Sarah Wootton is CEO of Dignity in Dying and has led the campaign for choice at the end of life from the margins to the mainstream in Parliament, the courts and the media. She established and is also CEO of Dignity in Dying's sister charity, Compassion in Dying, which empowers people to take control of their end-of-life treatment and care under the current law. She is a trustee of the Sheila McKechnie Foundation and previously led campaigning at the Equal Opportunities Commission and the Family Planning Association. Lloyd Riley joined the Policy and Research team at Dignity in Dying and Compassion in Dying in 2014. He is committed to giving a voice to the dying people and bereaved relatives who have been and continue to be failed by the current law.Drawing on his experience in the hospice sector and study of assisted dying laws around the world, Riley believes widespread change is needed to establish a culture around death and dying in the UK that truly respects the wishes of the individual.
In this deeply troubling time, we are united in working to protect our loved ones, our neighbours, our friends and ourselves. And, where required, to reduce suffering, pain and fear. This little book has the same objective and I highly recommend it. I have been a supporter of Dignity in Dying for a good few years. Its policies are ones of compassion, safety and care. Please read Last Rights. - Patrick Stewart There exists physical pain beyond the reach of morphine. Terminally ill patients of sound mind but suffering unbearable agony should be empowered to choose, legally and peacefully, the moment of their death. The religious convictions or paternalistic instincts of doctors are irrelevant. So argues this wise and beautifully poised book. It makes its powerful case for assisted dying with compassion, decency and moral depth. - Ian McEwan If you think you know what you think about assisted dying, pause for a moment. Read this urgent, cogent, necessary book - and then think again. - Julian Barnes Last Rights is a humane, sensible argument for changing the law on assisted dying, a moral issue whose time has come. All parliamentarians should consider the points raised in this book and question why we have abrogated our responsibility to change the law for so long. - The Right Honourable Baroness Betty Boothroyd OM This deeply humane book presents a brilliant, impassioned, carefully argued and indeed unanswerable case for the long-overdue legalisation of assisted dying. Above all, it exposes the cruelty and irrationality of the present law. Last Rights should be read by legislators, by physicians and by those whom this issue will affect - that is to say all of us. - Professor Ray Tallis The moral (and, for me, the Christian) case for a change in the law is irrefutable. Covid-19 has forced us all to rethink our certainties about death and dying. How can a country that cares so deeply for victims of this virus be so indifferent to those who, at the end of life, suffer indignity and intractable pain? Sarah Wootton and Lloyd Riley make a timely and powerful case for assisted dying. - Lord Carey of Clifton, Archbishop of Canterbury 1991-2002 We pride ourselves on our freedom to control our own lives. Yet we are not allowed to control our departure when our suffering is unbearable. There must be a proper inquiry into this ultimate denial of basic human rights. This book makes a powerful case for it. - John Humphrys The right to die on our own terms is the last frontier in a long battle to take control of our own beings, our bodies, our life and death. As we continue to grapple with a pandemic that has brought our own mortality centre stage, Last Rights makes an urgent, thoughtful case for why now is the time for the victory of compassion and kindness over the cowardice and dogma that prop up the status quo. - Polly Toynbee Last Rights is a much-needed contribution to the conversation that we must all start to have about dying. In a society that talks so much about human rights, so many forget that one of the most fundamental human rights must surely be an individual's right to choose when and how they die. - Julia Hartley-Brewer I cannot think of a better time to publish this vitally important book, which makes a compelling case for changing the outdated, harsh laws that prevent us from having any choice as to how we die, and any hope of a compassionate death. - Dame Carmen Callil, publisher and writer Last Rights is a powerful reminder that choice at the end of life is only accessible to those with the money to travel to Switzerland or the means to take matters into their own hands. Fifty years ago, society recognised that forcing women to endure the trauma of a backstreet abortion was unacceptable; the time has now come for us to show the same compassion to dying people. - Diana Melly, author and campaigner Supporters of assisted dying come from all walks of life but are united in deprecating the cruelty and suffering arising from the current law and united in the belief that the autonomy of dying people is a value worth fighting for. This book provides both a serious challenge to the establishment that has resisted law change to date and a rallying call to the compassionate majority. - Rabbi Danny Rich, Chief Executive, Liberal Judaism 2004-20 I am a disability rights advocate. I am also a religious person. Because of these commitments, not despite them, I support the option of assisted dying as a choice for those who are terminally ill. You are free to ignore me, but I do not think you are free to ignore this book. - Tom Shakespeare FBA, Professor of Disability Research, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine