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Passive Euthanasia, Right to Life & Supreme Court Jurisprudence

Core Issue

  • Family of a man in a persistent vegetative state (PVS) met Supreme Court of India judges seeking permission for euthanasia.
  • The patient has been in a vegetative state for over 13 years.
  • Judges sought views of primary and secondary medical boards on whether continuation of treatment is in the patient’s best interest.

Relevance

  • GS II (Polity & Constitution)
    • Article 21, judicial interpretation of dignity
    • Supreme Court role in rights expansion
  • GS IV (Ethics)
    • Autonomy vs sanctity of life
    • Medical ethics: beneficence, non-maleficence

What is Euthanasia?

  • Euthanasia: Intentional act/omission to end life to relieve suffering.
  • Types:
    • Active Euthanasia: Direct act to cause death (e.g., lethal injection) → Illegal in India.
    • Passive Euthanasia: Withdrawal/withholding of life-sustaining treatment → Legal under conditions.
  • Assisted Suicide: Providing means to commit suicide → Illegal.

Article 21 – Right to Life

  • Interpreted as Right to live with dignity, not mere animal existence.
  • Includes:
    • Right to privacy
    • Bodily autonomy
    • Right to refuse medical treatment

Key question: Does dignity extend to the end of life?
SC answer: Yes, in limited circumstances.

Supreme Court Jurisprudence

1. Aruna Shanbaug Case

  • First legal recognition of passive euthanasia in India.
  • Allowed withdrawal of life support for patients in PVS.
  • Required:
    • Approval of High Court.
    • Medical opinion.
  • Laid foundation but procedure was cumbersome.

2. Common Cause v. Union of India

  • Landmark Constitution Bench judgment.
  • Held:
    • Passive euthanasia is legal.
    • Living Will / Advance Directive recognised.
  • Established:
    • Right to die with dignity as part of Article 21.
  • Replaced HC approval with medical boards.

Legal Framework for Passive Euthanasia

Who can decide?

  • Competent patient → Through Living Will / Advance Directive.
  • Incompetent patient (PVS/coma) → Family + Doctors + Medical Boards.

Safeguards:

  • Opinion of:
    • Primary Medical Board.
    • Secondary Medical Board.
  • Certification that:
    • Treatment is futile.
    • Continuation not in best interest of patient.
  • No criminal liability if procedure followed.

Medical Boards – Role Explained

  • Primary Board: Treating doctors, hospital specialists.
  • Secondary Board: Independent experts, acts as safeguard.
  • Purpose:
    • Prevent misuse.
    • Ensure decision is medical, not emotional or economic.

Ethical Dimension 

Competing Ethical Principles

  • Autonomy: Respecting patient’s will/dignity.
  • Beneficence: Acting in patient’s best interest.
  • Non-maleficence: Avoiding prolonged suffering.
  • Sanctity of life vs Quality of life debate.

Indian approach: Middle path – no active killing, but dignity-preserving withdrawal.

Social & Governance Concerns

  • Fear of misuse against:
    • Elderly
    • Disabled
    • Economically dependent patients
  • Indian society:
    • Strong family involvement.
    • Limited palliative care infrastructure.
  • Hence emphasis on procedural safeguards.

Relevance of Current Case

  • Tests implementation of SC guidelines in real-life scenarios.
  • Shows shift from judicial approval to medical ethics-based governance.
  • Reinforces:
    • Family’s role.
    • Medical board centrality.
  • Highlights growing acceptance of end-of-life dignity.

International Context

  • Many countries allow:
    • Passive euthanasia (UK, India).
    • Some allow active euthanasia (Netherlands, Belgium).
  • India follows conservative, dignity-based model.

Challenges

  • Low awareness of Living Wills.
  • Hospital-level hesitation due to fear of litigation.
  • Uneven capacity of medical boards across States.
  • Emotional burden on families.

Way Forward

  • Standardise hospital protocols for end-of-life care.
  • Public awareness on Advance Directives.
  • Strengthen palliative care services.
  • Periodic training of doctors on legal safeguards.
  • Ethical committees at hospital level.

January 2026
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