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About this episode
I’m joined by Dr Nick Carr, one of the first GPs in Victoria to be involved in Voluntary Assisted Dying, and Dr Kane Treble, a regional GP in Mildura with a background in emergency medicine, palliative care and paramedicine. Together, they pull back the curtain on how Voluntary Assisted Dying works, why it matters, and what the system gets right (and wrong).
We dive into the personal stories that changed the way these doctors practise medicine — from patients like Beverley who died before the law was passed, to families who’ve experienced the relief and beauty of a death on their own terms. We talk openly about the barriers in the current laws, the stigma in rural communities, the gag clause that stops doctors from raising the option, and the very real impact this has on dying people and their families.
This conversation is raw, eye-opening and full of heart. It’s about the messy truth of death, why choice matters, and how doctors themselves are changed by walking alongside people at the very end.
Remember; You may not be ready to die, but at least you can be prepared.
Take care,
Catherine
Show notes
Guest Bio

One of the first GPs in Victoria and A regional GP in Mildura
Dr Nick Carr
Dr Nick Carr is a Melbourne-based General Practitioner with over 30 years of experience, currently practising at St Kilda Medical Group. With a background in medicine from the University of Cambridge, Nick has built a diverse clinical practice focused on men’s health, psychological medicine, aged care, and ethical medical decision-making. He is one of the first GPs in Victoria to be involved in Voluntary Assisted Dying (VAD) and is a vocal advocate for compassionate end-of-life care. Beyond his clinical work, Nick is a respected medical educator, broadcaster, and former ABC presenter, known for engaging the public in health and ethics conversations.
Dr Kane Treble
Dr Kane Treble is a General Practitioner based in Mildura, Victoria, with special interests in emergency medicine, palliative care, and medical education. He began his career as a paramedic before training in medicine and has worked across rural and regional settings, gaining extensive experience in both hospital and community care. Kane is passionate about teaching and mentoring the next generation of doctors, having received recognition for excellence in clinical education. His work bridges the gap between frontline care and medical training, with a strong focus on delivering quality healthcare in underserved communities.
Summary
In this episode, we cover:
- How Voluntary Assisted Dying became law in Victoria.
- The story of Beverley Broadbent and why her death sparked change.
- Why doctors in Victoria are still gagged from even mentioning Voluntary Assisted Dying.
- The challenges rural and regional patients face in accessing end-of-life choices.
- The reality of telehealth restrictions and why they make dying harder than it needs to be.
- What it takes to become a VAD-trained doctor — and why more doctors need to step up.
- Why every voluntary assisted dying death these doctors have witnessed has been called “beautiful”.
- The role of religion, aged care facilities, and Advance Care Directives in end-of-life planning.
- Resources and support for anyone exploring Voluntary Assisted Dying in Australia.
Transcript
1 00:00:02,790 --> 00:00:06,450 I've seen good deaths, seen some not so good deaths. 2 00:00:06,630 --> 00:00:07,680 Seen some terrible deaths. 3 00:00:08,100 --> 00:00:10,860 Having seen now numerous VAD deaths. 4 00:00:11,910 --> 00:00:13,230 I can tell you how I wanna go. 5 00:00:13,950 --> 00:00:16,140 It's peaceful, it's lovely. 6 00:00:16,140 --> 00:00:17,700 It's a celebration of life. 7 00:00:17,820 --> 00:00:20,910 You choose the time, the location, the music. 8 00:00:20,910 --> 00:00:24,630 We had one family that was blasting highway ... Read More
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I've seen good deaths, seen
some not so good deaths.
2
00:00:06,630 --> 00:00:07,680
Seen some terrible deaths.
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Having seen now numerous VAD deaths.
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I can tell you how I wanna go.
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It's peaceful, it's lovely.
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It's a celebration of life.
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You choose the time,
the location, the music.
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We had one family that was
blasting highway to hell in the
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background for the entire afternoon.
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For that person.
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That was their sendoff.
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That was the celebration of who they were.
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And as much as there's tears, there's
often laughter and joy and people
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with love surrounding that person,
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almost at the end of the first assessment,
we're hugging and crying, breaking all
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the kind of boundaries you're supposed
to have about doctor patient interaction,
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but it's such an intimate, profound.
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Experience and it matters
so much to these people.
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Welcome to Don't Be Caught Dead, a
podcast encouraging open conversations
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about dying and the death of a loved one.
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I'm your host, Katherine Ashton, founder
of Critical Info, and I'm helping to
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bring your stories of death back to life
because while you may not be ready to die.
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At least you can be prepared.
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Don't be caught dead.
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Acknowledges the lands of the
Coolen nations and recognizes their
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connection to land, sea, and community.
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We pay our respects to their elders
past, present, and emerging, and
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extend that respect to all Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander and First
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Nation peoples around the globe.
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Today I'm speaking with Dr.
Nick Carr and Dr. Kane Treble.
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So Dr. Nick Mayer, you may have heard
of before, he is a Melbourne-based
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general practitioner with over
30 years experience in currently
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practicing at St. Kilda Medical Group.
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He has a background in medicine from the
University of Cambridge and has built
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a diverse clinical practice focused on
men's health, psychological medicine, aged
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care, and ethical medical decision making.
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He is one of the first GPS in Victoria
to be involved in the voluntary
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assisted dying and is a vocal
advocate for compassionate end of
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life care beyond his clinical work.
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Nick is a respe respected medical
educator, broadcaster, and former A BC
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presenter known for engaging the public
in health and ethics conversations.
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Thanks for being with us, Nick.
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Oh, thank you for having me on, Catherine.
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And now Kane, we move to you.
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Dr. Kane Treble is a general practitioner
based in Mildura Victoria with special
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interests in emergency medicine,
palliative care, and medical education.
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He began his career as a paramedic
before training in medicine and has
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worked across rural and regional
settings, gaining extensive experience
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in both hospital and community care.
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Kane is passionate about teaching
and mentoring the next generation of
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doctors having received recognition for
ECU excellence in clinical education.
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His work bridges the gap between
frontline care and medical training with
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a strong focus on delivering quality
healthcare in underserved communities.
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Thanks for being with US Kane,
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and to be here.
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Thanks very much.
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Now, tell me what motivated you,
firstly to become medical practitioners.
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Nick, if we can start with you.
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Oh, it's terribly dull.
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I'm afraid.
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I, my dad was a doctor and I
saw what he was doing and I
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thought that looks quite fun.
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And as a sort of dumb English
schoolboy, I never really
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thought of doing anything else.
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And I was fascinated right from the side.
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Actually, I wasn't too
good at science at school.
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Languages were really my thing.
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And so my teacher said, well,
you'll be doing French, German,
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Italian, Latin for A levels.
