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Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults Bill [HL]
[As Introduced]
CONTENTS
[As Introduced]

A

bill

to

Allow adults who are terminally ill, subject to safeguards, to be assisted to end their own life; and for connected purposes.

B e it enacted by the King’s most Excellent Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and Commons, in this present Parliament assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:—

1 Assisted dying

(1)

Subject to the consent of the High Court (Family Division) pursuant to
subsection (2), a person who is terminally ill may request and lawfully be
provided with assistance to end their own life.

(2)

Subsection (1) applies only if the High Court (Family Division), by order,
confirms that it is satisfied that the person—

(a)

has a voluntary, clear, settled and informed wish to end their own
life,

(b)

has made a declaration to that effect in accordance with section 3, and

(c)

on the day the declaration is made—

(i)

is aged 18 or over,

(ii)

has capacity to make the decision to end their own life, and

(iii)

has been ordinarily resident in England and Wales for not less
than one year.

2 Terminal illness

(1)

For the purposes of this Act, a person is terminally ill if that person—

(a)

has been diagnosed by a registered medical practitioner as having an
inevitably progressive condition which cannot be reversed by treatment
(“a terminal illness”), and

(b)

as a consequence of that terminal illness, is reasonably expected to
die within six months.

(2)

Treatment which only relieves the symptoms of an inevitably progressive
condition temporarily is not to be regarded as treatment which can reverse
that condition.

(3)

A person is not considered to be terminally ill solely by reason of—

(a)

being diagnosed with a mental illness, within the meaning of the
Mental Health Act 1983, or

(b)

having a disability, within the meaning of section 6 of the Equality
Act 2010;


unless the person is also considered to be terminally ill as defined in subsection
2(1).

3 Declaration

(1)

An application may be made to the High Court (Family Division) under
section 1
(1) only if—

(a)

the person has made and signed a declaration that they have a
voluntary, clear, settled and informed wish to end their life in the
form in the Schedule in the presence of a witness (who must not be
a relative or directly involved in the person’s care or treatment or
likely to receive any benefit directly or indirectly from the person’s
death) who signed the declaration in the person’s presence, and

(b)

that declaration has been countersigned in accordance with subsection
(4)
by—

(i)

a suitably qualified registered medical practitioner from whom
the person has requested assistance to end their life (“the
attending doctor”); and

(ii)

another suitably qualified registered medical practitioner (“the
independent doctor”) who is not a relative, partner or colleague
in the same practice or clinical team, of the attending doctor;


neither of whom may also be the witness required under paragraph
(a)
.

(2)

The attending doctor (but not the independent doctor) may be, but need not
be, the registered medical practitioner who diagnosed that the person is
terminally ill or first informed the person of that diagnosis.

(3)

The attending doctor or the independent doctor—

(a)

may not be a relative or partner of, nor have any personal relationship
with, the person making the request,

(b)

may not expect to receive any benefit, whether directly or indirectly,
from the death of the person making the declaration, and

(c)

must be able to communicate with the person making the declaration
in the language of that person’s choice, if necessary via an interpreter
who is not a relative of the person.

(4)

Before countersigning a person’s declaration, the attending doctor and the
independent doctor, having separately examined the person and the person’s
medical records and each acting independently of the other, must be satisfied
that the person—

(a)

is terminally ill,

(b)

has the capacity to make the decision to end their own life, and

(c)

has a clear and settled intention to end their own life which has been
reached voluntarily, on an informed basis and without undue influence,
coercion or duress.

(5)

For the purposes of subsection (4) (c) , the attending doctor and independent
doctor can regard the person as having a clear and settled intention to end
their own life if they are satisfied, on the basis of in-depth discussions with
the person, that the person is acting on their own free will, without undue
influence, coercion or duress.

(6)

In deciding whether to countersign a declaration under subsection (4) , the
attending doctor and the independent doctor must be satisfied that the person
making it has been fully informed of the palliative, hospice and other care
which is available to that person.

(7)

If the attending doctor or independent doctor has doubt as to a person’s
capacity to make a decision under subsection (4) (b) , before deciding whether
to countersign a declaration made by that person the doctor must—

(a)

refer the person for assessment by an appropriate specialist, and

(b)

take account of any opinion provided by the appropriate specialist in
respect of that person.

(8)

A declaration under this section is valid and takes effect on such date as the
High Court (Family Division) may order.

(9)

A person who has made a declaration under this section may revoke it at
any time and revocation need not be in writing.

