Healthy woman’s assisted suicide renews ‘right to die’ debate
July 3rd, 2008From the New York Times, [UK] Times:
A maverick German politician has helped a healthy 79-year-old woman to kill herself, prompting a criminal investigation and sparking a new national debate over assisted suicide.
Bettina Schardt was neither sick nor dying, but had difficulty getting around, no family and few friends. She feared that she might need to move into a nursing home.
Ms. Schardt’s suicide – and Mr. Kusch’s energetic publicizing of it – have set off a national furor over the limits on the right to die, in a country that has struggled with this issue more than most because of the Nazi’s euthanizing of at least 100,000 mentally disabled and incurably ill people.
… The larger lesson of Ms. Schardt’s solitary death may have to do with the way Germany treats its old.
“The fear of nursing homes among elderly Germans is far greater than the fear of terrorism or the fear of losing your job,” said Eugen Brysch, the director of the German Hospice Foundation. “Germany must confront this fear, because fear, as we have seen, is a terrible adviser.”

