Newsroom: No room for error on assisted dying

By Caralise Treyes. Most Kiwis aren't aware that the end of life choice act is not a concept they'll be voting for, but specific, unmovable legislation. And if we make a mistake, death is a heavy penalty, writes Caralise Trayes.

A new Colmar Brunton poll revealed last weekend doesn’t do any favours in helping people recognise the binding referendum question they will actually be asked at this year's election. It only reinforces the point that Kiwis aren’t being equipped to make an informed vote.

I read headlines stating the majority of public (63 percent) support legalising euthanasia, according to the poll. To the untrained eye, that looks like some strong evidence that the End of Life Choice Act (EOLC Act) is a done deal. But to me it just smacks of the same shallow approach to this vote that many are tempted into making.

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NZ Herald: "Not going away": Euthanasia opponents vow to keep fighting

By Boris Jancic. Opponents of a bill legalising voluntary euthanasia say they're encouraged Parliament's support for the legislation has thinned at its second reading and are vowing to only get louder. Anti-euthanasia group #DefendNZ Creative Director Henoch Kloosterboer said the opposition voice would keep growing. "It's not going to change. It's not going to stop. There are so many more conversations to be had between now and third reading," he said. "This thing isn't going away. The risks aren't going away. The burden of proof is on the proponents to prove vulnerable New Zealanders will not be placed at risk. One wrongful death would be too many."

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Scoop: We need to talk about suicide and euthanasia

By Jannah Dennison. It is extraordinarily difficult to discuss suicide and euthanasia at the same time. But there is an urgent conversation to be had: what are the implications for New Zealand’s suicide prevention programme of introducing the End of Life Choice Bill? It can seem as if suicide and euthanasia are quite separate issues. On the one hand, suicide is devastating: a mental health tragedy brought on by a range of complex issues. These issues can be addressed with ongoing support and education. Suicide is seen as irrational, and avoidable. On the other hand, euthanasia can seem vastly different: a measured, compassionate response for seriously ill and suffering people. Such people may be well-supported, with stable mental health. Euthanasia – though still difficult - is seen here as rational and considered.

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NZ Disability Commissioner’s Canada euthanasia concerns confirmed in UN report

Media Release: Disability Commissioner Paula Tesoriero outlayed her concerns about the End of Life Choice Bill to John Campbell on TVNZ’s Breakfast yesterday morning. "I'm concerned that the safeguards are woefully inadequate,” she said. “I'm deeply troubled by the fact that this conversation is taking place in the absence of having a wider discussion about adequate disability support services in New Zealand.” Ms Tesoriero referenced a recent report from the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the rights of persons with disabilities, Ms. Catalina Devandas-Aguilar, on her visit to Canada. The UN report, published in April 2019, highlights concerns that disabled people are being pressured to consider euthanasia in Canada.

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RNZ Checkpoint: 14 experts weigh in as 23 MPs still undecided on euthanasia vote

By Alex Perrottet. Checkpoint has run the numbers and canvassed experts views from around the country and overseas. Interviewees include: Dr Otmar Kloiber - Secretary General of the World Medical Association, Robert Preston - a former civil servant in Britain who investigated euthanasia internationally for the British Parliament, Prof Margaret Somerville - Australian ethicist with nine doctorates who spent 40 years in Canada, Kate Baddock - NZMA chair, Dr Rod MacLeod from Auckland's Hibiscus Hospice, Dr Sinead Donnelly of Doctors Say No, former MP Maryan Street, retired intensive care medicine specialist Dr Jack Havill, and many more.

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TVNZ 1 NEWS: Doctors oppose Euthanasia Bill: 'We didn't train to end someone's life'

By Cushla Norman. Doctors against the Euthanasia Bill have stepped up their campaign, taking out a full-page advert in today's Herald on Sunday with more than a thousand signatures in opposition. The Bill allows doctors to assist terminally ill people who are likely to die within six months. A letter of opposition was organised by Dr Sinead Donnelley as thoughts on assisted dying continues to divide the public, politicians and medical professionals.