(10)

For the purpose of subsection (1) (b) (ii) , an attending or independent doctor
is suitably qualified if that doctor holds such qualification or has such
experience, including in respect of the diagnosis and management of terminal
illness, as the Secretary of State may specify in regulations (which may make
different provision for different purposes).

(11)

In this section , “appropriate specialist” means a registered practitioner (other
than the attending doctor or independent doctor) who is registered in the
specialty of psychiatry in the Special Register kept by the General Medical
Council.

4 Assistance in dying

(1)

The attending doctor of a person who has made a valid declaration and
obtained the consent of the High Court may prescribe medicines for that
person to enable that person to end their own life.

(2)

Any medicines prescribed under subsection (1) may only be delivered to the
person for whom they are prescribed—

(a)

by the attending doctor, or

(b)

by—

(i)

another registered medical practitioner, or

(ii)

a registered nurse


who has been authorised to do so by the attending doctor,

(c)

after the assisting health professional has confirmed that the person
has not revoked and does not wish to revoke their declaration, and

(d)

after a period of not less than 14 days has elapsed since the day on
which consent under section 1 is given by the High Court.

(3)

If the attending doctor and the independent doctor agree that a person’s
death from terminal illness is reasonably expected to occur within one month
of the day on which consent under section 1 is given by the High Court, the
period specified in subsection (2) (d) is reduced to six days.

(4)

In respect of a medicine which has been prescribed for a person under
subsection (1)
, an assisting health professional may—

(a)

prepare that medicine for self-administration by that person,

(b)

prepare a medical device which will enable that person to
self-administer the medicine, and

(c)

assist that person to ingest or otherwise self-administer the medicine,


but the decision to self-administer the medicine and the final act of doing so
must be taken by the person for whom the medicine has been prescribed.

(5)

Subsection (4) does not authorise an assisting health professional to administer
a medicine to another person with the intention of causing that person’s
death.

(6)

The assisting health professional must remain with the person until the person
has—

(a)

self-administered the medicine and died, or

(b)

decided not to self-administer the medicine,


and for the purpose of this subsection the assisting health professional is to
be regarded as remaining with the person if the assisting health professional
is in close proximity to, but not necessarily in the same room as, the person.

(7)

The Secretary of State may by regulations specify—

(a)

the medicines which may be prescribed under this section ,

(b)

the form and manner in which such prescriptions are to be issued,
and

(c)

the manner and conditions under which such medicines are to be
dispensed, stored, transported, used and destroyed.

(8)

Regulations under subsection (7) (c) must provide that an assisting health
professional—

(a)

must only deliver any medicines prescribed under this section to the
person for whom they have been prescribed immediately before their
intended use, and

(b)

in the event that the person decides not to self-administer the medicine,
must immediately remove it from that person and, as soon as
reasonably practicable, return it to the pharmacy from which it was
dispensed.

(9)

Regulations under subsection (7) may—

(a)

make different provision for different purposes; and

(b)

include consequential, incidental, supplementary or transitional
provisions.

(10)

Regulations under this section must not be made unless a draft of the statutory
instrument containing them has been laid before Parliament and approved
by a resolution of each House of Parliament.

(11)

In this section , “assisting health professional” means the attending doctor or
a person authorised by the attending doctor in accordance with subsection
(2)
(b) .

5 Conscientious objection


A person is not under any duty (whether by contract or arising from any
statutory or other legal requirement) to participate in anything authorised by
this Act to which that person has a conscientious objection.

6 Criminal liability

(1)

A person who provides any assistance in accordance with this Act is not
guilty of an offence.

(2)

A person who is in breach of the requirements of this Act, save for acts or
omissions in good faith and without negligence, will be guilty of a criminal
offence and will be liable, on conviction on indictment, to imprisonment for
a term not exceeding 14 years.

(3)

In the Suicide Act 1961, after section 2B (course of conduct), insert—


“2C
Assisted dying


Sections 2, 2A and 2B do not apply to any person in respect of the
provision of assistance to another person in accordance with the
Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults Act 2024.”

7 Inquests, death certification etc

(1)

A person is not to be regarded as having died in circumstances to which
section 1(2)(a) or (b) of the Coroners and Justice Act 2009 (duty to investigate
certain deaths) applies only because the person died as a consequence of the
provision of assistance in accordance with this Act.

