has become America’s first ‘death tourism’ destination, where terminally ill people from and other states that have outlawed assisted suicide have started travelling to get their hands on a deadly cocktail of drugs to , DailyMail.com can reveal.
In the liberal bastion , at least one clinic has started receiving out-of-staters who have less than six months to live and meet the other strict requirements of the state’s Death with Dignity (DWD) law.
Dr Nicholas Gideonse, the director of End of Life Choices Oregon, recently told a panel that he was advising terminally ill non-residents on travelling to Oregon to end their lives, despite a legal gray area.
Dr Gideonse, an advocate of ‘growing magic mushrooms mushroom’ therapy, said he was helping a Texan man suffering from Lou Gehrig’s disease and a hospice patient on the East Coast, but added that there were not yet ‘tons of people coming from all over’.
‘But for a small number of patients who otherwise qualify or are determined to go through that and who have the energy and the resources … it has started to happen,’ he said.
Dr Nicholas Gideonse, an advocate of ‘magic mushroom’ therapy, has led the charge for Oregon to become the first US state that allows terminally ill non-residents to come and end their lives
Oregon, California and Washington are among the US states with so-called medical aid in dying laws. Here, Robert Fuller, a cancer sufferer, takes a fatal dose of doctor-prescribed drugs in Seattle in 2019
Out-of-state residents must be able to spend at least 15 days in Oregon to process the paperwork, which requires sign-offs from two doctors and witnesses, before administering the fatal dose themselves, says the clinic’s website.
Dr Gideonse and the clinic operate in a legal gray zone — the state last year agreed to extend access to doctor-assisted suicide to out-of-staters, but this is not expected to be codified into law until later this year.
But, America’s first ‘death tourism’ destination throws up tough legal questions for family members who may help a loved one reach Oregon from a prohibitionist state. They could face arrest or even be prosecuted in their home state as a result.
For critics, Oregon’s nascent ‘death tourism’ industry, and efforts to create another in Vermont, show how the US is on a slippery slope to following in Canada’s footsteps — where lax rules have allowed people with so little as hearing loss to be euthanized.
While US assisted suicide rules are comparatively strict and help some desperately sick people end their agony, critics say they also devalue human life and make deadly drugs a solution for the infirm, disabled and even those who are cash-strapped or feel like a burden.
The End of Life Choices Oregon clinic, in Portland, says on its website that it helps non-resident adults with less than six months to live end their lives on the West Coast
The website of End of Life Choices Oregon explains how the terminally ill living in states that outlaw or do not support assisted suicides can take advantage of a change in Oregon’s rule
Jonathan Modie, a spokesman for Oregon Health Authority, said the state stopped enforcing the residency requirement last March, but that he was not aware of any out-of staters travelling to use Oregon’s DWD law so far.
Matt Vallière, executive director of the Patients Rights Action Fund, a campaign group, said America’s medical aid-in-dying (MAiD) rules were already ‘flimsy and easy to circumvent’ and that allowing suicide tourism deepened the problems of a flawed system.
Matt Vallière, executive director of the Patients Rights Action Fund, called Oregon a ‘Wild West’ for assisted suicide
‘You end up in this Wild West scenario where people take the drugs back to their home states, and there are a lot more questions than there are answers about what would happen after that,’ Vallière said.
Diane Coleman, president of Not Dead Yet, another campaign group, said the clinic and Oregon officials were bypassing laws in other states, where lawmakers had decided against having their own assisted suicide rules.
‘Many view these laws as a danger to people with serious illnesses, chronic conditions and significant disabilities in our cost-conscious healthcare system,’ Coleman told said.
Oregon became the first US state to allow physician-assisted suicide in 1997, allowing terminally ill adult Oregonians, with less than six months left to live, to ask doctors for a fatal dose of drugs they then administer themselves, typically at home.
In 2021, the most recent year for which data are available, doctors prescribed 383 fatal drug doses and 238 people ended their lives — mostly white people aged 65 and above suffering from cancer or diseases of the brain or heart.
Since Oregon implemented its Death with Dignity (DWD) Act in 1997, the number of doctor-assisted suicides has risen steadily
Oregon’s Death with Dignity law has been controversial from the outset. Here, Ellie Jenny (L) and Brock Miller from the disability rights organization Not Dead Yet demonstrate against a physician-assisted suicide in Portland in 2002
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Dr Gideonse in 2021 sued Oregon, challenging the constitutionality of the residency restriction in its DWD law, with support from Compassion & Choices, which leads the US campaign to expand America’s MAiD rules.
Oregon health chiefs in 2022 settled the case and agreed to lift the residency rule, but the state’s legislature has only begun considering the repeal this session through , which looks set to pass in the Democrat-led chamber.
Dr Gideonse initially complained that the residency requirement blocked him from signing lethal prescriptions for nearby residents of Washington state, who often cross the Columbia River for doctor’s appointments in his city.
In recent weeks, however, it has emerged that Dr Gideonse has also opened up procedures to far-flung non-residents, including those living in states that prohibit suicide assistance, according to his with The Completed Life Initiative.
After the lawsuit wrapped up, Dr Gideonse has communicated with terminally ill patients from states that prohibit medically-assisted suicides to assess whether they met Oregon’s criteria and to advise them on how they could relocate there for hospice care, he said.
‘Some of those conversations have become material,’ Dr Gideonse added, including the Texan sufferer of Lou Gehrig’s disease, an incurable neurodegenerative condition, who was then ‘in the process’ of coming to a hospice in Portland.
He also described communicating with a terminally sick patient in ‘one of the Carolinas,’ who was weighing whether to travel to Oregon or Switzerland — which has for decades facilitated assisted suicides for foreigners — to end their life.