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NZ Herald: Hundreds of proposed amendments could push euthanasia bill well into next year

By Derek Cheng. MPs opposing a bill that would legalise euthanasia are planning to put up more than 100 amendments that could push its possible passage well into next year. As currently drafted, the bill would allow New Zealanders to request assisted dying if they have a terminal illness or suffer from "a grievous and irremediable medical condition". Barry also attacked Seymour for saying that "the Sunday after the vote, the confessionals will be filled with people who have acted in quite disappointing ways misleading the public about my bill". Barry called it a "silly cheap shot" on faith-based people. "He has attempted to make it personal at different times to different groups, and I think that's deplorable. It's a much more important conversation than that and it's much bigger, even though he might not like to admit it, than even David Seymour."

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RNZ: 1000 Doctors sign letter against 'assisted suicide' Bill

More than 1000 doctors have signed an open letter saying they want no part in what they call assisted suicide. The Care Alliance, a charity which opposes physician-assisted euthanasia, has taken out a full-page ad in the New Zealand Herald. The signatories endorse the views of the World Medical Association and New Zealand Medical Association, that euthanasia is unethical, even if made legal. Dr Sinead Donnelly, who organised the letter, said the bill is unworkable, “The message is that as doctors we don't want to be part of it. You're going to, in our view, destroy the profession of medicine by drawing us in to ending the life of our patients and two, the risk to the vulnerable is much too great.”

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Newshub: 'We need politicians to protect us': Terminal patient slams euthanasia Bill

By Simon Shepherd & Finn Hogan. Vicki Walsh was diagnosed with terminal brain cancer almost eight years ago, and has defied her initial prognosis of 14 months to live. Despite her diagnosis, she opposes the End of Life Choice Bill introduced by ACT leader David Seymour last year, which is due for its second reading in Parliament this week. Speaking to Newshub Nation, Walsh sent a plea to politicians to oppose the Bill. “I’d say we trust our politicians to make decisions for us. That’s why we don’t get to drive around at 150 kilometres or not wear our seat belt, or we have to wear a helmet when we’re riding our pushbike, and I think we trust them to protect us. We need them to protect us from this bill because idealistically, it could look very appealing to some people. It’s what it opens up.”

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Age Concern expert says euthanasia may devalue the lives of older people

Media Release: 10% of older people in New Zealand experience some form of abuse, according to Age Concern professional educator on elder abuse and neglect, Hanny Naus. Age Concern see a wide range of older people who are abused, with 4 out of 5 of them being abused by family members. Speaking about David Seymour’s End of Life Choice Bill Ms Naus said, “Certainly, one of the issues around euthanasia is whether people’s life is of value. When it comes to elder abuse particularly, often the psychological threat that sits below it is that older people have no value – and so when it comes to euthanasia, from an elder abuse point of view, we would certainly argue that anybody’s life has value.”

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TVNZ 1 NEWS: Kiwi man sentenced to 8-year suspended jail for assisted suicides of three disabled people in South Africa

The 58-year-old Kiwi euthanasia advocate who appeared in a Dunedin court in 2011 charged with attempting to murder his terminally ill mother in 2006, has now pleaded guilty to three cases of assisted suicide in South Africa. He faced charges of premedited murder at the Western Cape High Court. Renée Joubert of Euthanasia-Free NZ applauded the decision today. "Politicians who don't want euthanasia to be available to people with disabilities, mental illness, and others who may have decades to live, need to vote against the End of Life Choice Bill on June 26," she said.

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Magic Talk: #DefendNZ Bioethics Professor outlines key ethical flaws with euthanasia in exclusive interview

Magic Drive with Ryan Bridge: With today marking assisted dying becoming legal in Victoria, and with David Seymour’s euthanasia Bill to be debated in Parliament on Wednesday 26 June, Ryan Bridge spoke with an euthanasia expert from Australia who featured in the #DefendNZ documentaries, Professor of Bioethics, Margaret Somerville. “What we're doing here is legalising intentional killing. Now up until you've got some legislation that allows that, as you just have in Victoria, that is first degree murder! So we have to look at what happens with this – it gets normalised. It becomes a normal way to die. Between 1 in 4 and 1 in 5 deaths in The Netherlands are by euthanasia – and that's the ones that we know about – and we know that there's a big under-reporting problem.”

