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Half-paralysed, partially blind woman fights for her right to die
‘I will not wait to become a vegetable’: Half-paralysed, partially blind woman fights for her right – and the rights of others – to die as she loses control of her limbs that still move
- Lydie Imhoff, 43, wishes to keep her right to be euthanized when the time comes
- The woman, who is native to France, has come to see Belgium as her ‘escape’ route, since the practise of voluntary death is illegal in her home nation
Half-paralysed from birth, partially sighted and now losing control of the limbs that still move, 43-year-old Lydie Imhoff is seeking an escape from life.
Her native France is still wrestling with the ethical, moral and legal questions surrounding euthanasia – but neighboring Belgium has already adopted it.
And Imhoff has made up her mind to make sure that, when the time comes, she can end her life on her own terms.
“My head works, but my body is leaving me. I will not wait to become a vegetable before taking action,” she told AFP as she initiated the journey towards death.
“Before I had the upper hand over my disability, but now I don’t at all.”
Lydie Imhoff is a 43 years old French citizen living in Besançon, France. She travelled to Belgium to receive the final authorization from Belgian psychiatrist Marc Reisinger to be euthanized
Lydie Imhoff has been suffering from hemiplegia and blindness from birth due to a perinatal stroke. Her condition is worsening year after year as she loses mobility
With euthanasia still forbidden despite an intense national debate in France, Imhoff has come to see Belgium as an “emergency exit” for when she eventually wishes to die.
But that emergency exit still has a lock and a gatekeeper – she has come to Brussels to meet a psychiatrist to explain her final decision.
And, in order that her experience might contribute to debate about euthanasia in the two countries, she allowed AFP journalists to sit in.
Strapped into a wheelchair, and accompanied from her home in the eastern French town of Besancon by her carer, she talks for 45 minutes.
It is a painful story, her upbringing marked not only by her disabilities but also sickness and violent abuse within her own family.
The account is also dotted by charming moments of humour, as when she disconcerted her interviewer by talking of her “little free-roaming flatmate” – her pet rabbit.
Imhoff arrived in the world catastrophically early after her mother’s five-and-a-half month pregnancy and immediately suffered a debilitating stroke.
The premature birth left her paralysed down the entire left side of her body.
In adulthood she did not let her handicap keep her from her hobby, horse-riding, but in 2009 she suffered a heavy fall causing cranial trauma and a spinal injury.
“Seventeen fractures in all,” she said.
Consulting Imhoff’s medical records, her interviewer Dr Marc Reisinger finds a diagnosis of “tetraparesis”, an illness that wastes the limb muscles.
She does not want to end her long fight right away, but is concerned that her symptoms are spreading, her muscle spasms more frequent.
Her native France is still wrestling with the ethical, moral and legal questions surrounding euthanasia — but neighbouring Belgium has already adopted it
The trigger for seeking a consultation in Belgium, where euthanasia can be legally sought, came when she lost sensation in the right hand she uses to read braille.
“I was devastated. My fingers are all that remain to retain an autonomous existence.”
To underline the point she demonstrates her struggle to take a sip of water on her own from a glass or a bottle, which she must grasp in the crook of her arm..
She admits that she created a psychological shell to insulate her from her pain, but said it’s not easy to maintain that facade as certain body parts succumb to agony.
Dr Reisinger is convinced that she meets the criteria set to have her life ended.
“For me it’s OK,” he said.
“I think that we are going to be able to help you do what you want to do, when you want to do it.”
The Belgian law, passed in 2002, decriminalises euthanasia and allows a lethal injection if two doctors, a general practitioner and a specialist agree.
The text also stipulates that the patient be in “constant, unbearable and untreatable” suffering caused by a “serious and incurable” condition.
Despite the tough criteria, last year the Federal Commission for Oversight and Evaluation recorded 2,966 acts of euthanasia in this country of 11 million, up by a tenth over 2021.
Most who chose this final route had cancers, followed by a group with multiple pathologies.
Among those who sought a quicker death, 53 were residents of France.
“The debate is losing traction in France and some feel a lot of despair. The result is greater pressure here,” said lawyer Jacqueline Herremans, a member of the Belgian evaluation commission.
In France, a citizens’ convention of randomly selected residents has sat to debate the issue and will offer the government advice on how to approach end of life care next month.
Currently, French law allows “deep and continued sedation until death” in certain conditions, but not actively assisted dying, even for the incurably sick or those in great suffering.
Elsewhere in Europe, active euthanasia is only legal in Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and Spain. Switzerland allows deadly drugs to be used if a patient can help administer them.
Reisinger suggests “freedom of choice” as a motive for allowing one form or another of assisted suicide or active euthanasia – and says a doctor has a duty to reduce pain.
“Why would he step aside at the final moment, the most crucial of all, saying ‘I’m no longer here to deal with your suffering’? That makes no sense.” he declared.
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