Assisted suicide is currently still prohibited in Austria. However, following a finding of the Austrian Constitutional Court it would be completely legal from 2022. A statutory regulation defining the limits between legal ways of assistance and the conditions therefor on the one hand and, on the other hand, assistive actions that shall remain prohibited is currently not in sight. However, a suicidal action performed upon the request of the person willing to die solely by someone else will remain illegal; this also applies if the person willing to commit suicide is physically unable to participate in her or his killing. In several European countries euthanasia and/or assisted suicide has already been legalized and in some countries, Switzerland for example, assisted suicide is a legal option even for patients without suffering from a life-limiting disease, unbearable suffering and insufficient treatment options are the only criteria. In this case report the clinical case of an Austrian patient will be presented, suffering from a personality disorder, who planed an assisted suicide in Switzerland. Ethic and legal backgrounds are discussed. The possibility of assisted suicide bears the danger that people suffering from psychiatric disorders, especially current major depressive episode, could refuse treatment options and choose suicide trough a commercial provider of assisted suicide. In particular it must be considered that currently severely depressed people usually suffer from limited insight and judgement as well as from limited freedom of choice.
CITATION STYLE
Vyssoki, B., Stich, M., Eder-Pissarek, E., Jez, I., Dobias, S., Unger, A., … Psota, G. (2021). Announced assisted suicide in Switzerland: a case report. Neuropsychiatrie, 35(4), 187–191. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40211-021-00398-6
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