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Australian professor condemns Kiwi euthanasia bill in new #DefendNZ videos being released

Media Release: A series of short videos featuring local and international euthanasia experts will be released across the #DefendNZ social media channels on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram from today. They are being released in the lead up to the likely Second Reading of David Seymour’s End of Life Choice Bill on Wednesday 26 June – only days away. Experts to feature include Australian Bioethics Professor Margaret Somerville of the University of Notre Dame. She sees the proposed legalisation of euthanasia as “the crossing of an ethical and legal Rubicon, after which it becomes impossible to contain the application and practice of euthanasia.”

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NZLifeNZ.com: 我曾去瑞士寻求安乐死,后来……一名瘫痪女子和中风父亲的故事 “I went to Switzerland to seek euthanasia, and then..." The story of a paralyzed woman and her father who suffered a stroke

克莱尔17岁时因为车祸成为了四肢瘫痪者,她甚至安排自己去瑞士实施安乐死。When Claire was 17, she became a tetraplegic because of a car accident. She even arranged for herself to be euthanized in Switzerland. 想一想你可能与父母进行的最艰难的对话!一名新西兰女子,克莱尔·弗里曼(Claire Freeman)和她的爸爸,在不同的时间段,争论过是否要对自己着手实施安乐死。Think of the most difficult conversation you can have with your parents! A New Zealand woman, Claire Freeman, and her father have argued at different times about whether she should seek out euthanasia.

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Disability Rights Commissioner says limiting euthanasia Bill to terminally ill won’t protect disabled people

#DefendNZ Media Release. Disability Rights Commissioner Paula Tesoriero MNZM was quoted on TVNZ’s Sunday programme last night speaking against the effectiveness of proposed changes to the End of Life Choice Bill to limit access to euthanasia or assisted suicide to those with terminal illness and with six months left to live. The Bill’s sponsor has suggested this will fix the Bill. Presenter Miriama Kamo reports Tesoriero saying that such a change would not safeguard disabled people. "Overseas experience has shown the scope is likely to expand over time and take in groups initially excluded," she said.

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Newsroom: Why I changed my mind on euthanasia

By Chris Ford. Chris Ford, a former Green Party List MP Candidate, and current Green Party member explains from 'a socialist, progressive and disability rights perspective’ why he has now swung his support to the anti-euthanasia camp', now firmly in the 'no' side on the voluntary euthanasia legislation conversation. “One could imagine that deeper future cuts to health and disability services would see many more disabled people placed under even greater pressure by both government and wider society to feel worthless and a burden.”

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TVNZ 1 NEWS: Disabled after car crash and previously suicidal, woman now opposes euthanasia law change

By Janet McIntyre. Think about the most difficult conversation you could have with your parents. Claire Freeman is having it right now with her dad and our cameras are rolling. Claire is in a wheel chair after becoming a tetraplegic when she was 17. She’s made numerous attempts on her life and even made arrangements to go to Switzerland to be assisted to die, to the heartbreak of her family.

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Voxy: New poll reveals unease with euthanasia legislation

Most New Zealanders don’t support euthanasia for those who refuse treatment. A new nationwide Curia Market Research poll has found that 60% of New Zealanders don’t want a law that would allow an 18-year-old to refuse treatment and instead choose to die by euthanasia. A quarter (24%) would support such a law. “We can expect the boundaries to be extended in response to such pressure. Changes may not necessarily go through Parliament, but may instead consist of changes in how doctors or courts apply the law.” says Euthanasia-Free NZ spokesperson. They call on MPs to reject the End of Life Choice Bill at its Second Reading.

