header-logo header-logo

A panel replaces a judge

18 April 2025 / Sir Mark Hedley
Issue: 8113 / Categories: Opinion , Health , Human rights
printer mail-detail
216140
Sir Mark Hedley on what needs to be considered as a result of this amendment to the assisted dying Bill

One sticking point that is surely evident to all who are following the assisted dying debate is that to legalise the service, we will need to believe it is possible to embed the rigorous safeguards required to ensure the choice is voluntary and free of coercion.

Indeed, recent evidence from the Nuffield Council on Bioethics shows that the public are greatly concerned about the existence and quality of safeguards, if assisted dying is to be legalised. In part, the public believed these protections should be provided by a wholly independent authority.

Those concerns were echoed in the original draft of the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill. Its proponents asserted its unparalleled safeguards, an important component of which was to be the role of the High Court judge, set out in clause 12. That judicial oversight has now been removed and replaced with a multidisciplinary panel comprising

To access this full article please fill the form below.
All fields are mandatory unless marked as 'Optional'.
If you already a subscriber to New Law Journal, please login here

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Winckworth Sherwood—Tim Foley

Winckworth Sherwood—Tim Foley

Property litigation practice strengthened by partner hire

Kingsley Napley—Romilly Holland

Kingsley Napley—Romilly Holland

International arbitration team specialist joins the team

Red Lion Chambers—Maurice MacSweeney

Red Lion Chambers—Maurice MacSweeney

Set creates new client and business development role amid growth

NEWS
Property lawyers have given a cautious welcome to the government’s landmark Bill capping ground rents at £250, banning new leasehold properties and making it easier for leaseholders to switch to commonhold
Four Nightingale courts are to be made permanent, as justice ministers continue to grapple with the record-level Crown Court backlog
The judiciary has set itself a trio of objectives and a trio of focus areas for the next five years, in its Judicial Diversity and Inclusion Strategy 2026-2030

The Sentencing Act 2026 received royal assent last week, bringing into law the recommendations of David Gauke’s May 2025 Independent Sentencing Review

Victims of crime are to be given free access to transcripts of Crown Court sentencing remarks, the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) has confirmed
back-to-top-scroll