Lisa Owen interviews Matt Vickers
Lisa Owen interviews Matt Vickers Vickers says
scope of select committee inquiry into assisted dying needs
to be “quite tight”, focusing on adults with terminal
illness “So it’s not a question of wanting to
die; it’s a question of them facing their death and having
a choice about how that actually happens.” Says
Canadian study of NZ suicide statistics show 5-8% of all
annual suicides were people with terminal illnesses “I think that as people gauge public opinion or as MPs
gauge public opinion and see how people feel about this,
they will begin to take a position and will feel secure in
doing so.”
Lisa Owen: Well, Matt
Vickers is with me now. Good morning.
Matt
Vickers: Good morning, Lisa.
Lecretia’s
situation – it really struck a chord with people, and they
followed this, and they’ll want to know how you’re
doing. What can you tell us?
It’s been a
tough few weeks, so the last few weeks I’ve been privately
grieving, along with Lecretia’s family. It was a huge loss
to us, of course. Lecretia was a wonderful, exceptional
human being, and her absence has been felt keenly. I guess,
though, with this petition being raised and the issue still
live and being discussed, it kind of feels in a lot of ways
that she’s still with us.
Has having this
campaign, has it helped in any way in what is an incredibly
difficult time? Or do you look back and wish that you
hadn’t spent the precious time on that in the days leading
up to your wife’s death?
Well, it was
always very important to Lecretia. She really felt very
strongly about this, and I think I actually tried to talk
her out of taking this High Court case, I think, when she
first raised the idea, but she was so committed and wanting
to do it that ultimately I got in behind her and supported
her.
Well, if you’re going to succeed in
this, you’re going to have to convince MPs, the MPs that
you saw then and others. Can you get them to take that
political risk of backing you on this?
Yeah,
I think so, and some already have. It was really heartening
to see when the Voluntary Euthanasia Society petition was
presented at Parliament the other day, we had four MPs come
down and actually accept the petition, and they all spoke
and spoke in support of this. And, of course, David Seymour
from the ACT Party has already said that he wanted to drop a
bill into the ballot, and he did that almost immediately
after Lecretia’s case or High Court proceedings ended and
we got the judgement, which was a really brave thing for him
to do. I think that as people gauge public opinion or as MPs
gauge public opinion and see how people feel about this,
they will begin to take a position and will feel secure in
doing so.
Well, you’ve got the first step,
haven’t you? You’ve won a select committee inquiry, so
how would you want that to work?
The terms
of reference of the select committee inquiry are really
important and this problem definition that they need to come
up with. I think they need to keep scope quite tight. I
think they need to focus on people that are in situations
like Lecretia’s, where they are facing a terminal illness
and impending mortality and just focusing on that specific
scenario and saying is assisted dying justified in those
cases?
Yeah, so just to be clear on that,
would it be fair to say that you want a law sort of like
Oregon’s, which is only for terminally ill, only for
people in the last six months of their law, they have to get
two doctors’ and it’s where the person is, they say, of
sound mind and settled opinion?
Yes. Yes, I
think those sorts of safeguards are important to have. I
think we should focus primarily on those people that are
dying and are clearly dying and it’s not a question of
whether they will recover, et cetera – they’re in that
process. So it’s not a question of wanting to die; it’s
a question of them facing their death and having a choice
about how that actually happens.
I just want
to look at some of the arguments around this, and I’m
going to put the criticism to you because you do want to
engage in this and you do want to address those points. So
first off, many disabled people, they live with limitations
and they live with pain in their lives and a lot of them
find the prospect of this legislation insulting. They worry
that they will come under pressure to choose death
too.
The people affected by this legislation
are terminally ill and whether they’re disabled or not,
and it’s about respecting the wishes of a person that is
in a situation where they are dying. Yes, disabled people
may be suffering from some of the symptoms that terminally
ill people suffer from, but those two people are on two
different trajectories. One, the disabled people are living
their lives and living productive and full lives, and people
that are terminally ill are facing their mortality and
having to deal with that – a very anxious and scary
situation. And having choices and a sense of control over
how that plays out I think is a tremendously powerful thing
for people to be able to have.
Because it is a
slippery slope argument, isn’t it? You say only terminally
ill adults, but the fear is that, well, what about
terminally ill children? What about those people who fear
that they will become a burden? Because Belgium has just
extended its laws to include terminally ill children as
well.
I think we should look at countries
like the Benelux countries and learn from them. There’s no
reason for us to copy them outright. We can see what works
for New Zealand and what New Zealand is willing to accept as
appropriate for our citizens. My personal view is that
terminally ill competent adults are really who we’re
talking about with this legislation.
So people
over the age of 18?
Yes.
Okay.
What about people who could face the pressure to end their
own lives? You know, someone wants Mum and Dad’s
inheritance or they don’t want the burden of looking after
a parent or someone in the family?
Yeah,
this is the vulnerability argument – that vulnerable
people are affected. The Canadian Supreme Court in their
decision – what they did is they said that there’s
anecdotes on both sides. There’s anecdotes that vulnerable
people are going to be affected and there’s difficult
cases, and then on the other sides there’s examples of
things working well. But when they actually looked at the
evidence, and they said that specifically in their
judgement, and they looked at the evidence, there is no
statistical significance around vulnerable groups being
affected. So I don’t buy that argument at
all.
What about people who put pressure on
themselves? They feel that they’ll be a burden, both
emotionally or financially, on someone, so they decide to
opt out. It’s a different type of pressure. It’s
internal pressure.