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Dominion Post: Doctors want no part in assisted suicide full page advert

We endorse the views of the World Medical Association and the New Zealand Medical Association that physician assisted suicide an euthanasia are unethical, even if they were made legal. Doctors are not necessary in the regulation of practice of assisted suicide. They are included only to provide a cloak of medical legitimacy. Leave doctors to focus on saving lives and providing real care to the dying. 1,000 Doctors say say.

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#DefendNZ representatives arrive in Wellington to advocate for vulnerable ahead of possible Second Reading of End of Life Choice Bill on 22 May

#DefendNZ Media Release. We all have a stake in the End of Life Choice Bill conversation, but for some people, this Bill is more than a thought experiment – it is a clear and present danger. For this reason, some of the people featured in the #DefendNZ documentaries are in the Capital to make themselves available to speak personally with MPs and media.

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Scoop: New poll shows less support for euthanasia

Euthanasia-Free NZ. A new nationwide Curia Market Research poll shows the gap between supporters and opponents of euthanasia is narrowing, and that many people withdraw their support when asked to consider some of the details involved in the End of Life Choice Bill, says Euthanasia-Free NZ executive officer Renée Joubert.

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NZ Herald Canvas: What is it like to die? A doctor explains.

By Kim Knight. Euthanasia, says MacLeod, is "predominantly a white middle-class push. "There's no push in India for euthanasia, no push in Thailand or Japan. They think we're mad. They look after the people who are most vulnerable. "If we're serious about caring for New Zealanders then we need to make sure that everybody has access to palliative care. That every single rest home has adequate staffing to care for people who are dying, that every hospital recognises when people are dying, and puts in more care - not less. Rather than saying 'we can't deal with this, so we'll kill people', you look at the problem and solve the problem."

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Stuff.co.nz: End of life choices: The Crown's duty of protection – by Queen's Counsel Grant Illingworth

By Grant Illingworth QC. In the aftermath of the Christchurch shootings, heavily armed police were urgently mobilised as soon as the threat was revealed. The Government acted to protect the lives of every individual in this country, with force if necessary. The Crown's fundamental obligation is to govern and protect every subject ... Opening the door to assisted suicide, without an absolute assurance that mistakes will never be made, would egregiously breach that obligation. No-one can give such assurance: it is certainly not provided by the bill currently before the House. It follows that every MP who agrees with the principle of reciprocal protection should vote to end the life of the End of Life Choice Bill.

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NZ Herald: Anti-euthanasia campaigners spend afternoon at Parliament

By Lucy Bennett: People with disabilities and terminal illnesses spent the afternoon at Parliament today in a last-ditch bid to convince MPs to vote against the End of Life Choice Bill. The controversial Bill, in the name of Act leader David Seymour, is due to have its second reading soon. It passed its first reading 76 votes to 44, by conscience vote, and Seymour is confident it will pass its second reading.

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End of Life Choice Bill has no place in New Zealand says new book from #DefendNZ

#DefendNZ Media Release. The grassroots movement opposed to the End of Life Choice Bill – today releases its book ‘Vote “No” to Assisted Suicide’, which has also been delivered to MPs. It presents a collection of writings illustrating #DefendNZ’s reasons for speaking out against the End of Life Choice Bill. It details the stories of Kiwis who could be eligible for assisted suicide under the Bill, as well as commentary from New Zealand and international experts – and evidence supporting their concerns.

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Stuff.co.nz: As a tetraplegic I once supported assisted suicide - but I was wrong

By Claire Freeman. The End of Life Choice Bill comes with a dark side that we cannot ignore, writes Claire Freeman. “For most of my life I've been pro assisted suicide. It was about choice, dignity, and compassion. I think that's why most New Zealanders are in favour of the End of Life Choice Bill. But it's not a choice for us when we aren't treated equally, in society or within the healthcare system. It isn't a choice when we feel there are no other options.”

