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Majority of doctors want medical bodies to have neutral stance on assisted dying

Dignity in Dying

2 min read Partner content

A poll of more than 1000 GPs has found that most doctors would want their medical bodies to be neutral on the subject of assisted dying. 


This comes as the Royal College of Physicians is shortly to survey its own membership as to whether the College should adopt a position of neutrality. A survey from the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) is also expected later in 2019.

The poll, conducted by research company medeConnect in January, found that 55% of respondents either agreed or strongly agreed that medical bodies like the RCGP and British Medical Association should “adopt a position of neutrality on the issue of assisted dying for terminally ill, competent adults”. Only a third of doctors disagreed.

The same poll found that GPs were personally split as to whether the law should change. 33% opposed a change in the law on assisted dying, while 32% supported it. 34% were neutral or did not know whether assisted dying should be legalised.

Asked whether doctors would want the choice for themselves, 43% said, if they were terminally ill and suffering unbearably at the end of life with only months or weeks to live, they would want the option of assisted dying. Only 27% said they would not want the choice, while 29% did not know or declined to answer.

Dr Jacky Davis, Chair of Healthcare Professionals for Assisted Dying, said:

“These results show what we know to be true, that there’s no consensus amongst doctors when it comes to the subject of assisted dying. Because of that, most doctors think their medical colleges and representative bodies should adopt a neutral stance so that everyone’s views can be represented.

“When surveys of the profession have been done in the past, we’ve seen the results skewed or misinterpreted by a loud minority of doctors with deeply-held personal objections to assisted dying. This year we can only hope the Royal Colleges and others start to take a more sensible, evidence-based view that permits an honest debate, represents the profession at large and respects the wishes of the vast majority of our patients.”

Polls of the general public have consistently found that an overwhelming majority would support a change in the law to allow terminally ill people choice and control over their death.

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