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And I said, no.
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So I'm going to do chemistry,
biology, and physics.
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Whoa.
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We somehow managed to scrape through,
became a doctor, which was actually
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the best decision I'll ever made.
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How about you, Kate?
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I actually took the exact opposite
path where I actually started
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off as a scientist, a research
scientist in biochemistry, but
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it doesn't get you invited to as
many parties as you might believe.
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I ended up jumping ship, becoming a
paramedic, as you mentioned before,
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but before long was, was dropping
patients off to emergency and I thought
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that that next bit looks like fun.
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So that's what actually made me decide.
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I, I did want to become a doctor,
do medicine and then after my wife
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had children, I realized I wasn't
spending much time with them.
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I thought I'd give this general practice
thing a go some work life balance
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just fell absolutely head over heels
in love with you a bit of a more.
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Bendy path, but, uh, I think I've
ended up exactly where I need to be.
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And I'm, I'm actually
with you on that, Kane.
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I mean, I loved every bit of medicine.
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I did.
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I loved doing pediatrics.
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I miss the old people.
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I really enjoyed geriatrics.
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But where were the other people?
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Psychiatry fascinated me, but, oh.
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Sometimes I launch someone,
just have a sore throat.
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General practice was obviously begging
for me and best, best decision I ever made
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because you'd probably say the same thing.
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I've worked in general
practice for nearly 40 years.
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Never had a dull day yet.
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How many, how many people can have the
privilege of saying that about their work?
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Definitely
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very few.
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I would say, Nick, to be perfectly honest.
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So tell me as a, as a gp, what, when was
the first point in time where you heard
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about voluntary assisted dying, where
you became involved in, in the process?
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I would love to say that it was
a lifelong passion of mine, but
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it would be completely false.
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It was a patient of mine and.
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This is often the case that it's
patient experience that brings doctors
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into this kind of field, and it was a
wonderful patient mine called Beverly
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Broadband, who's very well known in
the news for having taken her own
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life because voluntary assisted dying
wasn't available, and did a series
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of interviews with the age newspaper.
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To be published after her death.
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Uh, Beverly was a profoundly independent,
very bright and determined person.
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We didn't have voluntary assisted dying
when she died, and it was Beverly's
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death was one of the sparks that really
began the conversation said, began.
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It's not quite been talking
about it for a long time.
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But Beverly's death and publicity around
it was one of the factors that built
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the momentum towards us getting to the
law here in Victoria, 1970, up to 1920.
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And just some.
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So Beverly, if you can remind us
what, what your sort of period that
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we're talking about that Beverly's
articles were published in the age,
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I think it was 2012, something like that.
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So, well before we had VAD legislation in,
in the state or in this country at all.
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And she, she didn't have a. Terminal
illness, so she wouldn't have qualified
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for voluntary assisted dying, but
she knew her faculties were failing.
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She was absolutely determined,
not trained up in aged care.
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She'd seen that happen to her best
friend Betty, who was also a patient
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of mine and talked to me many, many
times about the fact that that was
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simply not gonna happen to her.
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She had no dependent, she was a single
woman and she was able to make her own
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decisions and wow, what an impact she had.
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And Nick, do you mind sort of setting
the scene for, for someone who may
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be unfamiliar with just how voluntary
assisted dying, what it looked like
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before it was introduced and then and
what options were available and then
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the period of when for what it meant
for you as a GP when it was introduced.
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If you can just sort of set that
scene for us, that would be great.
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Because before we had the legislation,
which was passed at the end of 2017,
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there was no option for people who
said, I've done my time, and palliative
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care has always been available,
and they do a magnificent job.
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And they believe a huge
amount of suffering prop.
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Palliative care can't relieve all
suffering and really struggle sometimes
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with what we call the existential
suffering of when it's all too much,
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and getting the choice back is something
that voluntary assisted diet has done for
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people prior to it being a legal option.
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The choice people
sometimes made was suicide.
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This was one of the factors that
was used to bring in the law.
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The fact that the coroner reported the
number of deaths by suicide of people who
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had terminal illness, and to say, I can't
wait for this disease to take its course.
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I have to have another way out.
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That was one of the factors that helped
people push this legislation through.
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Rodney Simon was another very powerful
advocate for voluntary assisted dying,
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and he counseled a lot of people
at the end of their lives prior to
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the legislation being available.
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But that was one man doing this and
doing an amazing job for people.
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But there was no legislation to help him.
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So of course, where the law began,
this was an enormous relief to some
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of the people suffering from terminal
illness who said, I do not want to grind
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through to the end of this process.
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I would like to have the option.
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And so has been to this day.
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It's worked very well for this
small number of people who need it.
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And tell me, Kane, you are more in
a regional area, being in Mildura
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currently, how have you seen or have,
have you seen an increase in your
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patients expressing interest in that
as a, a voluntary assisted toine?
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As a, as an option.
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Coming from a rural background,
it's always interesting to find
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out how the rural grapevine work.
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That's ultimately how most of the news
gets out, and particularly when at the
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moment, it isn't something that we're
really loudly allowed to advertise.
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As doctors, we're not allowed to
initiate the discussion, and so in many
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ways, we're actually, depending on our
patients to kinda get the word out for us
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when we come from the stoic pharma
mindset of don't worry, she'll be right.
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That becomes a real struggle and I
think a lot of rural Australians don't
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even know that this is an option.
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This is something that's
even open to them and.
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There are times when you can see the
suffering, you see the pain and you just
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wish, if only I could say these words
that might alleviate that suffering.
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And again, with that arm stoicism, we,
we'll get people saying things like,
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oh geez, can't we just hurry it up?
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Or Can't we pull up a
top and it doesn't count?
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We, we need to kind of tease
out a very specific request.
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And when you often try to
engage them and say, you know,
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Hey, what do you mean by that?
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I might be able to, to
talk about some things.
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Oh, no, don't worry about it.
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Wow.
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That's must be challenging 'cause,
because as the current law stands from
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my limited understanding is that you,
you cannot mention the, the topic of
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voluntary assisted dying as an option
to a patient that comes and speaks to
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you at, at the current stage as it is.
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Yeah.
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So I, I think while Victoria
were, was really pioneering in the
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space of voluntary assisted dying.
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I feel like we're lagging a
little bit behind other states.
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Yeah, we still can't actually initiate
the discussion, whereas other states have
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opened it up to to allow for exactly that.
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It was actually one of the recommendations
that came up on recent review of the VAD
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legislation to see if that's something
that we may be able to change, and
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fingers crossed, we're still waiting for
the outcome of what those changes could.
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When that clause was put into
the law, it's called the gag
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clause to, for convenience.
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Just to explain, doctors cannot
initiate the conversation
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about voluntary assisted dying.
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It's seen as a protection for patients
because it's thought that us nefarious
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doctors were going to say, come on.
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You know, why don't you get on?
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Just bump yourself off.
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Why would we bother all this expensive
and complicated palliative care?
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It's so insulting.
213
00:11:33,165 --> 00:11:37,035
To the medical profession to think
that we would do that sort of thing.
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We want what's best for our patients
and I don't know a doctor in the world
215
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who's going to be saying to someone
that they should have this path,
216
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but turn it around the other way.
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00:11:46,935 --> 00:11:52,275
There's no other area of medicine where we
are legally not allowed to tell people all
218
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their available options in any other area.
219
00:11:54,640 --> 00:11:58,185
Ofit, we would be negligent
from not giving people all their
220
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medically available options.
221
00:12:00,330 --> 00:12:04,140
And yet in this end of life space,
we, in Victoria and South Australia's
222
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the other state that has a gang
clause are legally not allowed.
223
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Bring that up.
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And it's really a, a
terrible disadvantage.
225
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Exactly.
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As you say, Kate, I see patients
who are old and failed and unwell
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and they simply don't know.
228
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And it disadvantages people
with lower levels of education
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maybe aren't aware of it.
230
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People, maybe it's English,
it's not their first language.
231
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And so they haven't come
across this in the news.
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Victoria and South Australia are
the only places that have it.
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All the other states and the a CT do
not have a gag clause, and it's not
234
00:12:34,935 --> 00:12:39,015
as if they've been dragging people out
in those other states and, and taking
235
00:12:39,105 --> 00:12:42,075
'em through VAD against their well,
that simply isn't going to happen.
236
00:12:42,555 --> 00:12:44,565
So we really have to get
rid of this gag clause
237
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because it, it is legal option.
238
00:12:49,095 --> 00:12:54,375
And so I, I suppose for, for any other
legal options that are on the table,
239
00:12:54,705 --> 00:12:56,535
you, you're allowed to speak about them.
240
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So for me, who is someone on the outside
looking in, it's kind of crazy that you
241
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can't actually mention a legal option,
which is a valid option and choice
242
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for, for people in, in the community.
243
00:13:10,035 --> 00:13:13,455
You're probably aware that the
legislation in Victoria only passed
244
00:13:13,455 --> 00:13:17,625
by two votes, and a lot of these
restrictions and extra clauses were put
245
00:13:18,495 --> 00:13:19,150
in to make sure it got across the line.
246
00:13:19,860 --> 00:13:20,790
Uh, was wide.
247
00:13:20,790 --> 00:13:24,480
He described as being the most
restrictive, voluntary assisted dying
248
00:13:24,540 --> 00:13:26,250
legislation of any place in the world.
249
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With the 68 safeguards, it was
better to get it through than
250
00:13:29,760 --> 00:13:31,140
not get it through at all.
251
00:13:31,200 --> 00:13:34,800
But I think we're now recognizing exactly
as you're saying, Kate, having been at
252
00:13:34,800 --> 00:13:39,505
the Vanguard, we're now the lag arts and
really we now know that some of those
253
00:13:39,505 --> 00:13:41,670
protections are not actually protections.
254
00:13:41,670 --> 00:13:44,280
They're actually barriers for
people who need this care.
255
00:13:46,170 --> 00:13:48,060
And just on that, Kane, sorry.
256
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I'll let you let you go.
257
00:13:50,100 --> 00:13:53,760
I think that also ties into issues
we have around the telecommunications
258
00:13:53,760 --> 00:13:57,930
act at the moment, whereby, regardless
of whether the conversation's
259
00:13:57,930 --> 00:14:02,070
been started by the patient, we
can't continue it using telephone,
260
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email, or electronic communication.
261
00:14:04,770 --> 00:14:09,420
And so again, from a rural setting, I
have patients that are two hours away.
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00:14:10,200 --> 00:14:13,380
We have to do this little song and
dance when we try to organize an
263
00:14:13,380 --> 00:14:15,960
appointment where I'll say, I'm calling
you up to say we need to catch up
264
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face to face to have a discussion.
265
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But I can't tell you why.
266
00:14:19,199 --> 00:14:22,230
And it's this ludicrous thing we have
to go through where we all know what
267
00:14:22,530 --> 00:14:25,349
we're planning, what we're talking about,
but we're restricted by the current
268
00:14:25,349 --> 00:14:27,540
legislation, current communication.
269
00:14:29,775 --> 00:14:33,885
For people who don't know quite why that
is, it's because there is a Commonwealth
270
00:14:33,885 --> 00:14:38,655
legislation called the Criminal Codes
Act minted in 2005, which bans any
271
00:14:38,655 --> 00:14:43,665
discussion or facilitation, suicide
by carriage service, text message,
272
00:14:43,665 --> 00:14:45,285
internet, telephone, that sort of thing.
273
00:14:45,645 --> 00:14:47,114
And it's a federal law.
274
00:14:47,354 --> 00:14:51,344
And so federal law trumps any
state or territory law, and.
275
00:14:51,810 --> 00:14:53,070
Dying with Dignity Victoria.
276
00:14:53,070 --> 00:14:57,630
We've been making strenuous efforts to
try and get this sorted out because the
277
00:14:57,630 --> 00:14:59,640
federal legislation talks about suicide.
278
00:15:00,060 --> 00:15:04,740
In the end, I end up in the federal
court with Mark DRS testing this in the
279
00:15:04,740 --> 00:15:08,760
federal court, and it was found that
the legislation does in fact apply to
280
00:15:08,760 --> 00:15:10,440
voluntary assisted dying legislation.
281
00:15:10,440 --> 00:15:11,820
So it's been clarified legally.
282
00:15:11,820 --> 00:15:12,660
You're quite right, Kate.
283
00:15:13,140 --> 00:15:15,750
In the legal sense, we're not
allowed to do any of this work.
284
00:15:16,125 --> 00:15:21,074
By telehealth, and of course that's an
immense imposition on frail older people,
285
00:15:21,074 --> 00:15:22,814
particularly our more regional areas.
286
00:15:22,875 --> 00:15:25,665
We then have to travel for
every aspect of this assessment.
287
00:15:25,964 --> 00:15:29,625
We do telehealth, but really
complicated medical problems.
288
00:15:29,625 --> 00:15:33,584
We, we become expert at that over
COVID and there's no reason why
289
00:15:33,584 --> 00:15:36,495
we shouldn't be able to do some
aspects of voluntary assisted.
290
00:15:36,555 --> 00:15:39,285
I don't need to do all of it,
but at least some of it, the
291
00:15:39,285 --> 00:15:41,204
patients will be no via telehealth.
