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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Nearly 400 people used California assisted death law in 2017

Supporters of a measure to allow terminally ill people to end their own life march Sept. 24, 2015, at the Capitol in Sacramento, Calif. California health officials say 374 terminally ill people took drugs to end their lives in 2017, the first full year after a law making the option legal took effect. (Rich Pedroncelli / Associated Press)
By Don Thompson Associated Press

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – California health officials reported Friday that 374 terminally ill people took drugs to end their lives in 2017, the first full year after a law made the option legal.

The California Department of Public Health said 577 people received aid-in-dying drugs last year, but not everyone used them. The law allows adults to obtain a prescription for life-ending drugs if a doctor has determined they have six months or less to live. They can self-administer the drugs.

Of the 374 who died, about 90 percent were more than 60 years old, about 95 percent were insured and about 83 percent were receiving hospice or similar care. The median age was 74.

The figures are more than double those from the first six months after the law went into effect June 9, 2016. In those early months 191 people received life-ending drugs, while 111 people took them and died.

Riverside County Superior Court Judge Daniel Ottolia ruled in May that the law is unconstitutional because it was adopted illegally when lawmakers passed it during a special Legislative session called to address health issues. An appeals court last week reinstated the End of Life Option Act, but gave opponents until July 2 to file objections.

The law passed in California after 29-year-old Brittany Maynard, who was dying from brain cancer, had to move to Oregon in 2014 so she could end her life. Doctor-assisted deaths are also legal in Colorado, Montana, Vermont, Washington state and Washington, D.C.

Critics argue the law can prompt hasty decisions and misdiagnoses and less use of palliative care, in which dying people can be sedated to relieve suffering. Supporters say it gives people the choice to ease what otherwise might be a lingering and painful death.

“No evidence of abuse, coercion, none of those claims have come to fruition. We’re happy to see that,” said Ashley Cardenas, policy and programs director for the advocacy organization Compassion & Choices.

The report said 241 doctors prescribed the drugs last year, which she said “shows that physicians are engaged in this process, they’re learning more about this process and providing the care that their patients want.”

Most of the recipients were college educated and receiving hospice or similar care, which she said “helps to refute some of the claims that were made by those opposed to the process” that those taking the drugs were uneducated or lacking in other options.

Patients Rights Action Fund, which opposes laws allowing people to take their lives, did not respond to messages.

State health officials reported Friday that 632 people, the majority of them with cancer, started to use the law last year by making two verbal requests to their physicians at least 15 days apart.

The 374 people who died include 11 people who were prescribed drugs in 2016 but died last year.

Another 86 people were prescribed the lethal drugs but died without taking them, while the fate of the remaining 128 people wasn’t reported.