http://doughtyblog.dailymail.co.uk/2012/10/what-about-the-seriously-ill-or-disabled-people-who-want-to-live.html
The "Liverpool Pathway":  "It comes down to this: there are a lot of people who believe that, rather than 
trying to help their loved ones, hospitals have been keen to kill them off."
What about the seriously ill or disabled people who want to live?
By Stephen Doughty, 12 October 2012 6:56 PM
We have heard an awful lot about the suffering of people who bear terrible 
afflictions or disabilities and who wish to die. We have heard very little about 
the desperately sick who want to live, and the families who stand by them in 
hope.
It is looking like we have got this the wrong way round.
The highly organised campaign for assisted dying has brought together 
pressure groups, think tanks, celebrities like Sir Terry Pratchett, and some 
fairly prominent politicians, notably in recent years Tony Blair’s Lord 
Chancellor and one-time flatmate, Lord Falconer.
It has been based around a brilliantly conceived series of legal cases in 
which the judiciary have been presented with deeply affecting hard cases. Each 
one has asked for a modest legal concession, usually involving human rights and 
the 1961 law that makes helping with a suicide a serious crime.
The individuals who have brought these cases are sometimes merely sympathetic 
and at others pitiable, as in the recent instance of Tony Nicklinson, the 
58-year-old victim of 'locked-in syndrome' who lost his call for help from his 
doctor to die in the High Court in August. Mr Nicklinson died a few days after 
his legal defeat.
Occasionally the legal campaigns have scored successes. The most notable was 
that of multiple sclerosis sufferer Debbie Purdy, who persuaded the Law Lords 
that the Director of Public Prosecutions should provide guidance on whether her 
husband might face prosecution for assisted suicide, were he to help her travel 
to the Dignitas clinic in Zurich to die.
As a result of the Purdy case, DPP Keir Starmer QC introduced rules on 
assisted dying prosecutions that mean no-one is likely to be prosecuted, with 
the risk of a 14-year-jail term, if they help in the death of someone who is a 
suffering relative or friend, and if they act out of compassion rather than 
malice or greed.
However you paint it, this is a major change in the law as set down by 
Parliament, a law which takes no account of the motives of the individual aiding 
and abetting the suicide.
Indeed, Mr Starmer has brought no prosecutions against anybody from the trail 
of stricken families who have helped members travel to Switzerland to die.
What is interesting is that, despite all the campaigning, all the 
high-profile court cases, all the BBC interviews, all the endless hand-wringing 
about the cruelty of keeping those who are suffering alive against their will, 
few people seem to want to take advantage of the new right to die.
We do not have very recent figures, but I would guess that no more than 200 
British people have died at Dignitas since the clinic became well-known here in 
2003.
It is a number small enough to raise the question of how big, really, is the 
demand for assisted dying?
The campaign for assisted dying has certainly been effective in influencing 
care of the incapacitated in the Health Service. 
It was surely a factor in the successful passage of the Mental Capacity Act, 
pushed through by Lord Falconer in the teeth of a rebellion by backbench Labour 
MPs, which gave legal status to living wills. These mean people can leave orders 
for their doctors to kill them by withdrawing nourishment and fluid by tube if 
they become too sick to speak for themselves.
The assisted dying campaign formed the background to the introduction of the 
Liverpool Care Pathway into hospitals across the country. This, for those who 
have not noticed, is the system by which medical staff withdraw treatment from 
those judged to be close to death, in the cause of easing their passing. It 
often involves heavy sedation and the removal of nourishment and fluid 
tubes.
I do not wish to try to step into the shoes of those medical professionals 
and care workers who deal every day with people at the extreme end of life and 
in the depths of the worst illnesses. I have no qualifications or knowledge to 
second guess their decisions, and no intention of criticising those who work 
with great professionalism and compassion in jobs that are far beyond my 
capability.
But all the indications suggest there are many families who are unhappy with 
the way in which their relatives have died in hospitals, and that they are 
increasingly willing to complain about it.
Many of these people may be speaking out of misdirected grief. As one 
well-informed MP put it to me this week, very few expect a loved one who goes 
into hospital to die, but people do have the habit of dying. Some of those 
complaining may be troublemakers, some inspired by political or religious 
agendas.
Nevertheless there seem to be a lot of them. And they are not celebrities or 
legal grandees or Westminster faces. They are little people, people like you and 
me, not the kind you usually hear on the radio or see on the TV.
The courageous Professor Patrick Pullicino, the hospital consultant who 
defied the NHS consensus to speak out against the Liverpool Care Pathway this 
summer, reckoned it is used in around 130,000 deaths each year. That is a number 
that dwarfs the assisted dying lobby.
I think we are going to hear a lot more about the Liverpool Care Pathway, and 
I think the medical professions, the Department of Health, and a number of 
politicians are going to have to put some time into considering what has been 
happening.
It comes down to this: there are a lot of people who believe that, rather 
than trying to help their loved ones, hospitals have been keen to kill them 
off.
They believe that, while the assisted dying lobby has been parading in the 
courts and publicising itself on the BBC, assisted dying has quietly become a 
reality in our hospitals.