Ashcroft’s Revenge

Challenge to suicide law gets new life.

The U.S. Supreme Court announced February 22 that it will decide whether the federal government may ban doctors from prescribing drugs to allow terminally ill patients to kill themselves. In 2001, then-Attorney General John Ashcroft declared, in Oregon v. Ashcroft, that the Controlled Substances Act blocks such action.

The court agreed to hear the federal government’s appeal of a lower court ruling saying that states have sole authority to regulate the practice of medicine. That ruling prevents the Drug Enforcement Administration from punishing doctors who prescribe lethal doses of drugs to terminally ill patients under Oregon’s Death with Dignity Act.

The Bush administration argues that suicide is not a legitimate medical purpose.

Under the act, approved twice by Oregon voters, a terminally ill patient must obtain a certification from two doctors that he or she is sane and has less than six months to live. A doctor then writes a prescription for a lethal dose of drugs, which the patient self-administers. Over six years under the law, 171 terminally ill people have ended their lives.

Supporters of assisted suicide said they worry about the impact on patients needing pain relief. “We all know doctors step back just a little bit” in their willingness to prescribe potent, pain-controlling drugs under fear of prosecution, said Susan Tolle of the Center for Ethics in Health Care at Oregon Health and Science University.

But David Stevens, executive director of the Christian Medical Association, suggested the question is not pain relief, but the role of physicians in health care: “The Court has an opportunity to ensure that patients receive truly compassionate care and pain relief by limiting physicians’ use of narcotics for healing—not death.”

The Court will hear the case in October.

Copyright © 2005 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere:

The 9th Circuit ruling that Oregon’s Death With Dignity Act does not violate the Federal Controlled Substances Act is available from Findlaw.com.

News elsewhere about Oregon v. Ashcroft includes:

Justices Asked to End Oregon Death Act | Bush administration looks to overturn 9th Circuit ruling, claims Controlled Substances Act pre-empts state law (New York Law Journal, Feb 16, 2005)

Prescription for Chaos | Understanding the lethal Oregon case that’s hitting the Supreme Court. (Wesley J. Smith, National Review Online, Feb. 23, 2005)

Court to review Oregon’s assisted-suicide law | The Supreme Court agreed Tuesday to decide whether the federal government can block a state’s right-to-die law, setting the stage for a debate that tangles issues of individual liberty, federal authority and personal privacy. (Knight Ridder Newspapers, Feb. 22, 2005)

More Life Ethics articles from Christianity Today include:

Stay of Execution | Judge allows Terri Schiavo to live a few days longer. (Feb. 24, 2005)

Gender Is No Disease | Our children’s sex is not something to be screened but gratefully received. (Jan. 25, 2005)

Bitter Pill | FDA strengthens warning on RU-486. (Jan. 24, 2005)

Post-Election Education | Pro-lifers weigh options after Californians fund embryonic stem-cell research. (Dec. 01, 2004)

Why I Apologized to Planned Parenthood | My difficult unplanned pregnancy impelled me to show a little more grace. (Oct. 29, 2004)

It’s Not About Stem Cells | Why we must clarify the debate over harvesting embryos. (Sept. 29, 2004)

California’s Prop. 71 Stem-Cell ‘Scam’ | Supporters of cloning embryos for research have $11 million to convince state voters. (Sept. 29, 2004)

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All Churches Should Be Multiracial

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Jesus' Guide to Spiritual Formation

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Thou Shalt Not Be Negative

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Compliant but Confused

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U.N.: No Cloning

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Discovering God

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Big Dream in Little Rock

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A Model of Intolerance

The Hero of Bloodless Reform

Members of One Another

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Aliens in Our Midst

Longing to Be Heard

The Risks of Regime Change

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Food Fights

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