The right-to-die debate has gone a step futher in Belgium. Charlotte McDonald-Gibson speaks to a mother who wants others to avoid her baby’s slow, painful death.
PUTTE, Belgium—In this small village amid an array of Flemish farms, they were an unusual but seemingly happy pair, two 43-year-olds who were identical, deaf twins. Townspeople recalled seeing Marc and Eddy Verbessem around town frequently, talking animatedly in sign language together, tooling around in a small blue car, and regularly buying two copies of a popular gossip magazine. No one expected them to decide to die on purpose.
To investigate attitudes towards physician-assisted death in minors among all physicians involved in the treatment of children dying in Flanders, Belgium over an 18-month period, and how these are related to actual medical end-of-life practices.
In Belgium, where euthanasia was legalized in 2002, we conducted a follow-up study in 2007 to two largescale nationwide surveys on medical end-of-life practices that had been conducted in 1998 and 2001. This follow-up study enabled us to investigate differences in the frequency and characteristics of these practices before and after the enactment of the law.
Scientists have been able to reach into the mind of a brain-damaged man and communicate with his thoughts. The research, carried out in the UK and Belgium, involved a new brain scanning method. Awareness was detected in three other patients previously diagnosed as being in a vegetative state. The study in the New England Journal of Medicine shows that scans can detect signs of awareness in patients thought to be closed off from the world. Patients in a vegetative state are awake, not in a coma, but have no awareness because of severe brain damage. The scientists used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) which shows brain activity in real time.
In the linked study (doi:10.1136/bmj.b2772), Van den Block and colleagues report a national mortality follow-back study of end of life care in Belgium conducted during 2005 and 2006. The findings are a valuable contribution to understanding the context of dying in Belgium. They detail the frequency of team based palliative care; involvement of generalists; use of intensive alleviation of symptoms, which can extend to palliative sedation (termed continuous deep sedation); and the incidence of euthanasia and physician assisted suicide. However, the authors’ interpretation of the data and the conclusions they reach raise questions. Their conclusion that life shortening decisions, including euthanasia and physician assisted suicide, are not related to a lower use of palliative care in Belgium and often occur within the context of multidisciplinary care, misrepresents the frequencies they report and is tangential to the main findings.