(2)

In the Births and Deaths Registration Act 1953, after section 39A (regulations
made by the Minister: further provisions), insert—


“39B
Regulations: assisted dying


(1)

The Secretary of State may make regulations—


(a)

providing for any provision of this Act relating to the
registration of deaths to apply in respect of deaths which arise
from the provision of assistance in accordance with the Assisted
Dying for Terminally Ill Adults Act 2024 with such
modifications as may be prescribed in respect of—


(i)

the information which is to be provided concerning
such deaths,


(ii)

the form and manner in which the cause of such deaths
is to be certified, and


(iii)

the form and manner in which such deaths are to be
registered, and


(b)

containing such incidental, supplemental and transitional
provisions as the Secretary of State considers appropriate.


(2)

Any regulations made under subsection (1)(a)(ii) must provide for the
cause of death to be recorded as “assisted death”.


(3)

The power of the Secretary of State to make regulations under this
section is exercisable by statutory instrument.


(4)

A statutory instrument containing regulations made under this section
by the Secretary of State may not be made unless a draft of the
instrument has been laid before and approved by a resolution of each
House of Parliament.”

(3)

The Registrar General must, at least once each year, prepare and lay before
Parliament a report providing a statistical analysis of deaths which have arisen
from the provision of assistance in accordance with this Act.

8 Codes of practice

(1)

The Secretary of State may issue one or more codes of practice in connection
with—

(a)

the assessment of whether a person has a clear and settled intention
to end their own life, including—

(i)

assessing whether the person has capacity to make such a
decision;

(ii)

recognising and taking account of the effects of depression or
other psychological disorders that may impair a person’s
decision-making;

(iii)

the information which is made available on treatment and end
of life care options available to them and on the consequences
of deciding to end their own life,

(b)

the counselling and guidance which should be made available to a
person who wishes to end their own life,

(c)

the arrangements for delivering medicines to the person for whom
they have been prescribed under section 4, and the assistance which
such a person may be given to ingest or self-administer them, and

(d)

such other matters relating to the operation of this Act as the Secretary
of State thinks fit.

(2)

Before issuing a code under this section the Secretary of State must consult
such persons as the Secretary of State thinks appropriate.

(3)

A code issued under subsection (1) does not come into operation until the
Secretary of State by order so provides.

(4)

An order bringing a code into operation may not be made unless a draft of
the order has been laid before, and approved by a resolution of, both Houses
of Parliament.

(5)

When a draft order is laid, the code to which it relates must also be laid.

(6)

A person performing any function under this Act must have regard to any
relevant provision of a code and failure to do so does not of itself render a
person liable to any criminal or civil proceedings but may be taken into
account in any proceedings.

9 Monitoring

(1)

The relevant Chief Medical Officer must—

(a)

monitor the operation of the Act, including compliance with its
provisions and any regulations or code of practice made under it,

(b)

inspect and report to the relevant national authority on any matter
connected with the operation of the Act which the relevant national
authority refers to the relevant Chief Medical Officer, and

(c)

submit an annual report to the relevant national authority on the
operation of the Act.

(2)

The Chief Medical Officer’s report must include the numbers of requests
under this Act that are rejected by an attending doctor, an independent doctor
or the High Court and the reasons for their rejection.

(3)

The Chief Medical Officers may combine their annual reports for the same
year in a single document (“a combined report”) in such manner as they
consider appropriate.

(4)

The relevant national authority must publish each annual report or combined
report it receives under this section and—

(a)

the Secretary of State must lay a copy of each report before Parliament,
and

(b)

the Welsh Ministers must lay a copy of each report before Senedd
Cymru.

(5)

In this section—


relevant Chief Medical Officer
means—

(a)

in England, the Chief Medical Officer to the Department of
Health, and

(b)

in Wales, the Chief Medical Officer to the Welsh Government;


relevant national authority
means—

(a)

in England, the Secretary of State, and

(b)

in Wales, the Welsh Ministers.

10 Offences

(1)

A person commits an offence if the person—

(a)

makes or knowingly uses a false instrument which purports to be a
declaration made under section 3 by another person, or

(b)

wilfully conceals or destroys a declaration made under section 3 by
another person.

(2)

A person (A) commits an offence if, in relation to another person (B) who is
seeking to make or has made a declaration under section 3 , A knowingly or
recklessly provides a medical or other professional opinion in respect of B
which is false or misleading in a material particular.

(3)

A person commits an offence if the person, dishonestly or by coercion, induces
another person to make, or revoke, a request for assistance to die.

(4)

A person commits an offence if the person, dishonestly or by coercion, induces
another person to self-administer life-ending medication.

(5)

A person guilty of an offence under subsections (1) , (3) and (4) which was
committed with the intention of causing the death of another person is liable,
on conviction on indictment, to imprisonment for life or a fine or both.

