Assisted Suicide Ban Holds Lead in West Virginia

Moral theologian and Creighton University School of Medicine professor Charles Camosy touted the results on Wednesday, noting in a post on X that the measure was in keeping with West Virginia’s ‘history of defending human dignity.’

West Virginia Capitol
West Virginia Capitol (photo: By Carol M. Highsmith /Library of CongressCatalog / Public domain)

With 90% of the vote tabulated as of 9 a.m. ET Wednesday, the effort to add a constitutional amendment in West Virginia prohibiting “medically assisted suicide, euthanasia, [and] mercy killing” was headed toward passage with the support of 50.5% of the Mountain State’s voters. 

The amendment to the state Constitution’s Bill of Rights, titled “Protection Against Medically Assisted Suicide,” would bar persons, physicians and health providers from participating in the practice. 

The amendment clarifies that the ban does not prohibit “the administration or prescription of medication for the purpose of alleviating pain or discomfort while the patient’s condition follows its natural course; nor does anything in this section prohibit the withholding or withdrawing of life-sustaining treatment, as requested by the patient or the patient’s decision-maker, in accordance with state law” nor does it prevent the state’s use of capital punishment.

Bishop Mark Brennan of the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston was vociferous in support of the measure, writing in a statement that “suicide, even if done for altruistic reasons, is a rejection of our place in the human community, because we choose to leave it before we have to.”

In his statement, Bishop Brennan pointed out that medically assisted suicide “corrupts the medical profession” and that “many of the reasons that lead people to choose the help of medical personnel to end their lives can be met by nonlethal means.”

Moral theologian and Creighton University School of Medicine professor Charles Camosy touted the results on Wednesday, noting in a post on X that the measure was in keeping with West Virginia’s “history of defending human dignity.”

West Virginia Congressman-elect Riley Moore, a Republican, also welcomed the vote, stating  “West Virginia stands for life, and we proved it tonight. The passage of Amendment 1 will protect WV’s most vulnerable from medical killing — forever.”

Assisted suicide is currently legal in the U.S. states of California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Vermont and Washington, as well as the District of Columbia.

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