Yeah, and Lecretia –
she talked about that, I think, on another programme where
she felt she didn’t want to be a burden to her family, but
it was only part of her thinking. And believe you me, her
mother and I made it very clear to her that we were willing
to take that on. I think what this is really about is giving
people the ability to have discussions with their families
about their wishes. You know, the scary thing about this is
when— in Canada they drew a distinction between people
that are suicidal and people that make a rational decision
to die. When you’re facing an impending death, you can
make this rational decision which is really not about— you
want to live, but you’re making a decision about how you
actually pass from this earth. And that’s quite different
to someone who can be treated and seen to and helped to see
that their situation is not one in which they should take
suicide. But people get into this situation where they have
this cruel choice between taking suicide in order to prevent
future suffering, which may or may not happen, or having to
go through this future suffering.
But don’t
you think terminally ill people can still be pressured? You
know, they may have a terminal illness, but they could still
be open to pressure. And once you open that door with this
law, isn’t it hard to push back?
I think
it would be very hard to convince a competent adult to
basically say yes to death if they didn’t want
to.
You touched on suicide there. You would
argue that people are killing themselves prematurely,
wouldn’t you, to avoid uncertainty of not being able to
have control so they choose to end their lives
earlier.
That’s right. Part of the
evidence that was presented in Lecretia’s case was some
research that was conducted by a man named John Charles
Weaver, who is a Canadian historian. He looked at about 100
years of New Zealand’s suicide records through the
Coronials- the Coronial Office – the Coroner’s office.
And he looked at the reasons why people were doing it, and
he actually was able to determine that between 5-8% of all
the annual suicides could be described as self-euthanasia;
so people that had terminal illnesses and were actually
choosing that option out of the two
options.
So how many would that be,
then?
That’s about 25 to 30 people a
year.
That’s a lot of people who are ending
their life
prematurely.
Absolutely.
So
you are arguing that this would mean that- Well, you’ve
written about sitting with Lecretia and her final days. You
talked about eating feijoas, playing with the cat, talking
about your holidays and all those
memories.
Yes. So those 25 to 30 people are
forced, essentially, to not tell their family about it to go
and do this in a very lonely and often quite violent
fashion, whereas what assisted dying would allow is actually
the families to deal with this as a family and provide an
end stage of life that was pleasant, I
guess.
So you’re actually saying that
allowing someone to end their life could actually prolong it
and the quality in the final days.
That was
a key argument in Lecretia’s case. It was that by not
having this legislation, it meant that there was a risk that
a life would be shortened by not having that legislation. So
if we have that legislation in place, it can actually
prolong people’s lives.
But couldn’t that
happen still when you talk about spending that time with
your family? Palliative care is so much better these days;
pain can be managed. Some people would say you can have
that; you can- you can be in hospice; you can be looked
after; you can have those final days with your family
without taking your life.
Palliative care in
New Zealand is wonderful, and we experienced that with
Lecretia. But both the plaintiff’s evidence –
Lecretia’s evidence – and the Crown’s evidence was
almost a unanimous agreement that palliative care cannot
deal with all suffering. It can do a really job with most,
and most people, that’s all they’ll ever need. But some
people fall outside of what palliative care is able to
offer. And it’s really- this is- this legislation, if we
get to that point, is for those people. It’s for if the
pain becomes too much, they can actually make a choice to
say enough is enough. And it’s just those people as well.
It’s those people that fear that might happen to them. So
Lecretia’s circumstances meant that the medical evidence
she was getting was that she may end up being in that
situation of having pain that couldn’t be managed by
palliative care, and that created psychological suffering
and existential suffering. But knowing that assisted dying
legislation was there would- it’s like being able to swim
to the side of the pool, right? You’re swimming out of
this deep end, and none of us has been there yet except for
those people in that situation. And she- by having this
legislation, it would have been able- she would have been
able to say if things got too much and palliative care got
to a point where it couldn’t help her, she could say
enough is enough.
Some people sitting at home
will be thinking to themselves, you know, with circumstances
they've experienced with their parents, grandparents,
friends; doctors are actually doing this in an ad hoc way;
that's what they might be thinking at home. It's happening
already.
Yeah, and that's the thing. It's
happening, and it's not being reported. So, another piece of
evidence that was presented in Lecretia's case was a doctors
survey — I think it was from the year 2005, possibly —
where doctors were queried anonymously about end-of-life
practices, and some of them, you know, actually admitted to
the fact that they were doing— they were actually
hastening death — and not outside of the principles of the
double effect, which is where they ease suffering and hasten
death — hastening death without the explicit request of
the patient, and, not only that, this report also said that
it was happening at rates similar to the Netherlands. So,
that's happening, and it's happening in a fashion that
there's no real visibility over it. It's this grey area.
They talk about this bright line that doesn't exist. So
actually getting clear legislation and legislation around
these practices and practices like terminal sedation would
actually be a wonderful thing to do.
So tell
me what is the next step for you now?
Well,
with the select committee agreeing to look into this and to
conduct an inquiry, that's a tremendous first step. We've
never done this before in New Zealand. So with the two
private member's bills that we had, they failed at first
reading, so it never got to select committee, so this is
wonderful. So what will happen now is the select committee
will decide on the terms of reference and the problem
definition, and I'd encourage them to keep that scope quite
small on to terminally ill patients only — to look at
people like in Lecretia's situation — and figure out what
is the right sort of policy position to deal with those
sorts of cases.
You're determined to deliver
this legacy?
Well, I feel like Lecretia
deserves this.
Okay, thank you very much for
joining us this morning. We're going to keep watching with
interest and hopefully we'll talk to you
again.
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