Difference between revisions of "Timeline of palliative care"

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| 1978 || Field development || A [[w:United States Department of Health and Human Services|United States Department of Health, Education, and Welfare]] task force reports that “the hospice movement as a concept for the care of the terminally ill and their families is a viable concept and one which holds out a means of providing more humane care for Americans dying of terminal illness while possibly reducing costs.  As such, it is the proper subject of federal support.”<ref name="History of Hospice Care"/> || {{w|United States}}
 
| 1978 || Field development || A [[w:United States Department of Health and Human Services|United States Department of Health, Education, and Welfare]] task force reports that “the hospice movement as a concept for the care of the terminally ill and their families is a viable concept and one which holds out a means of providing more humane care for Americans dying of terminal illness while possibly reducing costs.  As such, it is the proper subject of federal support.”<ref name="History of Hospice Care"/> || {{w|United States}}
 
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| 1979 || Facility || The first hospice in New Zealand opens. || {{w|New Zeland}}
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| 1979 || Facility || The first hospice in New Zealand opens.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Hospice Movement in New Zealand - 25 Years On |url=http://www.nathaniel.org.nz/single-mothers-are-saints/16-bioethical-issues/bioethics-at-the-end-of-life/114-the-hospice-movement-in-new-zealand-25-years-on |website=nathaniel.org.nz |accessdate=22 July 2018}}</ref> || {{w|New Zeland}}
 
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| 1980 || Facility || A hospice opens in {{w|Harare}} (Salisbury, at the time), Zimbabwe, the first in {{w|Sub-Saharan Africa}}.<ref name=Parry>{{cite book | last = Parry | first = Eldryd High Owen |author2=Richard Godfrey |author3=David Mabey |author4=Geoffrey Gill  | edition = 3 revised | title = Principles of Medicine in Africa | publisher = Cambridge University Press | year = 2004 | isbn = 0-521-80616-X | page = 1233}}</ref> || {{w|Zimbabwe}}
 
| 1980 || Facility || A hospice opens in {{w|Harare}} (Salisbury, at the time), Zimbabwe, the first in {{w|Sub-Saharan Africa}}.<ref name=Parry>{{cite book | last = Parry | first = Eldryd High Owen |author2=Richard Godfrey |author3=David Mabey |author4=Geoffrey Gill  | edition = 3 revised | title = Principles of Medicine in Africa | publisher = Cambridge University Press | year = 2004 | isbn = 0-521-80616-X | page = 1233}}</ref> || {{w|Zimbabwe}}

Revision as of 15:31, 22 July 2018

This is a timeline of palliative care, attempting to describe important events in the history of hospices until the formalization of palliative care in the late 20th century.

Big picture

Time period Development summary
12th century < Understanding palliative care begins with the developent of hospices. These are used in the Middle Ages in Europe and Mediterranean regions as a place of rest for travellers and pilgrims. Established and run by religious orders, the hospices offer special hospitality and care to travellers who are far from home and to people who are ill or dying. The hospices disappear for a while, but re-emerge in the 19th century in the United Kingdom and France particularly, again run by religious orders, and again caring for people who are terminally ill, but also providing accommodation for the incurable and destitute.[1]
20th century The development by the second half of the century of new technologies and effective specific treatments for disease still leaves much suffering unaddressed.[2] However, palliative care and hospices develop rapidly since the late 1960s, after their modern introduction in Britain by Cicely Saunders. Palliative care begins to be defined as a subject of activity in the 1970s and comes to be synonymous with the physical, social, psychological, and spiritual support of patients with life-limiting illness, delivered by a multidisciplinary team.[3] The movement develops in the United States and Europe in the late 1970s.[4] The hospice concept is introduced in China in the 1980s.[5] In the late 1980s, several notable palliative caregivers, with the support of like-minded physicians and bioethicists, endorse the moral permissibility of physician-assisted suicide.[6]
21th century A 2006 study found that some form of hospice or palliative care service is offered in about half of the countries in the world. While it is estimated that there are more than 10,000 international hospice and palliative programs today, it is also estimated that 18 million will still die in unnecessary pain and distress each year.[7]

