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Euthanasia - A Novel Intricacy for Psychiatry’s Purview?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 August 2024

Í. Alberdi-Páramo*
Affiliation:
1Psiquiatría, Hospital Clínico San Carlos 2Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid
M. Pérez-Lombardo
Affiliation:
1Psiquiatría, Hospital Clínico San Carlos
J. Pemán-Rodríguez
Affiliation:
3Psiquiatría, Hospital Nuestra Señora Candelaria, Tenerife
J. E. Ibáñez Vizoso
Affiliation:
1Psiquiatría, Hospital Clínico San Carlos
R. Á. Baena Mures
Affiliation:
4Psiquiatría, Fundación Alcorcón, Madrid
L. Niell Galmés
Affiliation:
4Psiquiatría, Fundación Alcorcón, Madrid
J. Rodríguez Quijano
Affiliation:
1Psiquiatría, Hospital Clínico San Carlos
G. Montero-Hernández
Affiliation:
5Psiquiatría, Red Salud Mental Vizkaya, Bilbao, Spain
*
*Corresponding author.

Abstract

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Introduction

Numerous countries, notably within Europe, have sanctioned the practice of euthanasia. Extant legal frameworks meticulously define the extent, essence, and application of euthanasia, encompassing divergent characterizations, explications of entitlements, procedural modalities, and provisions for access. Nonetheless, the precise function of psychiatrists within these legislative contours remains conspicuously nebulous.

Objectives

The present inquiry undertakes a comprehensive evaluative review of the euthanasia phenomenon vis-à-vis the intricate tapestry of European legislative paradigms, with an emphasis on elucidating the multifaceted involvement of psychiatry within this evolving landscape.

Methods

A nuanced narrative review is undertaken, encapsulating the contemporary state-of-affairs, fundamental conceptual architectures, the tenets of the Spanish Organic Law 03/2021, and the pharmaceutic armamentarium deployed in the orchestration of euthanasic practices. Additionally, the methodological blueprint employed within a prominent tertiary healthcare institution situated in Madrid is meticulously expounded.

Results

To date, euthanasia has garnered legal imprimatur across diverse jurisdictions including, but not limited to, the Netherlands, Belgium, Colombia, Canada, Spain, and New Zealand. The ambit of assisted death and its application to the domain of mental infirmities is meticulously deconstructed. Within the overarching realm of foundational concepts, a rigorous delineation is rendered between euthanasia, medical succor in the throes of mortality, assisted self-termination, facilitated demise, provision of mortal release, judicious calibration of therapeutic enterprise, and the contours of palliative sedation. Distinction between the principal executor and the advisory consultant is rendered salient. The rubric of conscientious objection emerges as an inviolable entitlement of healthcare practitioners enmeshed in the provisionary matrix.

The enduring incumbency of the psychiatrist as a pivotal appraiser of cognitive and volitional faculties holds firm. The conspicuous influence of psychopathological constellations upon the contours of euthanasia eligibility precipitates cogent deliberation.

Conclusions

As the frontiers of euthanasia expand to encompass an augmented array of legal jurisdictions, this study underscores the increasingly intricate role inhabited by psychiatrists in the matrix of evaluative assessments. The proclivity of mental maladies to exert a substantial gravitational pull upon determinations of eligibility for euthanasia accentuates the exigency for refined explication of roles and responsibilities within this evolving sphere, a clarion call resonant not only within the precincts of psychiatry but reverberating across the broader firmament of medical praxis.

Disclosure of Interest

None Declared

Type
Abstract
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of European Psychiatric Association
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