'Passive euthanasia' is quite different from the illegal practice of 'active euthanasia.'

'Passive euthanasia' is quite different from the illegal practice of 'active euthanasia.'

'Passive euthanasia' is quite different from the illegal practice of 'active euthanasia.'

'Passive euthanasia,' which allows a patient to die naturally by withholding or withdrawing medical treatment that sustains their life, has been legal in India since 2018. However, it is today that, for the first time, a 32-year-old man got the Supreme Court's approval for passive euthanasia in India. Harish Rana from Gaziabad, who has been in a vegetative state for the past 13 years following a fall, will be allowed the withdrawwal of the life support due to the permanent, irreversible damage to his health. However, 'passive euthanasia' is quite different from 'active euthanasia (it is still illegal),' in which a drug is administered to cause a patient's death. How does passive euthanasia work in the Indian context?

How it works
According to expert doctors, once passive euthanasia is permitted by the court, the patient is admitted to a palliative care unit. Here, the focus would be on ensuring dignified care for the patient, instead of trying to cure them or abandoning them medically. Here's how it works:
1) At the palliative unit, the patient will still receive hydration, nutrition and care for pain relief.
2) Medical care will be given for symptoms like shortness of breath, anxiety or other kinds of discomfort.
3)Family members will receive counselling to understand how the process works.
4)Treatment methods like invasive ventilation, intravenous antibiotics or interventions and high-end ICU treatments, which are generally undertaken to prolong a person's life, will be stopped. 

Family members of the patient will also receive counselling during the process of passive euthanasia Photo: iStock/witsarut sakorn
ADVERTISEMENT

The right to die with dignity
1) Though legal in India, passive euthanasia always requires court approval.
2) In 2018, the Indian Supreme Court said that the 'Right to Die with Dignity' comes under Article 21. People can write their medical wishes in their living wills in advance, to ensure that their decisions are carried out if they become unable to care for themselves. 
3) A judge will watch over the process of passive euthanasia, following the medical board's recommendations.

4) While in India the process is strict, requires medical and legal scrutiny and court approvals, the passive euthanasia procedures are a lot more lenient in many countries like the Netherlands and Belgium, where doctors are allowed to perform it as long as they comply with legal terms. 
The health condition of 'Harish Rana' has sparked widespread concern, with it generating over 5K search volume on Google Trends in the past one hour. 

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT