Top Belgian Health Insurance Company Calls for Euthanasia...
Apr 16, 2024 15:34:13 GMT -5
Post by schwartzie on Apr 16, 2024 15:34:13 GMT -5
These people who love death so much will soon have their fill! đĄ
Top Belgian Health Insurance Company Calls for Euthanasia as âSolutionâ for Aging Population
Frank Bergman
April 16, 2024 - 9:29 am
The head of Belgiumâs top health insurance company has called on the government to consider euthanizing the elderly as a âsolutionâ for the nationâs aging population.
As Slay News has reported, along with Canada, Germany, and Switzerland, Belgium has some of the most liberal euthanasia laws in the world.
In 2014, Belgium even amended its euthanasia laws to make it legal for doctors to terminate the life of a child.
Since the European nationâs âassisted suicideâ laws were first introduced in 2002, Belgium has now killed over 27,000 people with euthanasia.
However, some euthanasia advocates are arguing that the laws donât go far enough.
Luc Van Gorp, head of Christian Mutuality (CM), pointed out that the number of people over 80 in Belgium will double up to 1.2 million by 2050.
He argues that the elderly are putting large financial pressure on the taxpayer-funded healthcare system and insurance companies.
According to De Specialist, Van Gorp said the problem cannot be solved with more money and called for âa radically different approach.â
âDoctors and other health professionals are now doing their utmost to make everyone live longer, but for what purpose?â Van Gorp said.
âLiving longer is not an end in itself, is it?
âIt must first of all be about the question: how long can I live with quality [of life].â
âWhat about the category of older people who receive maximum care, but who still do not have the quality of life they want?
âThat question is asked far too little,â he stated.
Van Gorp said that in addition to the current euthanasia law, there âshould also be a softer form for people who feel that their lives are complete.â
âMany elderly people are tired of life,â he added.
Instead of calling the process suicide, which has negative connotations, he âwould rather call it: giving life back.â
âI know it is sensitive, but we really have to dare to have that debate.â
Van Gorp further asserted that the cost of caring for people toward the end of their life may not be worthwhile, citing âexpensive medicationâ for cancer patients.
He argues that euthanizing the elderly would be a âsolutionâ to the aging population that could save a large amount of taxpayer money.
In a telling remark, the executive describes elderly citizens by using the metaphor of a âmountain of meatâ that begins to smell as it goes off.
âI sometimes compare the aging people with a mountain of meat,â he said.
âThat mountain first ends up in healthcare.
âDoctors and hospitals get to work on this and make good money from it.
âBut as soon as that meat starts to smell, they pass it on to elderly care.
âBut aging is not only the responsibility of the people who work in elderly care.â
While several left-wing politicians are sympathetic to Van Gorpâs ideas, according to VRT NWS, Christian Democrat leader Sammy Mahdi opposed the plans.
âIf someone is tired of life and feels like they are standing in the way and no longer getting visitors, then we are failing as a society,â Mahdi said.
Meanwhile, Van Gorp doubled down on his ideas in an interview with the newspaper DeMorgen, in which he stated:
âThe demand for care will only increase in the coming years.
âIf we just keep doing the way we are doing today, weâre going for an outright care crash.
âWe can only prevent this if we choose a radically different approach, from a healthy society that puts quality of life first instead of quantity.â
âNumerous healthcare providers have long indicated that it cannot continue in this way,â he said.
âThere are simply not enough professional hands left to provide all care.
âAnd as a society, we create too little space to take care of those who are most dear to us.â
In 2002, Belgium was the second country in the post-World War II era that legalized euthanasia.
In 2014, it became the first country to abolish the age restriction on euthanasia.
It currently allows euthanasia for minors who suffer from a supposedly âterminalâ disease, are allegedly close to death, or suffer from chronic pain and have the consent of parents and doctors.
In 2018, a government report revealed that three minors received lethal injections between 2016 and 2017.