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#DefendNZ releases Top 5 Reasons for MPs to Vote ‘NO’ – The End of life Choice Bill will never be safe

#DefendNZ Media Release. The grassroots movement opposed to the End of Life Choice Bill – has listed their Top 5 Reasons why MPs should vote “no” at its Second Reading. The End of Life Choice Bill, should it pass, would put vulnerable people in danger of being coerced into requesting death, and of turning to death as a release from feelings of depression, anxiety, loneliness, or of concern about being a burden on loved ones.

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Scoop: Doctors’ Open Letter Gets 1,000th Signature

Care Alliance: The ‘Doctors Say No’ Open Letter opposing euthanasia has received its 1,000th signature. Organiser Dr Sinead Donnelly, a Wellington-based Palliative Medicine specialist, says she is humbled by the response. “We started with just a very simple one-page website and it has snowballed through word of mouth and social media.” Dr Donnelly says that David Seymour’s End of Life Choice Bill “only includes doctors to provide a cloak of medical legitimacy. Killing is not caring. It does not require any medical skills, it just requires the abandonment of medical ethics.”

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NZME Health Central: Watch the full debate - Bill English, David Seymour, Dr Leonie Herx, Claire Freeman talk End of Life Choice Bill in the ChalkTalks panel

Watch the full-length Health Central ChalkTalks panel debate on the End of Life Choice Bill from the ticketed and sold-out event on Wednesday 3 April 2019. Panelists included Former Prime Minister Sir Bill English, Dr Leonie Herx, Claire Freeman, David Seymour, Kerri Nuku of NZNO, and euthanasia advocate Dr Jack Havill.

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Dominion Post: End of Life Choice Bill report offers only ambiguity for MPs before second reading

By Alex Penk. After months of thought and argument, the justice select committee has thrown the End of Life Choice Bill back in Parliament's lap. We're in the strange situation where no-one, not even sponsor David Seymour, is supporting the Bill as it is. The select committee couldn't agree that the bill should pass and made only technical changes to it, deliberately leaving major questions hanging. Supporters are trying to invest the procedure with the illusion of certainty, but the bill is now overshadowed by ambiguity.

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RNZ: Euthanasia Bill 'loopholes' mean 16-year-olds could apply without parents knowledge: Lawyers, academics say

Morning Report: An open letter to the government calling for greater scrutiny to tidy up what they say are unacceptable loopholes in the End of Life Choice Bill has been signed by 75 lawyers and academics. One of those lawyers, Grant Illingworth QC, told Morning Report he was concerned by a loophole in the bill that could mean 16-year-olds could apply for assisted dying without their parents' knowledge.

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RNZ: Youth worker worried about euthanasia Bill's impact on suicide

By Emma Hatton. Dion Howard, a therapist who specialises in youth suicide is concerned not enough is known about how assisted dying may affect vulnerable youth. He said some coverage of the Bill had glorified assisted dying, "I've had instances of young people quoting Exit International methods on how to take your own life, which became a part of our risk assessments of their situations. That was concerning to me."

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Newshub Nation: Simon Shepherd interviews Act Party Leader David Seymour and Peter Thirkell from the Care Alliance

Simon Shepherd: With Act Party Leader David Seymour debated his controversial End of Life Choice Bill with Care Alliance Secretary Peter Thirkell on Newshub Nation. Thirkell says, “There’s a huge amount of expert evidence and evidence from the public saying please don’t do this. It puts vulnerable people at risk, it disrupts the doctor/patient relationship and requires them to participate in a system that would be unethical. The overseas experience certainly is not reassuring.”

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Tagata Pasifika: Debate on End of Life Choice Bill featuring Dr Ate Moala and Togi To’o

With Marama T-Pole. This week’s talanoa (dialogue) we are joined by Dr Ate Moala. Dr Moala says, “It will be the first time in the history of Aotearoa, and of course will flow over to our South Pacific nations, for doctors to be allowed to legally kill their patients – and death then will become a medical treatment for doctors to do. And in the current constraints of the District Health Boards, New Zealand healthcare resources, a death will be cheaper.”