Full timeline

Year Event type Details Country
1701 Publication A British monograph refers to the curative and palliative uses of opium as a "noble panacea".[8] United Kingdom
1802 Field development The term "palliate" already appears in the title of a medical paper in England.[8] United Kingdom
1842 Facility Jeanne Garnier establishes L'Association des Dames du Calvaire in Lyon.[8] France
1890 Publication London surgeon Herbert Snow publishes a text on the palliative treatment of terminal cancer, with an appendix on the use of the opium pipe.[8] United Kingdom
1950s Field development English nurse Cicely Saunders first articulates her ideas about modern hospice care around that time, based on the careful observation of dying patients. Saunders advocated that only an interdisciplinary team could relieve the “total pain” of a dying person in the context of his or her family, and the team concept is still at the core of palliative care.[9] United Kingdom
1952 Field development End-of-life care survey: A report based on the observations of district nurses throughout the United Kingdom of some 7050 cases, published by the Marie Curie Memorial Foundation, reveals appalling conditions of suffering and deprivation among many patients dying of cancer at home.[2] United Kingdom
1935 Publication Harvard physician Alfred Worcester publishes three lectures titled The Care of the Aged, the Dying and the Dead, intending to serve as outlines of what medical students should be taught because of the "unpardonable" shifting of care for the dying to nurses and sorrowing relatives.[8] United States
1960 Field development End-of-life care survey: In the United Kingdom, Glyn Hughes conducts a nationwide survey for the Gulbenkian Foundation, including widespread consultations, 300 site visits and contacts with 600 family doctors. Conditions in charitable homes are judged seriously inadequate, with deficiencies in financial support and staffing, and a large proportion of the nursing homes visited are deemed ‘quite unsuited—and in some cases amounting to actual neglect when measured by standards that can reasonably be expected’.[2] United Kingdom
1963 Field development End-of-life care survey: John Hinton publishes a unique detailed study of the physical and mental distress of the dying. His observations from the wards of a London teaching hospital show that much suffering remains unrelieved and also how most patients are well aware of their prognosis despite the lack of information normally given at that time.[2] United Kingdom
1964 Field development The concept of ‘total pain’ is defined. It includes not only physical symptoms but also mental distress and social or spiritual problems.[2]
1967 Facility St Christopher's Hospice opens in London, established by Dr Cicely Saunders. It is considered the first modern hospice.[7][1] United Kingdom
1969 Publication Swiss psychiatrist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross publishes On Death and Dying, introducing the further called Kübler-Ross model, (also known as the five stages of grief) which postulates a progression of emotional states experienced by both terminally ill patients after diagnosis and by loved-ones after a death. The five stages are chronologically: denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance.[9][7]
1972 Field development The first national hearings on the subject of death with dignity are conducted by the United States Senate Special Committee on Aging. In it, Elisabeth Kübler-Ross testifies, stating in her testimony, “We live in a very particular death-denying society. We isolate both the dying and the old, and it serves a purpose. They are reminders of our own mortality. We should not institutionalize people. We can give families more help with home care and visiting nurses, giving the families and the patients the spiritual, emotional, and financial help in order to facilitate the final care at home.”[10] United States
1974 Field development Canadian physician Balfour Mount, a surgical oncologist at The Royal Victoria Hospital of McGill University in Montreal, Canada, coins the term palliative care to avoid the negative connotations of the word hospice in French culture, and introduces Dr. Saunders’ innovations into academic teaching hospitals. Mount is the first to demonstrate what it meant to provide holistic care for people with chronic or life-limiting diseases and their families who were experiencing physical, psychological, social, or spiritual distress.[9][1] Canada
1974 Policy The first hospice legislation is introduced in the United States by Senators Frank Church and Frank E. Moss to provide federal funds for hospice programs. The legislation is not enacted.[11] United States
1974 Facility The Connecticut Hospice is founded in Branford, Connecticut, by American nurse Florence Wald, along with two pediatricians and a chaplain.[10] United States
1978 Field development A United States Department of Health, Education, and Welfare task force reports that “the hospice movement as a concept for the care of the terminally ill and their families is a viable concept and one which holds out a means of providing more humane care for Americans dying of terminal illness while possibly reducing costs. As such, it is the proper subject of federal support.”[10] United States
1979 Facility The first hospice in New Zealand opens.[12] New Zeland
1980 Facility A hospice opens in Harare (Salisbury, at the time), Zimbabwe, the first in Sub-Saharan Africa.[13] Zimbabwe
1981 Facility The first hospice in Japan opens.[14] Japan
1982 Organization The United States Congress creates the Medicare Hospice Benefit.[7] United States