292
00:15:42,839 --> 00:15:46,589
And, and that exactly what you were just
saying, Nick, about the advancements
293
00:15:46,589 --> 00:15:51,150
that we've seen during that COVID period,
how we have moved everything online.
294
00:15:51,150 --> 00:15:54,900
We have moved it to do just
about everything we possibly
295
00:15:54,900 --> 00:15:56,430
do remotely where possible.
296
00:15:56,699 --> 00:16:03,510
And, and it, it's a, seems to be a case
where, again, where life is more forward
297
00:16:03,510 --> 00:16:05,339
than the laws that actually govern it.
298
00:16:05,550 --> 00:16:08,400
So, so just talk me through Kane.
299
00:16:09,069 --> 00:16:13,090
The challenges that you were saying
that if you want to speak to a
300
00:16:13,090 --> 00:16:17,079
patient about voluntary assisted
dying, you have to do this in person.
301
00:16:17,590 --> 00:16:19,180
Talk me through what that looks like.
302
00:16:19,180 --> 00:16:21,010
Like you mentioned that you
may have to travel a few hours.
303
00:16:22,665 --> 00:16:23,025
Yes.
304
00:16:23,025 --> 00:16:25,875
I mean the, the first issue we
encounter is the patient needs to
305
00:16:25,875 --> 00:16:27,255
know we exist in the first place.
306
00:16:27,525 --> 00:16:32,115
And I actually do run a VAD clinic, but
we're not allowed to advertise it in case
307
00:16:32,115 --> 00:16:34,395
it's seen as initiating the discussion.
308
00:16:34,785 --> 00:16:38,444
And so we are again, dependent on
the word of mouth of, of patients
309
00:16:38,535 --> 00:16:41,474
to kind of let it be known that
this is something that even exists.
310
00:16:42,255 --> 00:16:45,854
They will have to attend in
person to actually initiate and,
311
00:16:45,854 --> 00:16:49,755
and start that whole process,
assess for their eligibility.
312
00:16:50,655 --> 00:16:54,285
For the multiple assessments that are
involved, these all have to remain
313
00:16:54,285 --> 00:16:58,755
face to face, and again, these are
patients that are often suffering.
314
00:16:59,415 --> 00:17:02,055
They're frail and traveling.
315
00:17:02,055 --> 00:17:06,015
What can be hours and hours just to
see us in the first place, let alone
316
00:17:06,015 --> 00:17:10,005
the trip home again, after what can
be some really difficult discussions.
317
00:17:10,605 --> 00:17:14,050
It's incredibly taxing and
incredibly infuriating to be frank.
318
00:17:15,044 --> 00:17:18,764
We can't help these people in, in a way
that would actually benefit the most
319
00:17:19,034 --> 00:17:22,365
in this day and age when we have so
many other advances through healthcare,
320
00:17:22,365 --> 00:17:27,704
through telehealth and to feel like we
aren't actually servicing rural Victoria.
321
00:17:27,704 --> 00:17:32,085
And we know that the majority of
cases that are put through VAD come
322
00:17:32,085 --> 00:17:33,465
from more metropolitan settings.
323
00:17:33,915 --> 00:17:34,155
Uh.
324
00:17:34,710 --> 00:17:38,310
Then once we do get through their
initial assessments, trying to find
325
00:17:38,340 --> 00:17:43,230
additional doctors or specialists to
become involved, to agree with the
326
00:17:43,230 --> 00:17:46,020
assessments that are made, the, the
current Victorian requirements, so
327
00:17:46,020 --> 00:17:50,280
that two doctors be involved to come
to consensus around their eligibility.
328
00:17:52,170 --> 00:17:56,370
Again, if these are patients that
struggle to, to travel, and then
329
00:17:56,370 --> 00:17:59,010
sometimes we have to say, not only
have you had to travel two hours
330
00:17:59,010 --> 00:18:00,475
to get to this regional hospital.
331
00:18:01,485 --> 00:18:03,585
Now going to ask you to travel six hours.
332
00:18:03,855 --> 00:18:06,795
You get to a metropolitan hospital to
be assessed by another doctor again,
333
00:18:08,505 --> 00:18:12,765
and these are people who have been
diagnosed with a life limiting illness.
334
00:18:13,035 --> 00:18:17,145
So they're obviously trying to manage
their health at the same time that
335
00:18:17,145 --> 00:18:21,345
they're, or, you know, being involved in
these appointments and, and traveling.
336
00:18:21,435 --> 00:18:24,795
I'm, as I'm assuming that that's,
that's what the challenge some
337
00:18:24,795 --> 00:18:26,115
of the challenges are as well.
338
00:18:27,555 --> 00:18:31,395
And coordinating all of the, the
friends, family, carers that are
339
00:18:31,395 --> 00:18:35,205
around them as well, that also often
have to travel with them just to, to
340
00:18:35,205 --> 00:18:36,475
make it safe for them to travel as.
341
00:18:37,649 --> 00:18:39,929
Even if someone doesn't live
a long distance away in city
342
00:18:39,929 --> 00:18:44,310
environments, these people remember
these people are often very infirm.
343
00:18:44,699 --> 00:18:48,810
Some of them are bit bound, and just
getting someone out of the bed and
344
00:18:48,810 --> 00:18:53,459
into a car can be a major struggle
and it doesn't matter if sometimes if
345
00:18:53,459 --> 00:18:55,185
the travel is only 10, 20, 30 minutes.
346
00:18:55,835 --> 00:19:01,325
The whole process can be painful,
exhausting, and a massive imposition.
347
00:19:01,325 --> 00:19:05,675
So it's, it has a very big
impact on people, rural,
348
00:19:05,705 --> 00:19:07,895
regional, and also metropolitan.
349
00:19:09,495 --> 00:19:13,005
Look, I, I, when you're, when
you're both talking, it reminds me
350
00:19:13,005 --> 00:19:18,045
of just the appointments I used to
have at the Vic Rehab Center after
351
00:19:18,045 --> 00:19:23,210
my car accident and, and you know,
they were an ordeal and, and I was.
352
00:19:23,940 --> 00:19:27,300
In recovery, you know, and, and
going through rehabilitation.
353
00:19:27,300 --> 00:19:33,360
So I was improving my health and wellbeing
and, but they were really hard and I
354
00:19:33,360 --> 00:19:37,920
was having to catch a taxi and, but
just to coordinate each, those two days
355
00:19:37,920 --> 00:19:42,390
that I was doing each week for the 16
weeks, that was a huge toll that it
356
00:19:42,390 --> 00:19:45,240
not only took on me, but all my family.
357
00:19:45,270 --> 00:19:48,240
'cause it it is, it's a, it's
a family commitment, isn't it?
358
00:19:50,520 --> 00:19:50,730
Yeah.
