As I pointed out earlier, mental illness is treatable.
In all cases all of the time, or in only some cases some of the time?
While I fully accept that current treatments are not perfect, they can work for many, so offering such people an easy-option of suicide does not seem like a good idea.
What do you propose to do with the not-many?
Secondly, (as has been mentioned) those who are physically fit do not need any assistance to kill themselves.
Those who desperately need an option of euthanasia are those who are facing a slow painful/humiliating death but are physically incapable of taking action themselves or travelling to an overseas facility.
Perhaps it has a lot to do with the fact that killing people medically (typically via a large dose of barbiturates) is easy, quick, painless, dignified and certain whereas typical suicide methods (depending on specific method) are none of these.
You wish to die. You can either throw yourself beneath a train, with all that that entails for trauma to the driver, the team needed to scrape up the bits, delay and disruption etc., or you can fall asleep in bed and never wake up. Your call.
Mental illness is a totally different scenario to 'End of life' illness. My wife has worked in mental health services and it's not uncommon for suicidal patients to make a complete recovery.
No sensible person would do anything to make suicide easier for the mentally ill but no truly compassionate person would wish for a prolonged painful death for a terminally ill patient.
P.S. I wasn't suggesting that the mentally ill ought to kill themselves, simply pointing out the obvious truth that they can.
I find it frightening that some posters here cannot see the difference between "end of life" illness, and mental illness where the person can make a full recovery.
It sounds as if some of them would be quite happy to murder them even though the people with mental illness makes them very vulnerable at that period in time.
Can they give their unbiased consent at that moment in time? I don't think so.
As someone who has had to deal with a situation recently, involving a vunerable person close to me, personally, their attitude is coming across as hard cold and unempathetic.
They are coming across as decidedly "callous"
Especially Shaker!
You seem to be 'tarring' all with the same brush, albeit with special focus on Shaker.
My involvement in this discussion is firstly to indicate why someone who wants to die might wish for medical assistance to help them rather than doing it themselves.
But additionally I have expressed my concerns over consent issues where someone is suffering from severe depression.
I also acknowledge that for many people depression is readily treatable and for them to be assisted in dying during a period where the depression is severe and treatment is not working wouldn't be right. However treatment is not successful for everyone, and there are people whose lives are permanently blighted and 'unlovable' due to the severest forms of depression. So the question is about those people, in other words people who:
1. Have suffered with very severe depression over many, many years.
2. Have attempted a variety of treatment option none of which have worked
3. Whose depression is such that they consider their life isn't worth living
4. Have a sure and settled view that they would prefer to die rather than continue to live a life so blighted by their illness
5. Want their suicide to be sure to succeed, to be painless and dignified
6. Do not consider that they can achieve (5) without medical assistance
and crucially
7. Are considered to have the capacity to consent.
I am not giving an answer because I think this is one of the hardest of hard cases for medical ethics, but maybe we can focus on a patient in those circumstances, and they do exist.