1983 Facility The first hospice in Israel opens.[15] Israel
1986 Field development Regarding the fact that effective specific treatments for disease leave much suffering unaddressed, professor Patrick Wall writes, ‘Symptoms were placed on one side and therapy directed at them was denigrated’.[2]
1986 Facility The first hospice in India, Shanti Avedna Ashram, opens in Bombay.[16][17][18] India
1987 Organization The Hospice Palliative Care Association of South Africa is formed.[19] South Africa
1987 Field development A recognized specialty on palliative care is established in Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom, following the demonstration of appropriate, scientifically based and patient-centered treatment.[2]
1987 Facility The Beijing Songtang Care Hospital, an early hospice in China, is founded in Beijing.[5] China
1988 Facility The first modern free-standing hospice in China opens in Shanghai.[20] China
1988 Facility The first research center for palliative care in China is established in Tianjin Medical University.[11] China
1988 Assisted suicide According to a General Resolution, "Unitarian Universalists advocate the right to self-determination in dying, and the release from civil or criminal penalties of those who, under proper safeguards, act to honor the right of terminally ill patients to select the time of their own deaths".[21]
1988 Organization The American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine is established.[22] United States
1990 Facility The first hospice unit in Taiwan, where the term for hospice translates "peaceful care", is innaugurated.[23] Taiwan
1990 The United States Supreme Court establishes the right of all American citizens to refuse all forms of treatment (including life-sustaining treatment and artificial hydration and nutrition), to have a constitutional basis in the 14th Amendment liberty rights clause.[24] United States
1990 Facility Nairobi Hospice opens in Nairobi, Kenya.[19] Kenya
1991 Advance healthcare directive In the United States, the Patient Self-Determination Act (PSDA)[25] comes into effect in December 1991, and requires healthcare providers (primarily hospitals, nursing homes and home health agencies) to give patients information about their rights to make advance directives under state law.[26] United States
1992 Facility The first free-standing hospice in Hong Kong, where the term for hospice translates "well-ending service", opens.[27] Hong Kong
1993 Organization The Pain and Palliative Care Society is established in India. It is the first charitable society for community based palliative care in Low and Middle income countries.[28] India
1993 Organization The Australian and New Zealand Society of Palliative Medicine (ANZSPM) is founded.[29] Australia, New Zealand
1993 Policy Hospice is installed as a guaranteed benefit in the United States.[7] United States
1993 Book The Oxford Textbook of Palliative Medicine is first published in Great Britain.[6] United Kingdom
1994 Organization The Committee of Rehabilitation and Palliative Care of China Anti-cancer Association (CRPC) is founded.[5] China
1994 Journal The European Journal of Palliative Care is established to provide an information and communication resource for all professionals involved in the provision of palliative care across Europe.[30]
1995 Facility The first Palliative Care Unit in Malaysia is set up.[31] Malaysia
1996 Book N.L. Carolone's Handbook of Palliative Care in Cancer is published in the United States.[6] United States
1997 Report The United States Institute of Medicine report, Approaching Death: improving care at the end of life (M.I. Field and C.K. Cassel, editors) documents glaring deficiencies in end-of-life care in the United States. With the support of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and George SorosOpen Society Institute, a major effort to bring palliative care into mainstream medicine and nursing is launched.[9] United States
1997 Facility The first hospice in Russia is established in Moscow.[32][33] Russia
1997 Assisted suicide The Colombian Constitutional Court allows for the euthanasia of sick patients who requested to end their lives, by passing Article 326 of the 1980 Penal Code.[34] Colombia
1997 Assisted suicide A study by Glasgow University's Institute of Law & Ethics in Medicine finds pharmacists (72%) and anaesthetists (56%) to be generally in favor of legalizing PAS. Pharmacists are twice as likely as medical GPs to endorse the view that "if a patient has decided to end their own life then doctors should be allowed in law to assist".[35] United Kingdom
1998 Book Palliative Medicine: A Case-Based Manual (edited by N. MacDonald) is published in the United States.[6] United States
1998 Journal The Journal of Palliative Medicine is launched.[6]
1999 In an evidence-based review of feeding-tube use in patients with advanced dementia, researchers show no medical benefits of feeding tubes but instead find harms including increased risk of aspiration pneumonia, gastric perfration, and local irritation.[24]
1999 Organization The International Association for Hospice and Palliative Care is formed.[6]
2002 Organization The African Palliative Care Association is established in Capetown.[36] South Africa
2003 Organization Pallium India is established as a national registered charitable trust, aimed at providing quality palliative care and effective pain relief for patients in India.[37] India
2004 Publication Clinical Practice Guidelines for Quality Palliative Care are first released, expanding the focus of palliative care to include not just dying patients, but also patients diagnosed with life-limiting illnesses.[9] United States
2004 Policy The Chinese Ministry of Health stipulates that the existence of hospice and palliative care be one of the accreditation standards for general hospitals.[11] China
2004 More than 1 million people with a life-limiting illness are served by the hospices in the United States, the first time the million-person mark is crossed.[10] United States
2004 Assisted suicide Final Exit Network is founded as a nonprofit run by volunteers who believe mentally competent adults have a right to end their lives if they suffer from unbearable pain.[38] United States
2004 Program A national end of life care program is established in the United Kingdom to identify and propagate best practice for end-of-life care in the country.[39] United Kingdom
2005 Policy The State Council of China issues the Regulations on Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances, to ensure enough opioids for medical use for patients with pain.[5] China
2005 Conference The first national conference on access to hospice and palliative care is hosted by the United States National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization in Saint Louis.[10] United States
2005 The number of hospice provider organizations throughout the United States tops 4,000 for the first time.[10] United States
2005 Notable death Cicely Saunders dies at St Christopher's Hospice at the age of 87 years.[40] United Kingdom
2006 Program There are 57 palliative medicine fellowship programs in the United States with approximately 100 trainees.[9] United States
2006 Policy The American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS) and the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education recognize the subspecialty of Hospice and Palliative Medicine.[9] United States
2006 (October 1) The Inaugural World Day is held to focus global attention on hospice and palliative care. Events are held in 70 countries.[10]
2006 Assisted suicide Belgium partially legalizes euthanasia with certain regulations: the patient must be an adult and in a "futile medical condition of constant and unbearable physical or mental suffering that cannot be alleviated".[41], the patient must have a long-term history with the doctor, with euthanasia/physician-assisted suicide only allowed for permanent residents, there need to be several requests that are reviewed by a commission and approved by two doctors.[34] Belgium
2007 Publication United States-based non-profit National Quality Forum releases A National Framework for Palliative and Hospice Care Quality Measurement and Reporting. United States
2007 Organization The Worldwide Palliative Care Alliance is founded with the purpose of adressing global care needs at the end-of-life.[10]
2007 Advance healthcare directive To date, 41% of Americans have completed a living will.[42] United States
2008 The United States National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization calls for increased access to palliative care in critical care settings.[10] United States
2008 Palliative sedation The American Medical Association Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs approve an ethical policy regarding the practice of palliative sedation.[43][44]
2009 Publication The United States National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization Standards of Practice for Pediatric Palliative Care and Hospice along with the companion publication Facts and Figures on Pediatric Palliative and Hospice Care in America are released.[10] United States
2010 Publication Paper published in New England Journal of Medicine reveals that patients with non-small-cell lung cancer may live longer with hospice and palliative care.[10] United States
2010 Palliative sedation Svenska Läkaresällskapets, an association of physicians in Sweden, publishes guidelines which allow for palliative sedation to be administered even with the intent of the patient not to reawaken.[45] Sweden
2013 Advance healthcare directive The Beijing Living Will Promotion Association is founded, calling for death with dignity by promoting living wills.[5] China
2014 Assisted suicide Belgium becomes the first country to authorize euthanasia for children, on request, if they have a terminal illness and understand the repercussions of their act.[46] Belgium
2015 The United Kingdom ranks highest globally in a study of end-of-life care. A study says "Its ranking is due to comprehensive national policies, the extensive integration of palliative care into the National Health Service, a strong hospice movement, and deep community engagement on the issue." The studies were carried out by the Economist Intelligence Unit and commissioned by the Lien Foundation, a Singaporean philanthropic organization.[47][48] United Kingdom
2015 (November) Assisted suicide As of date, Belgium has the most liberal assisted suicide laws in the world.[49] Belgium
2016 Assisted suicide Assisted suicide is declared legal in Canada.[50] Canada
2017 Publication A team of Chinese professionals from hospitals compile Palliative Nursing: a guide for oncology nurses, the first textbook to provide evidence-based practice on hospice and palliative care for oncology nurses in China, published by Peking University Medical Press.[5] China
2017 Advance healthcare directive The Italian Senate officially approves a law on advance healthcare directive that would come into force on 31 January 2018.[51][52] Italy
2018 Advance healthcare directive Indian Supreme Court permits living wills and passive euthanasia. The country's apex court holds that the right to a dignified life extends up to the point of having a dignified death.[53] India

