Profs and Pints Baltimore presents: “Assisted Suicide for Mental
Illness,” on a growing practice that raises huge ethical questions,
with Mark Komrad, M.D., a psychiatrist and medical ethicist on the
teaching faculty of the University of Maryland and Johns Hopkins,
Tulane, and Louisiana State universities. In several European
countries, physician-assisted suicide by oral prescription and
euthanasia by lethal injection is being made available to psychiatric
patients. Sometimes it’s even administered by their own treating
psychiatrists. Closer to home, Canada, which now offers euthanasia for
some people who are chronically ill, plans to expand eligibility to
those dealing only with psychiatric disorders in March 2027, and in
some of its provinces church-based healthcare centers cannot refuse to
offer euthanasia services. Currently four out of every 100 Canadians
dies by medical euthanasia, making it the fifth leading cause of death
in that country. Here in the United States, assisted suicide,
available in twelve U.S. states to the terminally ill, has already
been provided in one state to some psychiatric patients with anorexia.
Legal permission for doctors to help kill certain patients—or
provide them with the means to kill themselves—represents a profound
change in the fundamentals of 2300 years of medical ethics. Learn how
professional medical organizations around the world have been
responding, and become familiar with the ethical arguments for and
against these practices, with Dr. Mark Komrad, a longtime medical
ethicist who has published widely on the topic and helped craft the
American Psychiatric Association’s position statement on it. We'll
look at specific data from Belgium, Netherlands, Canada, and the US,
and see the way these practices have accelerated over time, profoundly
altering these societies' attitudes towards mental illness,
disability, and what lives are "worth living." Among the vital
questions we’ll explore: Are mental disorders ever truly terminal
and their treatment ever really futile? Could failures in the mental
healthcare system and social safety net push people to choose this way
out? Does it undermine suicide prevention efforts to sanction suicide
as a medical "treatment"? What does it mean to be a psychiatrist if
suicide can be provided and not just prevented? (Advance tickets:
$13.50 plus sales tax and processing fees. Doors: $17, or $15 with a
student ID. Talk begins at 4:30. Attendees may arrive any time after 3
pm.) [If you are in distress Dial 988 to reach the Suicide and Crisis
Lifeline, which provides 24/7 free and confidential support as well as
prevention and crisis resources.] Image: Photo by Zachary Nelson /
Stocksnap
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10/01/2025 Last update