Bill on the Right to Assisted Dying
AI-generated summary for informational purposes only. Not legal advice. See the original source for the authoritative text.
This French bill establishes a legal right to assisted dying for adult patients suffering from a serious, incurable illness that is life-threatening. The request must be voluntary, informed, and repeated, and the patient must be of legal age and capable of expressing their will at the time of the request. The procedure is strictly regulated: patients must meet defined medical criteria and submit a formal request that is reviewed by healthcare professionals. A collegial medical review process is required before any assisted dying can be authorized, ensuring that no single doctor can approve the procedure alone. A conscience clause is explicitly included, allowing any healthcare professional — including doctors, nurses, and pharmacists — to refuse participation in the assisted dying procedure without professional penalty. However, they are required to refer the patient to another willing professional or facility. The bill represents a significant shift in French end-of-life legislation, which previously only permitted deep continuous sedation under the 2016 Claeys-Leonetti law. This proposal would for the first time allow the administration of a lethal substance either by a healthcare professional or self-administered by the patient.
AI-generated summary. May contain errors. Refer to official sources for legal decisions.
Key Changes
- Creates a new legal right to assisted dying for adult patients with a serious, incurable, life-threatening illness who voluntarily and repeatedly request it
- Requires a formal collegial medical review process before any assisted dying procedure can be authorized — no single-doctor approval allowed
- Introduces an explicit conscience clause allowing any healthcare professional to refuse participation without professional penalty, with mandatory patient referral obligation
+ 3 more changes with Pro
Obligations
What this law requires
Healthcare professionals must conduct a collegial medical review process and document that no single doctor has approved the assisted dying procedure alone
Healthcare providers must verify that the patient is an adult of legal age at the time of the assisted dying request
Healthcare providers must verify that the patient has a serious, incurable, life-threatening illness before authorizing assisted dying
Healthcare providers must obtain and document that the patient's request is voluntary, informed, and repeated across multiple occasions
Healthcare providers must confirm the patient is capable of expressing their will at the time of the assisted dying request