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Tagata Pasifika: Pacific opponents of euthanasia Bill rally in the Capital this week

With Marama T-Pole. Pacific opponents of the End of Life Choice Bill stepped up efforts in the Capital this week with a rally at Parliament. Around 100 members of the Wellington Pacific community converged on the steps of Parliament to meet Pacific MPs and put forward their objections. The Bill would give terminally ill people the option of requesting help to die. Opponents say it will widen health inequality for Pacific people.

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When prognosis is wrong: New Zealander given less than six months to live survives many more years – latest #DefendNZ documentary tells his story

#DefendNZ Media Release. According to many, any attempt to limit access to euthanasia to those likely to die within six months would be difficult, if not impossible. This is because of the very imperfect art that is prognosis. This concern is captured perfectly in the story of Glenn Major, whose wife Heather and daughter Rachel recount his journey with terminal illness and disability, in the fifth documentary from #DefendNZ: When prognosis is wrong.

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Newstalk ZB: Palliative Care experts say we shouldn't allow euthanasia

With Larry Williams & Sinead Donnelly. Palliative Care experts say we shouldn't allow euthanasia – using Canada as an example, with lots of unwanted outcomes. Dr Sinead Donnelly is a Palliative Care Doctor in Wellington and explains that the risks are huge to the vulnerable in New Zealand society. She cites dangerous examples of expansion in both Canada and Oregon where forms of assisted dying are legal.

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#DefendNZ: The End of Life Choice Bill can’t be fixed

#DefendNZ Media Release. In their Report, released today, the Justice Committee details hundreds of problems with the End of Life Choice Bill, but fixes none of the substantial ones. The Committee reports that they heard that the Bill’s criteria are too wide and vague, and the Bill doesn’t protect against coercion. That the Bill may undermine suicide prevention programmes, and it may breach the Treaty of Waitangi. To name a few.

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RNZ: Pacific communities rally against euthanasia bill

About two-hundred people gathered in parliament grounds to protest against the bill. One of the speakers at the rally, Dr Luatupu Cleverley, said the legislation compounded poor health outcomes for the Pacific community. Pacific people already suffer the worst statistics in the New Zealand health system and the bill goes against their culture and traditions, Dr Cleverley said. It is traditional for Pacific families to look after their own and the government should focus on improving palliative care, she said.

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Newstalk ZB: Hundreds of Pacific Islanders rally outside Parliament against End of Life Choice Bill

Malcolm Jordan and Alex Mason. A major rally against David Seymour’s euthanasia Bill is underway in front of Parliament, with the Justice Select Committee reporting back to the house today. But a group representing Pacific Island communities is against it. The group says safeguards in the Bill will not protect the most vulnerable, particularily Pacific people who have some of the worst health statistics. They say it ignores respectful customs surrounding death and would lead to the abuse of the elderly, ill and vulnerable, and distrust of the medical profession.

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Woman with similar brain cancer to Lecretia Seales’ speaks out against the End Of Life Choice Bill in #DefendNZ fourth documentary – Terminal but not dead yet

#DefendNZ Media Release. Vicki Walsh speaks out against the End of Life Choice Bill in documentary Terminal but not dead yet. In 2011 she was diagnosed with Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), also known as Grade 4 astrocytoma, an advanced form of the brain cancer that Wellington lawyer Lecretia Seales was diagnosed with in the same year.

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Radio Waatea: Turia rejects assisted dying option

Former Māori Party co-leader Dame Tariana Turia says End of Life Choice Bill if passed would mark a potentially dangerous cultural and social shift in Aotearoa. Dame Tariana, whose former ministerial portfolios includes associate health and disability issues, says tikanga Māori is that death and dying are matters for the family and whānau to attend to.

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Dr Mary English speaks out against End of Life Choice Bill in #DefendNZ third documentary – A life in chronic pain

#DefendNZ Media Release. Former First Lady of New Zealand Dr Mary English speaks out against the End of Life Choice Bill in the third documentary released today by #DefendNZ – a grassroots movement opposed to the End of Life Choice Bill. A life in chronic pain features the story of Dr John Fox of Christchurch, who was born with spastic hemiplegia, a form of cerebral palsy.