(6)

Unless subsection (5) applies, a person convicted of an offence under this
section
is liable—

(a)

on summary conviction, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6
months or a fine not exceeding the statutory maximum or both;

(b)

on conviction on indictment, to imprisonment for a period not
exceeding five years or a fine or both.

11 Regulations

(1)

Regulations made by the Secretary of State under this Act are to be made by
statutory instrument.

(2)

Except as otherwise provided, a statutory instrument containing regulations
under this Act is subject to annulment in pursuance of a resolution of either
House of Parliament.

12 Interpretation


In this Act—


attending doctor
has the meaning given in section 3 ;


capacity
is to be construed in accordance with the Mental Capacity
Act 2005;


independent doctor
has the meaning given in section 3 ;


relative
, in relation to any person, means—

(a)

the spouse or civil partner of that person,

(b)

any lineal ancestor, lineal descendant, sibling, aunt, uncle or
cousin of that person or the person’s spouse or civil partner,
or

(c)

the spouse or civil partner of any relative mentioned in
paragraph (b)
,


and for the purposes of deducing any such relationship a spouse or
civil partner includes a former spouse or civil partner, a partner to
whom the person is not married, and a partner of the same sex, and


terminal illness
has the meaning given in section 2 (1) (a) .

13 Review

(1)

At any time during the period of 12 months beginning on the day five years
after the provisions in this Act come into force, the Secretary of State must—

(a)

undertake a review of the operation of this Act,

(b)

prepare a report on that review, and

(c)

as soon as reasonably practicable, publish and lay the report before
Parliament.

(2)

The report must, in particular, set out—

(a)

the extent to which the Act has been successful in supporting
terminally ill adults in being lawfully provided with assistance to end
their own lives,

(b)

any concerns with the operation of the Act which have been raised,
and

(c)

the Secretary of State’s response to any such concerns, including any
recommendations for changes to guidance or in relation to changes
to any enactment, including this Act.

14 Extent, commencement and short title

(1)

This Act extends to England and Wales only.

(2)

The following come into force on the day on which this Act is passed—

(a)

sections 4 and 7 so far as they confer a power to make regulations;

(b)

section 8 so far as it confers a power to issue codes of practice or
orders;

(c)

sections 11 and 12 ; and

(d)

(3)

Subject to subsection (2) , the provisions of this Act come into force two years
after the day on which it is passed.

(4)

This Act may be cited as the Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults Act
2024.

Schedule

Section 3

Form of declaration


Declaration: Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults Act 2024

Name of Declarant:

Date of Birth:

Address:

I have [condition], a terminal condition from which I am expected to die within six months of the date of this declaration.

The Attending Doctor and Independent Doctor identified below have each fully informed me about that diagnosis and prognosis and the treatments available to me, including pain control and palliative care.

Having considered all this information, I have a clear and settled intention to end my own life and, in order to assist me to do so, I have asked my attending doctor to prescribe medicines for me for that purpose.

I make this declaration voluntarily and in the full knowledge of its significance.

I understand that I may revoke this declaration at any time.

Signature:

Date:

Witness

Name of witness:

Address:

This declaration was signed by [name of declarant] in my presence and signed by me in [his/her] presence.

Signature:

Date:

Countersignature: Attending Doctor

I confirm that [name], who at the date of this declaration is [age] years of age and has been ordinarily resident in England and Wales for [time]:

(1) is terminally ill and that the diagnosis and prognosis set out above is correct;

(2) has the capacity to make the decision to end their own life; and

(3) has a clear and settled intention to do so, which has been reached on an informed basis, without coercion or duress, and having been informed of the palliative, hospice and other care which is available to [him/her].

Signature:

Date:

Name and Address of Attending Doctor:

Countersignature: Independent Doctor

I confirm that [name], who at the date of this declaration is [age] years of age and has been ordinarily resident in England and Wales for [time]:

(1) is terminally ill and that the diagnosis and prognosis set out above is correct;

(2) has the capacity to make the decision to end their own life; and

(3) has a clear and settled intention to do so, which has been reached on an informed basis, without coercion or duress, and having been informed of the palliative, hospice and other care which is available to [him/her].

Signature:

Date:

Name and Address of Independent Doctor:

Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults Bill [HL]
[As Introduced]

A

bill

to

Allow adults who are terminally ill, subject to safeguards, to be assisted to end their own life; and for connected purposes.

Lord Falconer of Thoroton

Ordered to be Printed, .

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