359
00:19:50,735 --> 00:19:50,925
Yes.
360
00:19:50,925 --> 00:19:52,525
Agreement very much.
361
00:19:54,480 --> 00:19:59,940
So tell me when you have referred to
the, the differences between, obviously
362
00:19:59,940 --> 00:20:03,840
Victoria being the first state to
introduce voluntary assisted dying, and
363
00:20:03,840 --> 00:20:08,820
then we have, I think the last state
that will introduce it currently is as.
364
00:20:09,210 --> 00:20:10,680
Canberra, is that correct?
365
00:20:10,740 --> 00:20:16,260
This year and yet we've still to
have it passed in Northern Territory.
366
00:20:16,740 --> 00:20:22,440
So what are the difference you is between,
for someone who is unfamiliar between,
367
00:20:22,440 --> 00:20:27,450
you know, Victorian laws and, and what's,
you know, being introduced into Canberra.
368
00:20:27,720 --> 00:20:31,620
You've mentioned that the gag
clause is obviously one, one issue.
369
00:20:31,980 --> 00:20:35,310
Then, you know, you've gotta love
Australia with all of our different
370
00:20:35,310 --> 00:20:36,810
laws in each states, don't you?
371
00:20:36,810 --> 00:20:37,015
And then the.
372
00:20:37,360 --> 00:20:42,010
The federal overarching law makes, makes
death and, and health so much fun to
373
00:20:42,010 --> 00:20:44,949
navigate and, and you are qualified.
374
00:20:46,419 --> 00:20:51,699
So, so what are the other, other
things that is, is sort of have, I
375
00:20:51,699 --> 00:20:54,909
suppose you could say, say we're a bit
more progressive than what we have in
376
00:20:54,909 --> 00:20:58,810
Victoria that we're, we find that's
challenging in our lovely little state.
377
00:20:59,889 --> 00:21:04,300
Katie, are you across the details of
the differences in a CT versus Victoria?
378
00:21:05,235 --> 00:21:09,105
Not particularly, but Mildura
is a, a border a town.
379
00:21:09,105 --> 00:21:13,215
We border a New South Wales and South
Australia is just a stone's throwaway.
380
00:21:13,695 --> 00:21:17,085
But I'm acutely aware that the one of
the Victorian restrictions that you
381
00:21:17,235 --> 00:21:20,835
is, that you need to be a Victorian
resident for the preceding 12 months.
382
00:21:21,525 --> 00:21:25,320
And so when our health service
catchment includes other states.
383
00:21:26,205 --> 00:21:29,235
We have residents of other states
that attend our health service
384
00:21:29,235 --> 00:21:31,514
and try to seek VAD as an option.
385
00:21:31,935 --> 00:21:35,175
We unfortunately have to turn them
away or redirect them rather to their
386
00:21:35,175 --> 00:21:37,095
home state for for assessment there.
387
00:21:38,264 --> 00:21:38,745
Oh wow.
388
00:21:38,835 --> 00:21:40,064
That's super challenging
389
00:21:41,085 --> 00:21:45,375
and I think I'm right in saying that
in a CT, they don't have the prognosis
390
00:21:45,375 --> 00:21:49,425
requirement of six months or 12 months
from neurodegenerative disorders.
391
00:21:49,875 --> 00:21:53,625
You just have to have a illness
that is going to end your life.
392
00:21:54,030 --> 00:21:58,980
So one of the concerns we have
is that we're asking in Victoria
393
00:21:58,980 --> 00:22:03,390
to give a prognosis and has to
be six months or less, unless
394
00:22:03,390 --> 00:22:06,720
it's a neuro neurodegenerative
disorder when it's 12 months.
395
00:22:07,020 --> 00:22:12,390
And this sometimes is a very significant
impediment because I frankly, we
396
00:22:12,390 --> 00:22:16,500
doctors a hopeless at prognosis and
it's often said that doctors won't
397
00:22:16,500 --> 00:22:20,580
give you six months as a timeline
until you've only got six weeks.
398
00:22:20,625 --> 00:22:25,305
And this sometimes does mean people
come to the process too late.
399
00:22:25,455 --> 00:22:29,055
'cause the specialists are doing
best job in the world that they can
400
00:22:29,055 --> 00:22:32,055
do and they say, no, we could try
this and let's there's hope here.
401
00:22:32,055 --> 00:22:34,365
And, and they don't want to say
to someone, you know what, I
402
00:22:34,365 --> 00:22:36,105
think we're not doing too badly.
403
00:22:36,105 --> 00:22:39,105
However, I think in's six months
time, this is not gonna work.
404
00:22:39,135 --> 00:22:43,065
They, they keep trying and keep
putting it off and then say, oh,
405
00:22:43,065 --> 00:22:44,265
things are not looking so good.
406
00:22:44,295 --> 00:22:45,915
And then the timelines get a bit short.
407
00:22:46,605 --> 00:22:49,875
And I believe in a CT, that
prognosis requirement isn't there.
408
00:22:49,875 --> 00:22:53,715
And I think that will free
the process to, to make it
409
00:22:54,255 --> 00:22:55,845
possible to start a bit earlier.
410
00:22:55,995 --> 00:22:58,905
Ideally, what we like to see, when
people ask me about it and they
411
00:22:58,905 --> 00:23:00,165
say, well, when should I start?
412
00:23:00,555 --> 00:23:02,115
I say, as soon as possible.
413
00:23:02,145 --> 00:23:06,135
'cause the best possible thing you can
do is go through this process, get it
414
00:23:06,135 --> 00:23:10,905
done, get your medication permit in
place, and then don't need to use it.
415
00:23:11,685 --> 00:23:14,625
Nothing I love more than someone
getting their little black box, stick
416
00:23:14,625 --> 00:23:16,514
it on the shelf and it gathers dust.
417
00:23:16,875 --> 00:23:18,435
'cause they get on with life.
418
00:23:18,975 --> 00:23:22,185
And I think there's a concern
that people will get this stuff
419
00:23:22,185 --> 00:23:23,955
and then take it too soon.
420
00:23:23,955 --> 00:23:28,334
I dunno, anyone who's ever done that,
what It's really the other way round.
421
00:23:28,364 --> 00:23:33,524
And I remember perfect phrase from
someone who said, once that little
422
00:23:33,524 --> 00:23:35,294
black pop, black pops arrived.
423
00:23:35,294 --> 00:23:37,784
And he said, now I've
got the dying sorted out.
424
00:23:37,935 --> 00:23:39,254
I can get on with living.
425
00:23:40,770 --> 00:23:42,149
But that's so true, isn't it?