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See also

External links

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "History of palliative care". pallcare.asn.au. Retrieved 7 June 2018. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 Saunders, Cicely. "The evolution of palliative care". PMC 1282179Freely accessible. PMID 11535742. 
  3. Clark, David. "From margins to centre: a review of the history of palliative care in cancer". 
  4. "Historique et principes fondateurs des soins palliatifs". palliabru.be. Retrieved 3 July 2018. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 Lu, Yuhan; Gu, Youhui; Yu, Wenhua. "Hospice and Palliative Care in China: Development and Challenges". PMC 5763435Freely accessible. PMID 29379830. doi:10.4103/apjon.apjon_72_17. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 Vanderpool, Harold Y. Palliative Care: The 400-Year Quest for a Good Death. 
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 "The History of Hospice Care and Palliative Care". familycomforthospice.org. Retrieved 3 July 2018. 
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 Bruera, Eduardo; Higginson, Irene; F von Gunten, Charles. Textbook of Palliative Medicine. 
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 9.6 "Palliative Care: An Historical Perspective". asheducationbook.hematologylibrary.org. Retrieved 6 June 2018. 
  10. 10.00 10.01 10.02 10.03 10.04 10.05 10.06 10.07 10.08 10.09 10.10 "History of Hospice Care". nhpco.org. Retrieved 7 June 2018. 
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 "Palliative Care Gains Roots in China". omicsonline.org. Retrieved 7 June 2018. 
  12. "The Hospice Movement in New Zealand - 25 Years On". nathaniel.org.nz. Retrieved 22 July 2018. 
  13. Parry, Eldryd High Owen; Richard Godfrey; David Mabey; Geoffrey Gill (2004). Principles of Medicine in Africa (3 revised ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 1233. ISBN 0-521-80616-X. 
  14. "Objectives". Japan Hospice Palliative Care Foundation. Retrieved 7 June 2018. 
  15. Ami, S. Ben. "Palliative care services in Israel" (PDF). Middle East Cancer Consortium. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-01-31. Retrieved 7 June 2018. 
  16. Kapoor, Bimla (October 2003). "Model of holistic care in hospice set up in India". Nursing Journal of India. Archived from the original on 2008-01-19. Retrieved 7 June 2018. 
  17. Clinical Pain Management. CRC Press. 2008. p. 87. ISBN 978-0-340-94007-5. Retrieved 30 June 2013. In 1986, Professor D'Souza opened the first Indian hospice, Shanti Avedna Ashram, in Mumbai, Maharashtra, central India. 
  18. Iyer, Malathy (Mar 8, 2011). "At India's first hospice, every life is important". The Times Of India. Retrieved 7 June 2018. The pin drop silence gives no indication that there are 60 patients admitted at the moment in Shanti Avedna Sadan-the country's first hospice that is located on the quiet incline leading to the Mount Mary Church in Bandra. 
  19. 19.0 19.1 Wright, Michael; Justin Wood; Tom Lynch; David Clark (November 2006). Mapping levels of palliative care development: a global view (PDF) (Report). Help the Hospices; National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization. p. 14. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-23. Retrieved 2010-02-06. 
