Brittany Maynard was bubbly, bright and beautiful.
She was also terminally ill with brain cancer.
The 29-year-old chose to take control over when her life would end – taking a lethal dose of prescribed drugs on November 1, last year.
But the Californian native had to go interstate, to Oregon, to fulfil her wish.
She wanted new legislation granting terminally ill people the right to die with dignity to be her legacy. And now, it appears to be just days away in her home state.
The Californian State Assembly has approved legislation allowing terminally ill patients with less than six months to live to legally end their lives with a doctor’s help and the Senate is expected to endorse the bill within days, CBS reports.
Four US states – Oregon, Washington, Vermont and Montana – currently allow doctors to prescribe life-ending drugs and at least 24 states have unsuccessfully introduced aid-in-dying legislation this year.
After listening to emotional and religious arguments on both sides, the Assembly voted 42-33 in favour of granting the right to die.
Passing the legislation in the assembly was the obstacle; an earlier version of the bill had previously passed in the Senate, News Limited reports.
Top Comments
Does anyone know what Australia's stance is on this?
Still illegal in Australia. Don't imagine this will change under the current government - we're as close to a police state as you can get here.