426
00:23:42,149 --> 00:23:47,189
That it, it seems to be a common story
that I've heard is when people are
427
00:23:47,189 --> 00:23:51,629
diagnosed with a life limiting illness,
they, they don't get in contact with the
428
00:23:51,629 --> 00:23:55,560
services for that support, whether it
be palliative care support or whether
429
00:23:55,560 --> 00:23:59,909
it actually be, you know, looking at,
into voluntary assisted dying because.
430
00:24:00,060 --> 00:24:05,070
You know, the words that you were using
then Nick were the, the author, Leah
431
00:24:05,070 --> 00:24:09,930
Kaminsky refers to it as militarizing,
you know, the Battle of Cancer.
432
00:24:09,930 --> 00:24:12,360
And, you know, we've gotta wage the war.
433
00:24:12,360 --> 00:24:18,210
And, and, and the whole way in which
we talk about death and dying is like,
434
00:24:18,210 --> 00:24:22,710
it's, it's something that we, you know,
we don't want to lose the fight and all
435
00:24:22,710 --> 00:24:25,650
of this, this rhetoric around it, but.
436
00:24:26,110 --> 00:24:31,480
It really does come down to the end of
the day about choices and making informed
437
00:24:31,480 --> 00:24:38,050
choices about what's available and, and
it sounds like that there's an added layer
438
00:24:38,050 --> 00:24:42,550
upon those conversations that you have
because it's not just palliative care.
439
00:24:42,550 --> 00:24:45,370
There's another layer that you need
to take into consideration because.
440
00:24:45,935 --> 00:24:50,135
Of the, the, the real process
that you seem to have to go to
441
00:24:50,465 --> 00:24:54,905
once you, you actually decide to
go with voluntary assisted dying.
442
00:24:55,445 --> 00:25:00,155
Can perhaps, Kane, would you like to just
give us an indication of, I think it was
443
00:25:00,155 --> 00:25:06,425
68 sort of guidelines or checklists that
are associated with the, the process?
444
00:25:06,425 --> 00:25:11,014
Can you just give us people a snapshot
of what is involved and what, what
445
00:25:11,014 --> 00:25:14,105
are the checks and balances in
place for those that are unaware?
446
00:25:16,065 --> 00:25:16,515
Definitely.
447
00:25:16,515 --> 00:25:20,505
So probably focusing a little bit
more on the the patient perspective.
448
00:25:21,585 --> 00:25:25,515
The first point is where the
patient first voices that request,
449
00:25:25,635 --> 00:25:29,175
the first request say, I would
like you to help me in my life.
450
00:25:29,865 --> 00:25:33,765
From there, an initial assessment
can be made by that doctor
451
00:25:33,765 --> 00:25:35,235
if they are VAD trained.
452
00:25:35,235 --> 00:25:39,015
Or more often than not, I think
referrals have to be made through
453
00:25:39,015 --> 00:25:40,430
to doctors who are VAD trained.
454
00:25:41,835 --> 00:25:46,635
From that first assessment, there's a
a very thorough assessment of not only
455
00:25:46,635 --> 00:25:52,695
their medical history, their current
diagnosis, the quality of life, as well
456
00:25:52,695 --> 00:25:56,595
as their other eligibility requirement,
which again, speaking from Victoria, they
457
00:25:56,595 --> 00:26:02,025
need to be 18 years of age, a Australian
citizen, or holding permanent residency.
458
00:26:02,535 --> 00:26:08,145
They need to have resided in Victoria
for the preceding 12 months, and they
459
00:26:08,175 --> 00:26:09,855
need to, oh, there's one more there.
460
00:26:09,860 --> 00:26:10,210
I'm forgetting.
461
00:26:11,715 --> 00:26:12,615
Can you help me out there?
462
00:26:13,005 --> 00:26:13,125
Yes.
463
00:26:13,335 --> 00:26:15,945
Well, they need to have
decision making capacity.
464
00:26:15,945 --> 00:26:16,335
Thank you.
465
00:26:16,665 --> 00:26:17,025
Yes.
466
00:26:17,475 --> 00:26:19,365
And that's actually a
massive part of that.
467
00:26:19,425 --> 00:26:22,245
That first, first assessment
is to find out what is the
468
00:26:22,245 --> 00:26:24,465
intent behind their request.
469
00:26:24,945 --> 00:26:27,075
I've had a lot of people that
come in and say, look, I actually
470
00:26:27,075 --> 00:26:28,065
just want the information.
471
00:26:28,065 --> 00:26:30,075
I just want to know what
all the options are.
472
00:26:30,075 --> 00:26:32,865
And they don't necessarily want
to proceed with, um, actually
473
00:26:32,865 --> 00:26:34,785
obtaining VAD medication.
474
00:26:35,895 --> 00:26:37,665
Sometimes I think they just
want to know that it's there.
475
00:26:38,879 --> 00:26:39,990
Tied into that as well.
476
00:26:40,050 --> 00:26:43,740
We do get a lot of people that actually
don't qualify and I, I would say
477
00:26:43,740 --> 00:26:48,899
I've had ballpark 25% of people that
have actually said, look, I'm not
478
00:26:48,899 --> 00:26:50,580
entirely sure you, you do want this.
479
00:26:50,580 --> 00:26:53,340
I think you have symptoms that
we can actually get on top of.
480
00:26:53,340 --> 00:26:56,699
Or, you know, there may be an
understandable depression in
481
00:26:56,729 --> 00:26:59,550
this situation or a mental health
condition that may be contributing.
482
00:26:59,550 --> 00:27:01,104
Let's address that first.
483
00:27:02,625 --> 00:27:06,315
And the, the majority of those kinds
of cases I actually choose in the end
484
00:27:06,525 --> 00:27:10,155
not to proceed with VAD because we can
actually improve their quality of life.
485
00:27:10,155 --> 00:27:13,005
And again, that's really what we're
trying to achieve here is maximizing
486
00:27:13,005 --> 00:27:16,635
quality of life, acknowledging that
we, we often can't change the outcome,
487
00:27:16,635 --> 00:27:17,715
but we can change the journey.
488
00:27:18,835 --> 00:27:21,600
For those that do decide,
actually no, this, this is an
489
00:27:21,600 --> 00:27:22,770
option I would like to pursue.
490
00:27:23,010 --> 00:27:25,740
We then, then to need to
link into a second doctor.
491
00:27:26,220 --> 00:27:29,639
We have one doctor that acts as
a coordinating practitioner who
492
00:27:29,970 --> 00:27:33,000
essentially holds the hand through
the journey, makes sure all the
493
00:27:33,000 --> 00:27:36,300
proper boxes are ticked, the forms are
filled, all the requirements are met.