  20. Pang, Samantha Mei-che (2003). Nursing Ethics in Modern China: Conflicting Values and Competing Role. Rodopi. p. 80. ISBN 90-420-0944-6. 
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  23. Lai, Yuen-Liang; Wen Hao Su (September 1997). "Palliative medicine and the hospice movement in Taiwan". Supportive Care in Cancer. 5 (5): 348–350. ISSN 0941-4355. doi:10.1007/s005200050090. 
  24. 24.0 24.1 Dementias (Charles Duyckaerts, Irene Litvan ed.). 
  25. Patient Self-Determination Act U.S.C.A. 1395cc & 1396a, 4206-4207, 4751, Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990, P.L:.b 101-508 (101ST Cong. 2nd Sess. Nov. 5, 1990) (West Supp., 1991).
  26. Docker, C. Advance Directives/Living Wills in: McLean S.A.M., Contemporary Issues in Law, Medicine and Ethics," Dartmouth 1996:182.
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  33. Giger, Joyce Newman. Transcultural Nursing: Assessment and Intervention. 
  34. 34.0 34.1 McDougall & Gorman 2008
  35. McLean, S. (1997). Sometimes a Small Victory. Institute of Law and Ethics in Medicine, University of Glasgow. 
  36. "About APCA". africanpalliativecare.org. Retrieved 22 July 2018. 
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  39. NHS National End of Life Care Programme, official website
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  41. McDougall & Gorman 2008, p. 93
  42. Charmaine Jones, With living wills gaining in popularity, push grows for more extensive directive, Crain's Cleveland Business, August 20, 2007.
  43. Kevin B. O'Reilly, AMA meeting: AMA OKs palliative sedation for terminally ill, American Medical News, July 7, 2008.
  44. American Medical Association (2008), Report of the Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs: Sedation to Unconsciousness in End-of-Life Care, ama-assn.org; accessed January 5, 2018.
  45. Österberg, Lina (October 11, 2010). "Sjuka får sövas in i döden". Dagens Medicin (in Swedish). Retrieved 22 July 2018. 
  46. "Right to die: terminal divide in state of euthanasia in Europe - BizNews.com". BizNews.com. 2014-12-12. Retrieved 22 July 2018. 
  47. "Quality of Death Index 2015: Ranking palliative care across the world". The Economist Intelligence Unit. 6 October 2015 ; "UK end-of-life care 'best in world'". BBC. 6 October 2015. Retrieved 8 October 2015. 
  48. The Quality of Death: Ranking end-of-life care across the world, Economist Intelligence Unit, July 2010; Quality of death, Lien Foundation, July 2010; United States Tied for 9th Place in Economist Intelligence Unit's First Ever Global 'Quality of Death' Index, Lien Foundation press release; UK comes top on end of life care - report, BBC News, 15 July 2010
  49. "24 & ready to die". The Economist. Economist Group. 10 November 2015. Retrieved 22 July 2018. 
  50. "2nd Interim Report on Medical Assistance in Dying in Canada 2017". Health Canada. Retrieved 22 July 2018. 
  51. "*** NORMATTIVA ***". www.normattiva.it. 
  52. "Biotestamento. Favorevole o contrario?". ProVersi.it. 19 February 2018. 
  53. "Death with dignity: on SC's verdict on euthanasia and living wills". 10 March 2018 – via www.thehindu.com.