McArthur welcomes amendments and urges MSP to back bulletproof bill
Liam McArthur has today thanked MSPs for their constructive contributions and urged them to back his Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults bill as the legislation completed a fourth and final day of parliamentary scrutiny.
Over the past week:
• There were 175 amendments accepted, 83 from those who opposed the Bill at Stage 1 (47%)
• It has been confirmed that the bill is legislatively competent with section 104 orders agreed and confirmation from the Secretary of State for Scotland that the UK Government will deliver these protections.
• Every health professional can be assured their rights are strengthened - no duty to participate, no detriment and the bill cannot be enacted until the UK Government enables relevant provisions relating to the training, qualifications and experience requirements for healthcare professionals
• Daniel Johnson's amendment ensures that patients must have a six months prognosis
• Ruth Maguire's amendment doubles down on the safeguards to detect and prevent coercion. During the assessment, the doctor must carry out as assessment in private to make sure the person is acting voluntarily. They must consider direct and indirect coercion
• Fulton McGregor's amendment ensures doctors making assessments make a request to the person's local authority as to whether they are being provided with social or mental health care, adding in even more protection for vulnerable people
• Palliative care access and uptake will be greatly improved as a result of amendments including doctors carrying out assessments must discuss with the person their diagnosis, prognosis, treatment options, palliative, hospice and other care available including symptom management and psychological support, and requirement to assess provision of palliative care alongside the Act to Scottish Ministers’ 5 year review
• Scottish Ministers will be required to prepare and publish guidance relating to a number of issues which will help consistency in practice, and that guidance will be reviewed by Parliament for approval, and be reviewed every 5 years adding an additional layer of oversight to the guidance.
The bill will now face a final vote on Tuesday evening.
Liam McArthur said:
“I would like to thank my MSP colleagues for their participation in what I know have been long and demanding debates this week. I appreciate the thoughtful engagement of all members and the considered way in which we have considered Stage 3 amendments.
“Over the past four days MSPs have made this legislation bulletproof. This is now the toughest and most comprehensively safeguarded assisted dying bill in the world.
“MSPs have added detailed amendments on coercion, prognosis and protection of vulnerable groups and there are cast iron protections for healthcare professionals ready to go. I also want to highlight key amendments which will ensure the Bill cannot come into effect before protections for healthcare professionals, as well as the training and qualification provisions are in place.
“It has overwhelming public support from Scots regardless of religious affiliation, political party or disability status.
“I am clear that we have crafted a Bill that provides compassionate choice for dying people alongside clarity and protections for the professionals who will support them to exercise that choice. MSPs need to look terminally ill Scots whose experiences prove beyond all doubt that a change in the law is desperately needed in the eye and pass this bill.”