<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=192888919167017&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1">
Tuesday,  April 23 , 2024

Linkedin Pinterest
News / Northwest

Right-to-die advocate’s video released after death

The Columbian
Published: November 20, 2014, 12:00am

PORTLAND (AP) — To mark what would have been the 30th birthday of Brittany Maynard, a right-to-die advocacy group has issued three weeks after her death new video footage of the terminally ill woman.

In the video, recorded in August by the group Compassion & Choices and released Wednesday, Maynard calls on more states to enact legislation allowing terminally ill people to end life on their own terms.

Maynard, who was diagnosed with terminal cancer and given six months to live this spring, grabbed the national spotlight for about a month after publicizing that she and her husband moved to Portland from California so she could use Oregon’s law to end her life with dignity.

Maynard ended her life Nov. 1.

The new video includes photographs of Maynard before her illness. It also features the voices of other terminally ill patients and their family members.

Oregon was the first state to allow terminally ill patients to die using lethal medications prescribed by a doctor.

Four other U.S. states also allow patients to seek aid in dying: Washington, Montana, Vermont and New Mexico. Vermont legalized it last year through legislation. Oregon and Washington did so by referendum, and it was effectively legalized through court decisions in Montana and New Mexico — though New Mexico’s attorney general is now appealing the ruling in his state.

Compassion & Choices says legislators in about a dozen states plan to introduce right-to-die laws next year.

But the political reality is that such legislation has been pushed for years, often unsuccessfully.

The New Jersey Assembly passed a bill last week that would allow physicians to prescribe life-ending drugs to terminally ill patients, with some legislators citing Maynard’s story as a deciding factor in their vote. But Republican Gov. Chris Christie has said he opposes the measure.

In California, the West Hollywood City Council this week passed a resolution that urges the Los Angeles County District Attorney to not prosecute physicians and family members who offer aid in dying to the terminally ill. But the state has no current bills or ballot measures on the issue.

In Pennsylvania, where a death-with-dignity bill was introduced in October, its sponsor, Rep. Mark Rozzi, admits the bill’s passage will be an uphill battle. Rozzi, a Democrat, said it has been difficult getting bills out of the judiciary committee when they are opposed by the state’s Catholic leadership.

Some religious groups and social conservatives, including a Vatican official and the American Life League, have heavily criticized Maynard’s decision.

Loading...