Meeting of the Parliament 10 March 2026 [Draft]
I thank everyone who has contributed to the debate. We all face a fundamental conundrum. We are being asked to ponder legislation in which the key definition is simply that a person is
“terminally ill if they have an advanced and progressive disease, illness or condition from which they are unable to recover and that can reasonably be expected to cause their premature death.”
Save for perhaps that second last word—“premature”—that definition covers a huge range of conditions. One could say—I say this without any glibness—that we all suffer from a condition that is progressive and that will limit our lives: life. A great number of medical conditions fit that definition. Simply the prognosis or diagnosis that someone has a condition from which they will not recover and that will likely kill them is sufficient for them to exercise the capacities that are set out in the bill.