Voluntary assisted dying available to more Australians in 2023

Lindy Willmott, Queensland University of Technology; Ben White, Queensland University of Technology, and Katrine Del Villar, Queensland University of Technology

By the end of 2023, eligible people in all Australian states will be able to apply for voluntary assisted dying as the final three states’ laws become operational this year.

This year began with Queensland’s voluntary assisted dying law commencing operation on 1 January. South Australia is to follow shortly, on 31 January, with the New South Wales law to commence on 28 November.

These states join Victoria, Western Australia and Tasmania, whose laws have been operating for more than three years, one year and three months respectively.

The territories may be poised to follow with the Commonwealth’s lifting of an over 25-year ban on territories passing voluntary assisted dying laws.

The Australian Capital Territory has already signalled it will introduce such laws by 2024 and circulate a discussion paper in coming months.

Hundreds have chosen to die this way

There is now a clear picture emerging of voluntary assisted dying in Australia, with hundreds choosing this in states where it is legal.

In Victoria, 604 people have been assisted to die in the three years between June 2019 and June 2022 (the latest figures publicly available). Some 75 per cent of people being assisted to die since the law commenced were 65 or older; more than 80 per cent of applicants had cancer. In the last reporting period (1 July 2021 to 30 June 2022), deaths from voluntary assisted dying represented 0.58 per cent of deaths in that state.

In WA, uptake has been much higher than expected, with 190 people (1.1 per cent of deaths in the state) choosing voluntary assisted dying in the first year. This is more than the number of Victorians who accessed voluntary assisted dying in the first year, even though WA’s population is much smaller.

In WA, almost 88 per cent of eligible applicants were aged 60 or over and 68 per cent of patients requesting voluntary assisted dying had cancer.

In both states, more than 80 per cent of patients requesting voluntary assisted dying were also receiving palliative care. Eligible applicants cited the inability to engage in activities that make life enjoyable, and the loss of autonomy, as the two most common reasons for accessing voluntary assisted dying.

How is the system working?

In Victoria and WA, bodies that oversee voluntary assisted dying have found the system safe. According to their reports, only people who meet the strict eligibility criteria have been able to access it.

Those providing voluntary assisted dying and state-based services designed to help prospective patients access it have been praised as being supportive and compassionate.

However, there are barriers to access, including:

Many of these issues are heightened in rural and remote areas.

While it is still early days in Tasmania, access issues have already been reported. These result from a lack of trained doctors, and a complicated and lengthy request and assessment process.

Person sitting on bench looking out at rural view across paddock to mountains
Many access issues are heightened in rural and remote areas.
Robert So/Pexels

How can we address these issues?

Voluntary assisted dying legislation in each state requires it to be reviewed after a certain period. For both Victoria and WA, this review will begin this year.

But it is not yet clear how these reviews will be conducted, or what evidence considered.

For some issues, law reform might be needed. For others, a policy response may be possible. For example, potential barriers might be addressed through better remuneration for participating practitioners, strategies to support individuals living in rural and remote areas and a more flexible application of the Australian residency rules.

These mandated reviews present an important opportunity to improve how voluntary assisted dying laws operate in practice. It is pivotal these reviews are evidence-based.

Fortunately, there is a growing body of published evidence that can guide and inform these reviews – from the bodies that oversee voluntary assisted dying and from research on voluntary assisted dying practice.

Now voluntary assisted dying laws are operational in all Australian states, or will be by the end of the year, the next challenge is to ensure current barriers to access are removed while continuing to ensure the system operates safely.

Katherine Waller, Project Coordinator, Australian Centre for Health Law Research, Queensland University of Technology, coauthored this article.

Lindy Willmott, Professor of Law, Australian Centre for Health Law Research, Queensland University of Technology, Queensland University of Technology; Ben White, Professor of End-of-Life Law and Regulation, Australian Centre for Health Law Research, Queensland University of Technology, and Katrine Del Villar, Postdoctoral research fellow, Queensland University of Technology

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons licence. Read the original article.

Do you think Australians should be able to end their lives on their terms? Or are these laws a step too far? Let us know in the comments section below.

The Conversation
The Conversationhttps://theconversation.com/au/who-we-are
The Conversation Australia and New Zealand is a unique collaboration between academics and journalists that is the world’s leading publisher of research-based news and analysis.

2 COMMENTS

  1. My first boyfriend (aged 69), took up this option and was allowed to die peacefully in July 2022. His cancer was a particularly aggressive one – affecting his shoulders and beyond. Unbeknown to myself, he had been suffering horribly for decades and despite various treatments which appeared to initially work before coming back with a vengeance, he had simply had enough and chose when and when he would depart this earth.

  2. Absolutely essential that people be assisted to die, it’s an individual choice, your life, your choice and should not be restricted to a terminal illness or time frame . Those who have been living in severe pain for years should not have to wait because their problem is “not terminal”. I have a friend in Holland who has been throwing up anything she eats for 2 years, no cure, lost a lot of weight, a feeding tube might keep her alive but it no way to live and she has requested euthansia and will get it.

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