More than 1,000 doctors have urged MPs Vote against assisted dyeing bill When it returns FolkClaiming that it is “the real danger to both patients and medical workforces”.
Terminally sick adults (end of life) bill, which will be Allow sick patients with six months to stay to end your lifeThe last time is to be voted on 20 June.
In front of the vote, in a letter to MPs, from doctor NHS Expressing “serious concerns”, arguing that “this bill is not the answer”.
While he admitted that there should be a debate at the end of life care, he argued that very little evidence has been heard from doctors, disabled people and other marginal groups.
He said, “This bill will widen inequalities, it provides inadequate protection and, in our collective outlook, is simply not safe,” he wrote, bill “deeply” flawed “.
The letter is signed by Geneticist Sir John Burn, Sir Shakeel Qureshi, who received a nightthud for his work in pediatric cardiology, former Deputy Chief Medical Officer of Scotland Professor Elene Kail, and Baronic Finelle, a professor of Pachakam therapy and members of Lord’s House.
The bill in its current form, which applies only to England and Wales, means that sick adults with only six months can apply for assistance to eliminate their lives, with two doctors and expert panels with the necessary approval.
Last month, MPs approved the change in the bill to ensure that no Medics would be obliged to participate in assisted dyeing.
Doctors already had an opt-out, but the new section extends anyone including pharmacists and social care workers.
The letter seen by Sky News, says: “Weak patients are forced to force women, domestic misconduct victims, and the elderly are at risk of being at risk. People who struggle to pay for heating or care or wish to preserve their property for their children, they have a high risk of choosing if the option is available and the option is more difficult.”
Meanwhile, Professor Colin Reece, a member of the Royal College of Physician Working Group of Assisted Dyeing, said the law “will be very intensive results for the future and many doctors are really worried that members of Parliament are not listening to the ideas of the medical profession”.
“We don’t think it is a bill that is safe, which protects patients, protects families, and protects the medical workforce,” he said.

But Bill’s sponsor Kim Leadbatter said assisted dyeing should be valid to avoid sick people who get out of frustration or to avoid making “painful” trips in Switzerland.
Last month, he told the Commons that he had “heard hundreds of stories from those who have lost the loved ones in deeply and painful circumstances”, saying: “If we do not vote to change the law, we are essentially saying that the status quo is acceptable.”
After the TV drug Hillary Jones, there was a warning from doctors that the drug would “back in the dark age”. Proposed legislation Voting has been given.
GP, often seen on ITV Good Morning Britain And this Lorraine The show said that he will help Sick patient to end his life If the law was replaced, the practice was described as “kind and kind”.
Dr. Jones said that Medics is currently “looking at his shoulders due to the legal results of the law” because it stands. Encouraging or assisting suicide is currently against the law in England and Wales, with a 14 -year maximum jail sentence.
Asked about possible importance, whether the law changes, Dr. Jones said: “This healthcare will provide relief to professionals who deal with terminal disease.
“There are wonderful people who are taking care and kind, who are allegedly accused of wrongly fear of their actions, being accused of doing wrong, and due to that fear, people are often weakened at the end of life.
“People are looking at their shoulders due to the drugs that they are using or the dosage they are using means that patients are not getting the best subcutaneous care that they can have.”