The number of legal yearly euthanasia cases has been steadily on the rise since its legalization in 2002, reaching almost 3,000 cases in 2022.
link
Top Belgian Health Insurance Company Calls for Euthanasia as âSolutionâ for Aging Population
Frank Bergman
April 16, 2024 - 9:29 am
The head of Belgiumâs top health insurance company has called on the government to consider euthanizing the elderly as a âsolutionâ for the nationâs aging population.
As Slay News has reported, along with Canada, Germany, and Switzerland, Belgium has some of the most liberal euthanasia laws in the world.
In 2014, Belgium even amended its euthanasia laws to make it legal for doctors to terminate the life of a child.
Since the European nationâs âassisted suicideâ laws were first introduced in 2002, Belgium has now killed over 27,000 people with euthanasia.
However, some euthanasia advocates are arguing that the laws donât go far enough.
Luc Van Gorp, head of Christian Mutuality (CM), pointed out that the number of people over 80 in Belgium will double up to 1.2 million by 2050.
He argues that the elderly are putting large financial pressure on the taxpayer-funded healthcare system and insurance companies.
According to De Specialist, Van Gorp said the problem cannot be solved with more money and called for âa radically different approach.â
âDoctors and other health professionals are now doing their utmost to make everyone live longer, but for what purpose?â Van Gorp said.
âLiving longer is not an end in itself, is it?
âIt must first of all be about the question: how long can I live with quality [of life].â
âWhat about the category of older people who receive maximum care, but who still do not have the quality of life they want?
âThat question is asked far too little,â he stated.
Van Gorp said that in addition to the current euthanasia law, there âshould also be a softer form for people who feel that their lives are complete.â
âMany elderly people are tired of life,â he added.
Instead of calling the process suicide, which has negative connotations, he âwould rather call it: giving life back.â
âI know it is sensitive, but we really have to dare to have that debate.â
Van Gorp further asserted that the cost of caring for people toward the end of their life may not be worthwhile, citing âexpensive medicationâ for cancer patients.
He argues that euthanizing the elderly would be a âsolutionâ to the aging population that could save a large amount of taxpayer money.
In a telling remark, the executive describes elderly citizens by using the metaphor of a âmountain of meatâ that begins to smell as it goes off.
âI sometimes compare the aging people with a mountain of meat,â he said.
âThat mountain first ends up in healthcare.
âDoctors and hospitals get to work on this and make good money from it.
âBut as soon as that meat starts to smell, they pass it on to elderly care.
âBut aging is not only the responsibility of the people who work in elderly care.â
While several left-wing politicians are sympathetic to Van Gorpâs ideas, according to VRT NWS, Christian Democrat leader Sammy Mahdi opposed the plans.
âIf someone is tired of life and feels like they are standing in the way and no longer getting visitors, then we are failing as a society,â Mahdi said.
Meanwhile, Van Gorp doubled down on his ideas in an interview with the newspaper DeMorgen, in which he stated:
âThe demand for care will only increase in the coming years.
âIf we just keep doing the way we are doing today, weâre going for an outright care crash.
âWe can only prevent this if we choose a radically different approach, from a healthy society that puts quality of life first instead of quantity.â
âNumerous healthcare providers have long indicated that it cannot continue in this way,â he said.
âThere are simply not enough professional hands left to provide all care.
âAnd as a society, we create too little space to take care of those who are most dear to us.â
In 2002, Belgium was the second country in the post-World War II era that legalized euthanasia.
In 2014, it became the first country to abolish the age restriction on euthanasia.
It currently allows euthanasia for minors who suffer from a supposedly âterminalâ disease, are allegedly close to death, or suffer from chronic pain and have the consent of parents and doctors.
In 2018, a government report revealed that three minors received lethal injections between 2016 and 2017.
The number of legal yearly euthanasia cases has been steadily on the rise since its legalization in 2002, reaching almost 3,000 cases in 2022.
link