The Suicide Tourist

February 18, 2010

Sir Terry Pratchett calls for euthanasia tribunals

Filed under: News — Ivan @ 2:20 pm

The author Sir Terry Pratchett is calling for euthanasia tribunals to give sufferers from incurable diseases the right to medical help to end their lives.

Pratchett, author of the bestselling Discworld fantasy novels, was diagnosed two years ago with a rare form of early onset Alzheimer’s disease – a discovery he memorably described, when he broke the news on the Discworld News website, as “an embuggerance”.

In his lecture, Shaking Hands With Death, the author will volunteer to be a test case before a euthanasia tribunal himself.

Read the story in its entirety here.

December 10, 2008

The Suicide Tourist to air on British television

Filed under: Broadcasts, News — Tags: — Ivan @ 4:46 pm

The Suicide Tourist will be broadcast for the first time on British television at 9 PM tonight, December 10, on Sky Real Lives.

The story has been reported on by CNN, the BBC, the Daily Mail and many others.

I want to thank everyone who has posted their very kind thoughts on various online outlets. I suspect we’ll be making more use of this site in the near future than we have done in the past several months.

Best,
Ivan Ewert

April 23, 2008

The Suicide Tourist nominated for multiple Leo Awards

Filed under: Festivals, News — Ivan @ 1:32 pm

The Suicide Tourist has been nominated for 2008 Leo Awards in the following categories:

  •  Best Documentary Program
  •  Best Direction
  •  Best Cinematography
  •  Best Picture Editing
  •  Best Overall Sound
  •  Best Musical Score

The Leo Awards will be announced on May 24, 2008; at the Westin Bayshore in Vancouver, Canada. To learn more, visit the Leo Awards homepage.

Best of luck to our nominees!

March 17, 2008

France rejects right-to-die plea

Filed under: News — Ivan @ 7:06 pm

(from BBC.co.uk)

A French woman with a severely disfiguring and incurable facial tumour has been refused the right to die.

Chantal Sebire, a 52-year-old former schoolteacher and mother of three, had asked a court in Dijon, eastern France, to allow doctors to help her die.

But while the French have liberalised legislation governing euthanasia, the court ruled the law still did not allow doctors to actively end a life.

The case of Ms Sebire has however sparked intense debate and sympathy.

She suffers from an extremely rare form of cancer in the nasal cavity known as an esthesioneuroblastoma. Only 200 cases of the disease have been recorded worldwide in the past two decades.

Appealing on French television last month for the right to die, Ms Sebire said she could no longer see properly, taste or smell. She described how children ran away from her in the street.

“One would not allow an animal to go through what I have endured,” she said.

‘Second opinion’

But a magistrate in Dijon said such a request could simply not be granted.

“Even if the physical degeneration of Madame Sebire merits compassion, this request can only be rejected under French law,” he said.

Legislation adopted in 2005 allows families to request that life-support equipment for terminally ill patients but does not allow a doctor to take action to end a patient’s life.

French President Nicholas Sarkozy, whom Ms Sebire has urged to intervene in her case, said he had asked his chief health adviser to make contact and help with providing further opinions on her condition.

Ms Sebire, who has said she will not appeal Monday’s decision, has however indicated she could may go to a country such as Switzerland – where assisted suicide is legal.

“I now know how to get my hands on what I need, and if I don’t get it in France, I will get it elsewhere,” she has said.

Sarah Wootton, of Dignity in Dying, which campaigns in the UK for assisted dying for the terminally ill, said: “It is immensely sad that because France has no assisted dying law, Chantal Sebire will continue to suffer.

“It is simply wrong that terminally ill people not just in France, but also in the UK, who are suffering unbearably are not being given the choice to die with dignity.”

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