494
00:27:36,780 --> 00:27:39,960
And another doctor that acts as
a consulting doctor, their job
495
00:27:39,960 --> 00:27:43,860
is to make sure that yes they
agree, diagnosis, prognosis,
496
00:27:43,860 --> 00:27:45,360
and that all those same kind of.
497
00:27:45,750 --> 00:27:47,970
Important safeguards are being met.
498
00:27:49,110 --> 00:27:52,800
Um, important to point out again
in Victoria that at least one of
499
00:27:52,800 --> 00:27:57,150
these doctors has to beed in their
specialty for at least five years,
500
00:27:57,930 --> 00:28:01,200
and they have, there has to be at
least one person who is a specialist
501
00:28:01,290 --> 00:28:03,030
in that specific condition as well.
502
00:28:03,210 --> 00:28:07,290
Making sure there is that expertise
behind the, the diagnosis, the prognosis,
503
00:28:07,980 --> 00:28:11,430
acknowledging that the prognosis is
incredibly difficult to determine, and
504
00:28:11,430 --> 00:28:14,415
it's often that, you know, how long is
a piece of string kind of guesstimation.
505
00:28:15,510 --> 00:28:16,470
In the best of our ability.
506
00:28:17,850 --> 00:28:21,960
Once that second assessment's been
submitted, we can then actually go through
507
00:28:21,960 --> 00:28:27,030
and there's a compulsory kind of pause
between that second assessment through
508
00:28:27,030 --> 00:28:31,290
to, or the first assessment, second
assessment, and then a, uh, written
509
00:28:31,290 --> 00:28:36,149
declaration, a written request, which is
that formal request, then to say, this
510
00:28:36,149 --> 00:28:41,550
is an ongoing request from the patient,
made freely without coercion, and this
511
00:28:41,550 --> 00:28:43,590
isn't just a spur of the moment decision.
512
00:28:44,310 --> 00:28:46,290
One opportunity to get this right.
513
00:28:46,710 --> 00:28:49,860
And so it's that kind of forced
benchmark to make sure that the time
514
00:28:49,860 --> 00:28:51,450
is taken to consider all options.
515
00:28:52,470 --> 00:28:56,370
Yes, there are ways to speed things
up if we do think that the prognosis
516
00:28:56,370 --> 00:29:00,900
is within the, the nine day compulsory
kind of pause there, but I would say
517
00:29:00,900 --> 00:29:05,940
the vast majority of cases, taking
that nine days is achievable, is done.
518
00:29:05,940 --> 00:29:08,035
And I think the really
important part of the process.
519
00:29:09,585 --> 00:29:13,725
Once that's gone through, we can
finally put in an application for
520
00:29:13,725 --> 00:29:15,945
the permit to have the medication.
521
00:29:15,945 --> 00:29:20,625
There's an appointment of a contact
person Out of their role is to also act
522
00:29:20,625 --> 00:29:24,855
as a safeguard around the, the storage
and return of medications as well.
523
00:29:25,304 --> 00:29:29,774
And depending on what form of medication
that patient's actually going to receive,
524
00:29:30,225 --> 00:29:34,575
we tend to prefer generally speaking that
the patient's able to self-administer
525
00:29:34,575 --> 00:29:35,925
the medication to themselves.
526
00:29:36,314 --> 00:29:37,754
That can be orally.
527
00:29:37,905 --> 00:29:39,675
It does have quite a bitter taste.
528
00:29:39,675 --> 00:29:40,064
I hear.
529
00:29:40,064 --> 00:29:43,574
I've never tried it myself,
but an incredibly bitter taste.
530
00:29:43,965 --> 00:29:44,594
I've tried it.
531
00:29:44,985 --> 00:29:46,485
You, you have and lift a tail.
532
00:29:46,485 --> 00:29:46,604
The
533
00:29:46,604 --> 00:29:47,415
tail, yes.
534
00:29:47,415 --> 00:29:51,344
I, I decided I needed to taste this stuff
to see what it is that people are having
535
00:29:51,344 --> 00:29:55,814
as the very last thing they tasted and oh
my goodness, it is outrageously bitter.
536
00:29:57,195 --> 00:29:58,844
I did only have a very small dose.
537
00:29:59,715 --> 00:30:00,074
Good
538
00:30:00,074 --> 00:30:00,284
to hear.
539
00:30:02,715 --> 00:30:04,515
I might just stick to
coffee if it's all the same.
540
00:30:05,775 --> 00:30:06,255
Yeah.
541
00:30:06,285 --> 00:30:07,275
Yep, definitely.
542
00:30:08,175 --> 00:30:12,045
And, and so I'm just trying to
mentally, as you are, you are going
543
00:30:12,045 --> 00:30:13,695
through all of these steps to Kane.
544
00:30:14,055 --> 00:30:19,275
I'm mentally trying to think from
just a, from my perspective, it.
545
00:30:19,625 --> 00:30:23,375
It took me months to get
in to see a specialist.
546
00:30:23,825 --> 00:30:28,805
Is, is that the case in some of these
scenarios, like especially like it doesn't
547
00:30:28,805 --> 00:30:31,985
matter whether you're in a rural area or
whether you're in a metropolitan area.
548
00:30:32,225 --> 00:30:36,995
Sometimes the waiting lists for these
specialists are extensively long.
549
00:30:37,745 --> 00:30:40,325
Is that also part of that
timeline and process?
550
00:30:40,325 --> 00:30:41,225
How does that work?
551
00:30:42,575 --> 00:30:45,605
Well, yes, there can be extensive weights.
552
00:30:46,920 --> 00:30:51,300
But that's even if there is a specialist
in that condition who is VD trained?
553
00:30:52,350 --> 00:30:52,530
Yeah.
554
00:30:52,710 --> 00:30:52,830
Do you
555
00:30:52,830 --> 00:30:54,690
believe we have specialties
where that is not?
556
00:30:54,690 --> 00:30:54,870
That was
557
00:30:54,870 --> 00:30:56,100
gonna be my next question.
558
00:30:57,314 --> 00:31:02,235
Yeah, so there are some understanding,
some agreements with the secretariat
559
00:31:02,294 --> 00:31:04,425
around where that is the case.
560
00:31:04,425 --> 00:31:06,405
What other things might we be able to do?
561
00:31:06,405 --> 00:31:10,304
What other specialties may be able to
weigh in acknowledging that it's, it's
562
00:31:10,304 --> 00:31:14,504
not as ideal, but it certainly does
add that extra complexity, that extra
563
00:31:14,504 --> 00:31:18,929
delay more often than not, as well as
I think making it more difficult and
564
00:31:19,169 --> 00:31:20,745
frustrating for the patients involved.
