Elsevier

General Hospital Psychiatry

Volume 36, Issue 1, January–February 2014, Pages 7-9
General Hospital Psychiatry

Special Section: Controversies in Psychiatry: Pro and Con Editorials
Psychiatric review should be mandatory for patients requesting assisted suicide

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2013.08.003Get rights and content

Section snippets

The core purposes of MPR

There are three key arguments in favor of MPR: (a) MPR will help ensure that the central criteria specified by most legislatures [absence of mental disorder (impairing judgment), mental capacity and unbearable suffering] are met; (b) MPR will help offset the risks to individuals, society and the vulnerable associated with the legalization of assisted suicide; and (c) MPR will confer significant benefits to the applicant, society and the legislature that has enabled its use.

Psychological autopsy

Countering the criticisms of mandatory review

Rates of psychiatric consultation for assisted dying applications in Oregon, Washington and European countries are surprisingly low, and published figures fall somewhere between 4 and 7% of applications [1]. The reasons for these low rates of consultation are unclear, although the usual arguments opposing MPR are likely to also be relevant here. The usual concerns about MPR are that it curtails free choice and compromises autonomy, that it is a burden on frail patients and that it medicalizes,

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