Faculty of Business and Law, Australian Centre for Health Law Research, Queensland University of Technology, PO Box 2434, Brisbane, QLD, 4000, Australia.
BMC Med Ethics. 2023 Mar 13;24(1):22. doi: 10.1186/s12910-023-00902-3.
Voluntary assisted dying became lawful in Victoria, the first Australian state to permit this practice, in 2019 via the Voluntary Assisted Dying Act 2017 (Vic). While conscientious objection by individual health professionals is protected by the Victorian legislation, objections by institutions are governed by policy. No research has been conducted in Victoria, and very little research conducted internationally, on how institutional objection is experienced by patients seeking assisted dying.
28 semi-structured interviews were conducted with 32 family caregivers and one patient about the experience of 28 patients who sought assisted dying. Participants were interviewed during August-November 2021. Data from the 17 interviews (all with family caregivers) which reported institutional objection were analysed thematically.
Participants reported institutional objection affecting eligibility assessments, medication access, and taking the medication or having it administered. Institutional objection occurred across health settings and was sometimes communicated obliquely. These objections resulted in delays, transfers, and choices between progressing an assisted dying application and receiving palliative or other care. Participants also reported objections causing adverse emotional experiences and distrust of objecting institutions. Six mediating influences on institutional objections were identified: staff views within objecting institutions; support of external medical practitioners and pharmacists providing assisted dying services; nature of a patient's illness; progression or state of a patient's illness; patient's geographical location; and the capability and assertiveness of a patient and/or caregiver.
Institutional objection to assisted dying is much-debated yet empirically understudied. This research found that in Victoria, objections were regularly reported by participants and adversely affected access to assisted dying and the wider end-of-life experience for patients and caregivers. This barrier arises in an assisted dying system that is already procedurally challenging, particularly given the limited window patients have to apply. Better regulation may be needed as Victoria's existing policy approach appears to preference institutional positions over patient's choice given existing power dynamics.
2019 年,维多利亚州通过 2017 年《自愿协助死亡法》(Vic)成为澳大利亚第一个允许这种做法的州,自愿协助死亡合法化。虽然维多利亚州立法保护个别卫生专业人员的良心反对,但机构的反对意见受政策管辖。在维多利亚州,没有关于寻求协助死亡的患者如何体验机构反对的研究,国际上也很少有研究。
2021 年 8 月至 11 月期间,对 32 名家庭护理人员和 1 名患者进行了 28 次半结构访谈,了解了 28 名寻求协助死亡的患者的经历。参与者接受了采访。从报告机构反对的 17 次访谈(均为家庭护理人员)中分析了主题数据。
参与者报告机构反对影响资格评估、药物获取以及服用药物或接受药物管理。机构反对发生在各种卫生环境中,有时是间接传达的。这些反对意见导致了延误、转移以及在推进协助死亡申请和接受姑息治疗或其他护理之间做出选择。参与者还报告说,反对意见会导致负面的情绪体验和对反对机构的不信任。确定了影响机构反对的六个中介影响因素:反对机构内的工作人员意见;支持提供协助死亡服务的外部医疗从业者和药剂师;患者疾病的性质;患者疾病的进展或状态;患者的地理位置;以及患者和/或护理人员的能力和自信。
机构对协助死亡的反对意见备受争议,但在经验研究方面却很少。这项研究发现,在维多利亚州,参与者经常报告反对意见,并对患者和护理人员获得协助死亡的机会以及更广泛的临终体验产生不利影响。在一个程序上已经具有挑战性的协助死亡系统中,这种障碍尤其因为患者申请的时间窗口有限而出现。鉴于现有权力动态,维多利亚州现有的政策方法似乎优先考虑机构立场而不是患者的选择,因此可能需要更好的监管。