- Scott Helman's article about legalizing assisted suicide in Massachusetts implies that doing so will eliminate violent suicides. I am physician in Oregon where assisted suicide is legal. Official statistics from the state of Oregon do not support this claim.
- Based on an Oregon Public Health report released in 2010, Oregon's overall suicide rate, which excludes suicide under Oregon's assisted suicide act, is 35% above the national average. The report documents that the rate has been "increasing significantly since 2000."
- Just three years prior, in 1997, Oregon legalized assisted suicide. Suicide has thus increased, not decreased, with legalization of assisted suicide. Moreover, many of these deaths are violent. For 2007, which is the most recent year reported on Oregon's website, "[f]irearms were the dominant mechanism of suicide among men." The claim that legalization prevents violent deaths is without factual support.
- Factual support for the above statistics:
- Oregon Health Authority News Release September 9, 2010 athttp://www.oregon.gov/DHS/news/2010news/2010-0909a.pdf and,
- "Suicides in Oregon, Trends and Risk Factors," Executive Summary, p.4, at
- http://public.health.oregon.gov/DiseasesConditions/InjuryFatalityData/Documents/Suicide%20in%20Oregon%20Trends%20and%20risk%20factors.pdf
- William L. Toffler MD
- Professor of Family Medicine
- Oregon Health & Science University
- Posrtland OR
Grim Complaint Against Kaiser Hospital
http://www.courthousenews.com/2012/02/06/43641.htm
By WILLIAM DOTINGA
RIVERSIDE, Calif. (CN) - A son claims a Kaiser hospital ignored his wealthy father's power of attorney so the plaintiff's greedy siblings could collect multimillion-dollar inheritances.
Hector Noval sued Kaiser Foundation Hospitals and affiliates, a doctor and two social workers on behalf of his father, Victorino Noval, who died in May 2010 after a "terminal extubation." Noval says his father had been involuntarily admitted to Kaiser's intensive care unit for pneumonia on April 28, 2010, while suffering from early-stage of Parkinson's and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
RIVERSIDE, Calif. (CN) - A son claims a Kaiser hospital ignored his wealthy father's power of attorney so the plaintiff's greedy siblings could collect multimillion-dollar inheritances.
Hector Noval sued Kaiser Foundation Hospitals and affiliates, a doctor and two social workers on behalf of his father, Victorino Noval, who died in May 2010 after a "terminal extubation." Noval says his father had been involuntarily admitted to Kaiser's intensive care unit for pneumonia on April 28, 2010, while suffering from early-stage of Parkinson's and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Before being hospitalized, Noval, 78, "lived in his own home, drove his own vehicle, and performed his own activities of daily living," according to the Superior Court complaint. "He was worth $60 million and had annual income of $3 million. He made investments and controlled his finances. He suffered from no neurological deficiencies. He did not have dementia or diminished capacity, He functioned independent of others. He was in no way nearing death, an irreversible coma, or a persistent vegetative state. Upon hospitalization, he only required temporary oxygen support while the pneumonia infection in his lungs cleared and he regained his strength. His condition was no more serious than that."