Passive Euthanasia

Why in News: The U.K. House of Commons recently passed the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill, allowing physician-assisted dying for terminally ill adults — reigniting global debate on euthanasia. This has renewed discussions in India on reforming its passive euthanasia framework.

Introduction

  • The Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill passed by the U.K. Parliament reignited global debate on euthanasia.
  • India recognises passive euthanasia (withdrawal of life support) but prohibits active euthanasia (deliberate ending of life).
  • Key judgments: Aruna Shanbaug (2011) and Common Cause (2018) upheld the right to die with dignity under Article 21.

Current Framework and Limitations

Legal procedure requires:

  • Two medical boards’ approval.
  • Existence of a valid advance directive.
  • Sometimes judicial sanction.
  • Result: Implementation is slow, complex, and inaccessible.
  • Families often make informal decisions, exposing doctors to legal risks.
  • Lack of awareness and bureaucratic hurdles undermine the law’s intent.

Why Active Euthanasia Is Unsuitable for India

  • India’s healthcare is fragmented and under-resourced.
  • High treatment costs and poor palliative care create ethical risks of coercion for poor or elderly patients.
  • Deep religious sensitivities and family involvement complicate end-of-life choices.
  • Constitutionally, right to life cannot be stretched to mean right to be killed.

Reforming the Passive Euthanasia Mechanism

Digital Reforms:

  • Launch a national digital portal for registering advance directives, linked to Aadhaar for verification.

Institutional Mechanisms:

  • Empower hospital ethics committees (senior doctors + palliative expert + neutral member) to decide within 48 hours.
  • Replace State ombudsman with decentralised digital monitoring and independent medical auditors.

Safeguards:

  • Seven-day cooling-off period, counselling, and mandatory palliative review.

Training and Awareness:

  • Include end-of-life ethics in medical education.
  • Conduct nationwide awareness drives on advance care planning.

Way Forward

  • Ensure dignity in dying through humane and efficient systems.
  • Reform passive euthanasia without adopting active euthanasia.
  • Digitally driven, transparent, and compassionate mechanisms will align with Indian ethical values and protect vulnerable lives.

GS Paper II: Issues related to health, ethics, and human rights; role of judiciary in upholding constitutional rights (Article 21 – Right to Life and Dignity).

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