Daily Mail – December 9, 2009
Now the Dutch turn against legalised mercy killing
By Simon Caldwell
Legalised euthanasia has led to a severe decline in the quality of care for terminally-ill patients in Holland, it has been claimed. Many ask to die ‘out of fear’ because of an absence of effective pain relief, according to a new book. Even the architect of the controversial law has admitted she may have made a mistake in pushing it through because of its impact on services for the elderly.
Holland was the first country in the world to legalise euthanasia, in 2002. But Dr Els Borst, the former Health Minister and Deputy Prime Minister who guided the law through the Dutch parliament, now says it was brought in ‘far too early’. Without elaborating, she admitted that medical care for the terminally-ill had declined since the law came into effect. he said more should have been done legally to protect people who wanted to die natural deaths. ‘In the Netherlands, we first listened to the political and societal demand in favour of euthanasia,’ said Dr Borst. ‘Obviously, this was not in the proper order.’ The former hospital doctor made her remarks in an interview with researcher Dr Anne-Marie The, for a book on the history of euthanasia called Redeemer Under God.
Dr The, who has studied euthanasia for 15 years, said that palliative care was so inadequate in Holland that patients ‘often ask for euthanasia out of fear’ of dying in agony because care and pain relief is so poor. She added that a crisis had developed and that ‘to think that we have neatly arranged everything by adopting the euthanasia law is an illusion’. Phyllis Bowman of Right to Life, a British group opposed to euthanasia, said she had witnessed pro-euthanasia campaigners picket hospices in Holland. …
Cases of euthanasia in the country have increased from 1,626 in 2003 to 2,331 in 2008. It is also alleged that there have been thousands of cases of involuntary euthanasia and dozens of killings of disabled newborns.



