Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley, the Roman Catholic archbishop of Boston,
thanked his fellow bishops and Catholic organizations from across the
United States for helping to defeat doctor-assisted suicide on the
Massachusetts statewide ballot Nov. 6.
O’Malley, in remarks prepared for delivery in Baltimore Monday at the
main annual gathering of American bishops, said the church, along with
interfaith allies and help from disabilities groups, medical
associations, and hospice groups had stopped a “terrible assault on
human life.”
He pointed to the Netherlands, where doctor-assisted suicide is
legal, and where a group is now creating mobile teams that will offer
euthanasia to patients at home, making lethal drugs more widely
available to patients. The United States, O’Malley said, is a long way
from that, but only because voters here have drawn a line.
“What has put the brakes on the growth of physician-assisted suicide
in the U.S. is that more than 20 states have rejected proposed
legislation and ballot initiatives,” he said.
But he said the church’s work is not done on the issue. He called on
Catholic organizations to do more to reduce suffering at the end of life
so that fewer people have reason to seek a doctor’s help accelerating
the process.
“Just as in our struggle against abortion, it is not enough simply to
condemn abortion, but we need to help to take care of the women whose
lives are in turmoil because of a pregnancy,” he said, according to
remarks. “In the same way, we need to reach out to those facing
difficulties at the end of life.”
The church, he said, must work with hospice and palliative care groups to offer pain relief to more terminally ill people.
“Fear of tremendous pain is advanced as a reason to support
physician-assisted suicide,” he said. “In almost every instance
palliative care can suppress pain.”
Ballot Question 2, which proponents called “Death with Dignity,”
would have given people with less than six months to live access to
prescription drugs to end their lives.
Polls from six weeks before the
election showed widespread support for the measure, but it failed by 2
points following a $4 million ad blitz funded largely by Catholic
institutional and individual donors.
The Catholic church teaches that suicide in any form is a grave sin.
O’Malley said that the last time Massachusetts considered
doctor-assisted suicide, he was the bishop of Fall River; following its
defeat in the Legislature, he said, he and his staff began establishing
Alzheimer’s units in all the nursing homes in the diocese, and improved
pain management services as well.
“Those are the kinds of things that we need to do in the Archdiocese of Boston and throughout the nation,” O’Malley said.