Published 11:58 IST, April 20th 2021

Chileans react ahead of euthanasia vote

Chile's Chamber of Deputies is due to vote on a euthanasia bill on Tuesday, something that Cecilia Heyder welcomes.

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Chile's Chamber of Deputies is due to vote on a euthanasia bill on Tuesday, something that Cecilia Heyder welcomes.

Heyder, a Chilean activist for the right to a dignified death and who suffers from metastatic cancer, lupus and a blood disorder, says she hopes that lawmakers will approve legislation that allows euthanasia for people with serious and irremediable illnesses.

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If the bill passes, it will head to the Senate.

"I want a good death. I want to be sedated," she said during a recent interview with The Associated Press at a park in Santiago.

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Heyder, who was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2011, says she doesn't even know what part of her body the cancer has metastasized.

"I don't know where because I refuse to have cancer studies done," she said. "I'm never going to step at the doors of the cancer hospital again."

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Due to her blood condition, any cut, bruise or hemorrhage can kill her. In addition, she lives in constant pain. She also has to move about with two catheters: one for blood transfusion and the other for morphine.

Rosario Corvalan from the anti-euthanasia "Community and Justice" group said they were against the bill "because human dignity is inherent in all people. It is not lost through suffering or disease."

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Euthanasia — when a doctor directly administers fatal drugs to a patient — is either legal or sanctioned by courts in Belgium, Canada, Luxembourg, Colombia, and the Netherlands.

In Switzerland and some U.S. states, medically assisted suicide — when patients self-administer lethal drugs under medical supervision — is permitted.

 

11:58 IST, April 20th 2021