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NZME: Health Central: Intense debate at panel discussion on End of Life Choice Bill includes Bill English, Dr Leonie Herx, Claire Freeman and Seymour

By Jude Barback. While last night’s Health Central ChalkTalks panel discussion on the End of Life Choice Bill raised more questions than it did answers, it is clear that this is the conversation we need to be having. Panellists included Former Prime Minister Sir Bill English, Dr Leonie Herx, Claire Freeman (who features in the #DefendNZ documentary released Wednesday 3 April), David Seymour, Kerri Nuku of NZNO, and euthanasia advocate Dr Jack Havill.

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Stuff.co.nz: Patients' trust in doctors central in End of Life Choice Bill debate

By Dr Conrad Engelbrecht: Anaesthetist and Pain Medicine Specialist. “In debate around the End of Life Choice Bill, there is a lot of talk about pain and suffering. Is it possible to stop all pain and suffering? Can pain and suffering make a life no longer valuable, and make death a better option than life? What should a doctor's role be when a patient is experiencing intense pain and suffering?”

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Waikato Times: Trust key in End of Life Bill

By Dr Conrad Engelbrecht: Anaesthetist and Pain Medicine Specialist. Waikato Hospital’s Conrad Engelbrecht wants politicians talking about policies and funding that provide patients with support they need to navigate what can be a difficult path from pain to improved quality of life. “As someone who works with people in pain every day, I can’t support the End of Life Choice Bill. It takes a vulnerable population, one that experiences depression and anxiety and already worries that their lives hold no value to society, and offers them suicide as a solution to their pain and suffering.”

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Former NZ euthanasia advocate speaks out against End of Life Choice Bill in new #DefendNZ documentary

#DefendNZ Media Release. The movement opposed to the End of Life Choice Bill – launches its second full-length documentary today, entitled A deadly double standard which features the story of Claire Freeman from Christchurch, who has been a tetraplegic since her neck was broken in a car accident at the age of 17. A multiple suicide survivor and former euthanasia advocate, she now speaks out against the End of Life Choice Bill.

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Indian Newslink: Legalising Euthanasia will have deadly effects says expert and Sir Bill English says New Zealand should not risk such a law

By Venkat Ramen. New Zealand will be wrong to choose Euthanasia since its long-term effects would be deadly, says an international expert. Dr Leonie Herx, Head of Palliative Medicine at Queen’s University, Canada said that while death is a natural process, it should not be induced through medical or any other assistance. Former Prime Minister Sir Bill English, also a strong opponent, said that the End of Life Choice Bill, will place a “very large number of New Zealanders at serious risk”.

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Newstalk ZB: Majority of submissions on euthanasia bill are against legalising

Newstalk ZB: Mike Hosking interviews Dr Leonie Herx. "The largest children's hospital in Canada - the Toronto Hospital for Sick Children - has already published their guidelines on how euthanasia will occur for mature minors. It includes if the child says they don't want the parent to know, the parent will be informed the child has died after they've received euthanasia."

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Newshub: Slippery slope to kids, mentally ill getting euthanised - doctor

The AM Show: Dan Satherley interviews Dr Leonie Herx. A visiting Canadian doctor claims if New Zealand introduces euthanasia, it could result in children choosing to end their own lives without their parents' input. Canadian palliative care physician Leonie Herx is in New Zealand to take part in a debate hosted by North Shore MP Maggie Barry on ACT MP David Seymour's End of Life Choice Bill, which would legalise euthanasia under strict circumstances.

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MercatorNet: #DefendNZ is rallying Kiwis against euthanasia

Carolyn Moynihan. A new campaign targets a bill being honed to maximise support. New Zealand groups opposing euthanasia have come together in a campaign to fight legislation in parliament that could soon legalise assisted suicide. #DefendNZ launched on March 10 with a website and video trailer introducing Kiwis who could be eligible for assisted suicide under a bill that could be passed in the current parliamentary session.

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