye to the people around her, Preston said. She fell asleep after drinking less than half the full cocktail, then awakened before later dying. The lethal drug used in assisted dying in Washington and Oregon is either oral secobarbital or pentobarbital, mixed with a sweet-tasting liquid or custard.
The problem in these two cases, Preston said, was the patients refused to have a physician or trained Compassion volunteer present to make sure proper procedures were followed. Compassion counsels patients not to eat for four to five hours beforehand; to take an anti-nausea drug an hour ahead of time; not to take laxatives or ingest acidic beverages such as orange juice; to drink water or soda only at room temperature; and to say goodbyes first and then drink the lethal cocktail down all at once.
Compassion had a volunteer present in 80 percent of the Washington cases where patients ingested the lethal drug last year, and there were no reported complications in those cases, Preston said.
“When we have a trained volunteer present, the average time to sleep is five minutes and the average time to dying is 25 minutes,” he said. “Like any medical procedure, there’s a right way to do it. Even when patients and their families have been adequately instructed, it can misfire if there isn’t someone knowledgable there watching.”
In Oregon, there was one reported regurgitation out of the 59 deaths under the law in 2009; there have been 20 out of 460 cases since that state’s pioneering Death with Dignity law took effect in 1998. Over that entire period, just one patient was reported to have awakened after taking the drug, about four years ago.
According to George Eighmey, Compassion’s executive director in Oregon, doctors later concluded that patient woke up because he had taken a laxative to mask the bitter taste of the lethal drug, which prevented his body from absorbing the drug quickly enough. When he awoke after being asleep for 65 hours, there were no signs of pain, and he ended up dying of his underlying disease two weeks later.
Oregon reported one Death with Dignity patient last year who took a record 104 hours to die. “The doctors we talked to said it’s likely she just had a very strong heart,” Eighmey said.
There’s no indication that people who have taken longer to die have suffered, Eighmey said; they look relaxed and sleep soundly. In one case last year, however, family members noticed the patient “grimacing or twitching,” he acknowledged. “They were concerned afterward, but the person still died without awakening.”
Compassion volunteers inform family members in advance to prepare for an extended vigil. While the average time to death is two hours, Eighmey said, eight or nine of the 460 patients took longer than 10 hours. “It depends on the family whether it’s uncomfortable or not,” he said. “Yes, some are distressed. But others find it comforting. One family called me after the father took 24 hours to die. They lit candles and held a vigil and said it was good for them and for the father as well. It’s no different than the dying process in natural death.”
Eighmey boasts that last year Compassion had volunteers present during 57 of the 59 assisted-dying cases in Oregon, up from around 80 percent over the previous years. “More and more hospices and medical providers are aware of our organization and appreciate our facilitating that process,” he said.
In Washington, there is concern that mandatory physician reporting forms on two of the 63 Washington patients who received lethal medication prescriptions from their doctors weren’t filed in time for the 2009 annual report. In addition, there were four missing after-death forms from physicians — making it impossible to know whether four of the 47 patients who received the prescription and subsequently died expired from ingesting the lethal drug or from other causes.
“The law doesn’t provide specific enforcement authority but we are calling doctors to ask them if they forgot to send the forms,” said Donn Moyer, a spokesman for the Washington Department of Health.
Geller, who also heads a Christian-oriented, right-to-life bereavement group called Consoling Grace, criticized the missing forms as a sign of the dangerous holes in reporting and enforcement under the law. “We don’t know who died from the medication, and there’s no penalty for not reporting,” she said.
She argues that elderly and disabled people are being pressured by relatives to choose assisted suicide for financial reasons, and that providers are being told they can’t report this as elder abuse due to the Death with Dignity law. She said she knows of one case last year where a woman suffering from moderate diabetes wanted to stop taking her insulin to qualify for Death with Dignity; when a hospice nurse told her she didn’t qualify under the requirement that patients be terminally ill with six months to live, a Compassion & Choices volunteer called and berated the nurse.
Geller declined to make the hospice nurse available for an interview, saying the nurse was fearful of retaliation. But Preston called Geller’s charge against Compassion a “baseless and unsubstantiated claim,” saying, “we would never consider working with such a patient except to advise her that she didn’t qualify under the law.”
Like what you just read? Support high quality local journalism. Become a member of Crosscut today!










Twitter
Facebook
RSS Feeds
Comments:
Posted Tue, Mar 23, 3:23 p.m. Inappropriate
There's always the 32 caliber solution. I hope when the time comes for me that I have a choice about how to end my life and do not have to resort to that.
Kathleen
Posted Fri, Apr 2, 7:55 p.m. Inappropriate
When my mother used the Death with Dignity Act, she weas dying of stage IV pancreatic cancer and had 2 to 6 months to live. I was with her on her last day and she followed the directions meticulously--she wanted to be absolutely sure she died the way she wanted to die, and that didn't include complications. The reason she chose death with dignity in the first place was die peacefully at home before pain and pain medication robbed her peace and dignity. Her death went exactly the way she wanted--no complications but lots of peace.
I just cannot understand why poor compliance on the part of a few people is equated with whether the Death With Dignity law is working the way it should. You know, sometimes people eat before they have major surgery and then aspirate under anesthesia, too, but we don't criticize doctors or the process of undergoing surgery because the patient failed to follow directions.
Geller states that elderly and disabled people are being pressured by relatives to "choose assisted suicide for financial reason". I would challenge her to prove that assertion. Just because she says it, doesn't mean it is truly happening, and afterall, she has her own agenda to state such inflamatory, scary things because she doesn't agree with the Death with Dignity Act, which was voted into law by the people of Washington State. In fact, Geller appears to be making more than one unsubstantiated claim in this article--too bad she cannot produce that nurse who claims to have been berated by a Compassion and Choice volunteer. I guess we'll know what really happened.
Posted Fri, Apr 2, 7:57 p.m. Inappropriate
Pardon--I meant to say we will NEVER know what really happened.
Posted Sun, Apr 11, 10:52 p.m. Inappropriate
Attempting suicide is the worst thing I can't do in my entire life. Maybe the one doing this is on the influence of drugs such as scopolamine which inhibits drug tolerance and crime like suicide.
Login or register to add your voice to the conversation.