the College of Physicians opposes euthanasia and calls for a “conscience clause”

by time news

The College of Physicians is not “not in favor of euthanasia” and considers that, if France opens up the possibility of active assistance in dying, doctors must benefit from “conscience clause”said its president Thursday in the Daily doctor.

The National Consultative Ethics Committee (CCNE) judged possible, in an opinion published on Tuesday, active assistance in dying under strict conditions, for adults suffering from serious and incurable diseases, with physical and/or psychological suffering impossible to appease, and a vital prognosis engaged in the medium term.

“Performing euthanasia is not the doctor’s role”

For the President of the National Council of the Order of Physicians (CNOM), François Arnault, “place and role” sketched for the doctor by the CCNE appear “rather like a good basis for reflection”.

“He must make sure of the diagnosis and verify that the person meets the medical criteria – the clinical situations envisaged, for example certain neurodegenerative diseases, are rather consensus in their difficulty of management. He must also ensure the reality of the patient’s wishes, which is very important.he detailed in an interview.

Most “If assisted suicide is accepted, we will be very attentive: should he be a companion? Surely. Perform ? I do not believe. This is not his jobsaid Dr. Arnault. “And the Order is not in favor of euthanasia”where a doctor performs the lethal injection, he continued.

conscience clause

When asked whether to go further than the Claeys-Leonetti law of 2016, the president of the CNOM replied that “the population has high expectations” but that“The law must protect the doctor in the support he would be required to provide”.

“This must go through a conscience clause, like the one that exists for the voluntary termination of pregnancy, with the duty to redirect the patient to a doctor who agrees to take care of him”, he pleaded. A position which is in line with CCNE’s recommendations.

More broadly, the President of the Council of the Order judged France ” very late “ on the end of life and considered that it was “it is necessary for each department to have establishments dedicated to the end of life, with trained and supported caregivers”. According to him, “we must fight against these inequalities of access to palliative care, through training, and already through the application of the Claeys-Leonetti law”.

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