Meeting of the Parliament 12 March 2026 [Draft]
Hopefully you can hear me. I certainly do not believe that it would be fair if a patient were told that at the point of diagnosis.
On Rona Mackay’s point about Australia, when it first legislated, the legislation was all about coercion and protecting vulnerable people, and it prohibited doctors and health professionals from mentioning assisted dying. However, the core reason that it is reconsidering that now is that independent statutory reviews across multiple states found that it prevented informed choice and that many eligible patients did not know that the option existed for them. That has been especially true for people with low health literacy, those from diverse cultural and linguistic backgrounds, rural patients and those with dementia and other neurodegenerative conditions. The result was that people have died in severe distress without ever knowing that assisted dying was a lawful option.