By Micheal Cook
In March, a committee of Ireland’s parliament recommended that “the Government introduce legislation allowing for assisted dying.”
If this is approved, Irish doctors will be ready to implement it. In the latest edition of its Guide to Professional Conduct and Ethics, the Medical Council has deleted the sentence: “You must not take part in the deliberate killing of a patient.”
Professor Des O’Neill, a consultant geriatrician, has expressed his anger over the allegedly flawed process by which the change in policy was made. In an op-ed in the Medical Independent, he complained that he had to resort to a freedom of information request to read the minutes of the decision made by the Medical Council.
“the committee is saying what is legal is ethical, which has been quoted subsequently as the rationale for dropping the long-standing and well-reasoned ethical stricture on euthanasia and assisted suicide. That this ethically impoverished stance was adopted speaks volumes about either ethical illiteracy or else an unarticulated strategy to remove an important ethical principle from the guide.”
“failure to communicate and engage appropriately on a major ethical issue will do lasting damage to the credibility and standing of the Medical Council as a focus for considered ethical reflection and support for not only present and future generations of doctors, but also patients and the public.”
