Данная фотография взята с интернета

Doctors in the Netherlands can no longer be prosecuted for carrying out euthanasia on dementia patients who have previously given written consent.


Previously, patients would need to confirm their request. But on Tuesday the Dutch Supreme Court ruled this was no longer the case. The decision comes after a doctor was taken to court for carrying out assisted suicide on a patient with Alzheimer's, who had previously asked for the procedure in a statement. Prosecutors said the doctor did not properly consult the unnamed 74-year-old. But the family supported the doctor's decision, and she was acquitted of any wrongdoing last year. Belgian doctors cleared in first euthanasia trial Germany overturns ban on assisted suicide It is a landmark decision in the Netherlands. The country became the first in the world to legalise euthanasia in 2002, albeit under strict conditions. These include that the patients must be enduring "unbearable and endless suffering", and that at least two doctors agree to the procedure. If these conditions are met, doctors "may carry out a written request beforehand for euthanasia in people with advanced dementia," the court ruled on Tuesday. Patients must also have made this request before their dementia was so advanced that they could "no long express their will".