Montana Judge Grants Right to Doctor Assisted Suicide

by Terri Potratz | December 7, 2008 at 03:55 pm
110 views | 7 Recommendations | 1 comment

Photos

Ambassadors of humanity

Ambassadors of humanity

see larger image

uploaded by tikun

A Montana judge has issued a ruling that will allow a terminal cancer patient to seek out doctor-assisted suicide.  The Billings man, Robert Baxter, sued the state of Montana for the right to die with dignity should his pain and suffering become unbearable.

In her ruling, Judge McCarter wrote that “the Montana constitutional rights of individual privacy and human dignity” give a mentally competent person who is terminally ill the right to “die with dignity.”

The ruling said that those patients had the right to obtain self-administered medications to hasten death if they found their suffering to be unbearable, and that physicians could prescribe such medication without fear of prosecution.

But the state has argued that the Legislature should decide whether terminally ill patients have the right to take their own life. The state’s attorney general, Mike McGrath, said he expected the state to file an appeal.

The plaintiff, Robert Baxter, 75, said in a statement that he was “glad to know that the court respects my choice to die with dignity if my situation becomes intolerable.”


Montana is the third US state to permit doctor-assisted suicide, along with Oregon and Washington.  Judge Dorothy McCarther's ruling is expected to be appealed.

recommend This comment thread is now closed
0
Rhonda J Mangus

Thanks for this important story, Terri.

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

What is NowPublic?

NowPublic lets people work together to cover news events around the world.

Find out more

Crowd Power

Art_By_Alida
First Flagged at 4:19 PM, Dec 7, 2008 by Art_By_Alida
These members have powered this story:

Most Recommended Stories in Health

Recommendations (7)

Most recently recommended by:
 

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from