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. 2005 Nov 19;331(7526):1160. doi: 10.1136/bmj.331.7526.1160-a

Dignitas is investigated for helping healthy woman to die

Michael Leidig 1
PMCID: PMC1285120  PMID: 16293819

The Swiss euthanasia group Dignitas, which claims to offer a dignified death to terminally ill people, is being investigated after a healthy German woman was given a lethal mix of drugs by providing a false medical report.

Dignitas has helped 453 terminally ill Europeans, including 30 British people, to end their lives since it started in 1998. Assisted suicide is legal in Switzerland, but of the groups registered to provide such assistance only Dignitas offers its services to foreign nationals, and it recently opened its first office abroad in Germany to recruit clients (BMJ 2005;331: 984, 29 Oct).

In the incident under investigation a 69 year old woman, who has not been named for legal reasons, approached Dignitas with a medical report showing that she had terminal liver cirrhosis and was given a lethal dose of sodium pentobarbital.

Figure 1.

Figure 1

The managing chairman of the German hospice foundation, Eugen Brysch, protests against the opening of a Dignitas clinic in Germany

Credit: EUROPICS

But a routine autopsy carried out by German authorities when the body was brought back from Switzerland exposed the report as a fake and added that although the woman had depression she was nevertheless physically fit.

The doctor used by Dignitas to help administer the lethal injection has also died. He committed suicide shortly after he was told that the German woman had not been terminally ill.

A subsequent investigation found that she had persuaded her GP in Augsburg to falsify the report by telling him she needed the report to get sick leave from work. The doctor told police he had no idea that the woman would use it to persuade Dignitas to help her commit suicide.

Hans-Juergen Kolb, Augsburg's senior public prosecutor, confirmed that the investigation included the German GP and the 71 year old Swiss doctor as well as Dignitas itself, although after the death of the Swiss doctor charges against him would be left on file once the report for prosecutors was completed.

But the founder of Dignitas, Ludwig Minelli, defended his organisation: “The doctor's report that I was given indicated the woman was suffering from cirrhosis of the liver as well as hepatitis. And in any case every person in Europe has the right to choose to die, even if they are not terminally ill.”

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