565
00:31:21,419 --> 00:31:26,370
To hear that there aren't doctors
available or, or trained in VAD for
566
00:31:26,370 --> 00:31:30,270
something that's obviously going to
have such a big impact on their life and
567
00:31:30,270 --> 00:31:34,020
ultimately their death is a source of
great frustration and, and particularly
568
00:31:34,020 --> 00:31:37,230
from a rural setting where we struggle
to have specialists at the best of times.
569
00:31:37,649 --> 00:31:40,919
Then trying to say, you know, Hey,
we also need you to travel to see
570
00:31:40,919 --> 00:31:44,399
a specialist who may not even be
a specialist of their condition.
571
00:31:44,850 --> 00:31:46,169
This bit of insult to injury, I think.
572
00:31:46,500 --> 00:31:46,560
I
573
00:31:47,040 --> 00:31:51,000
do have to say that many specialists
who work in this field of voluntary
574
00:31:51,000 --> 00:31:56,070
assisted dying, bend over backwards
to accommodate these patients.
575
00:31:56,070 --> 00:32:00,120
They know that they can't reasonably ask
someone with a prognosis of six months
576
00:32:00,330 --> 00:32:02,100
to come and see 'em in seven months time.
577
00:32:02,100 --> 00:32:06,390
So I have found that people
are extraordinarily kind.
578
00:32:06,420 --> 00:32:08,730
They go out their way and.
579
00:32:09,149 --> 00:32:12,210
I mean, I have the privilege of working
in the city environment where we have
580
00:32:12,210 --> 00:32:17,550
more options, but the devotion of some
of the people working in this area, their
581
00:32:17,550 --> 00:32:22,710
preparedness to do, do the extras, to
see people when they simply do not have
582
00:32:22,710 --> 00:32:26,294
appointments to do so, but they get people
in and they go and see them at home.
583
00:32:26,294 --> 00:32:31,169
They, they really go to extraordinary
lengths to make this possible for people.
584
00:32:32,295 --> 00:32:33,885
I will highlight up here.
585
00:32:33,885 --> 00:32:37,815
Obviously we've had many occasions where
we've actually flown a specialist in
586
00:32:37,815 --> 00:32:42,075
to be able to see that patient, that's
someone who's not only taken the time
587
00:32:42,075 --> 00:32:45,315
to come up, but that's essentially
a full day list of other patients
588
00:32:45,315 --> 00:32:46,665
they could have seen in that time.
589
00:32:47,145 --> 00:32:50,965
And to their absolute credit, I'm unaware
of any of the specialists I've worked with
590
00:32:51,105 --> 00:32:54,045
that have actually charged the patient
anything for any of these assessments
591
00:32:54,045 --> 00:32:55,395
or, or any of their time involved.
592
00:32:56,580 --> 00:32:57,780
Wow, that's amazing.
593
00:32:57,810 --> 00:33:01,500
And Nick, do you mind talking me
through what is the process for
594
00:33:01,500 --> 00:33:06,065
someone to a doctor to become
A-A-V-A-D, you know, trained doctor?
595
00:33:07,334 --> 00:33:09,675
First thing is to want to do it.
596
00:33:09,675 --> 00:33:11,475
So please adopt this out there.
597
00:33:11,834 --> 00:33:13,725
Don't just be interested, be passionate.
598
00:33:13,754 --> 00:33:14,655
Let's get involved.
599
00:33:14,655 --> 00:33:17,745
You'll find if you do do it,
it's possibly some of the most
600
00:33:17,745 --> 00:33:19,844
rewarding work I have ever done.
601
00:33:20,175 --> 00:33:23,324
Not something I would've
expected, but it's so true.
602
00:33:24,135 --> 00:33:28,935
So it's, it's people being prepared
to do it is the number one huge hurdle
603
00:33:29,145 --> 00:33:30,764
then It's actually, it's not that hard.
604
00:33:30,854 --> 00:33:33,104
It's a, it's an online training.
605
00:33:33,195 --> 00:33:35,475
It takes most of the day and.
606
00:33:36,139 --> 00:33:40,910
Another areas of this work is, there's
very little incentive for this because
607
00:33:40,910 --> 00:33:42,860
it's, it's a day away from your work.
608
00:33:42,860 --> 00:33:46,790
There's, there's really no reward
for doing that work other than being
609
00:33:46,790 --> 00:33:49,070
able to become a VAD practitioner.
610
00:33:49,820 --> 00:33:52,010
But that's, but that
trendy is very thorough.
611
00:33:52,010 --> 00:33:54,800
It's actually very interesting,
and we've had people who do it
612
00:33:54,800 --> 00:33:57,560
because they want to find out more
about voluntary assisted dying.
613
00:33:57,560 --> 00:33:59,840
They don't necessarily want to
become the ad practitioners.
614
00:34:00,225 --> 00:34:03,135
But they think this is an important
area of healthcare I should know about.
615
00:34:03,524 --> 00:34:04,905
So the training is the number one.
616
00:34:04,905 --> 00:34:05,445
It's very easy.
617
00:34:05,445 --> 00:34:07,725
You sign up online and get that done.
618
00:34:07,725 --> 00:34:11,715
And once you've done that, you
are then a VAD trained pop up.
619
00:34:11,985 --> 00:34:15,375
And like most training, you do
that and you have absolutely no
620
00:34:15,375 --> 00:34:16,755
idea how to do the real work.
621
00:34:16,904 --> 00:34:20,210
So the real training comes with you
actually see a patient for the first time.
622
00:34:21,105 --> 00:34:26,385
I did the training in April of 2019 before
the law had even been implemented in
623
00:34:26,385 --> 00:34:28,125
the first group that did the training.
624
00:34:28,574 --> 00:34:33,824
And then the law began in June, 2019, and
eight days later, a patient rang up who
625
00:34:33,824 --> 00:34:38,925
had seen me in the news and said, oh, VAD
had pancreatic cancer, and came along.
626
00:34:38,985 --> 00:34:40,310
And that's when I really started learning.
627
00:34:41,000 --> 00:34:41,990
How this works.
628
00:34:42,350 --> 00:34:45,050
He actually was a very good example
of one things you were saying,
629
00:34:45,050 --> 00:34:49,610
Kane, about the criteria because the
Victorian legislation said he must be an
630
00:34:49,610 --> 00:34:52,040
Australian citizen or permanent resident.
631
00:34:52,820 --> 00:34:57,650
This man, Julian, was his name here to
lived in Australia for over 40 years,
632
00:34:58,520 --> 00:35:00,440
and I was doing his first assessment.
633
00:35:00,440 --> 00:35:03,170
The very first patient I'd ever
done, done it for, he brought in
634
00:35:03,170 --> 00:35:05,390
his passport and it was British.
635
00:35:06,375 --> 00:35:10,275
He had never taken out citizenship,
so he'd lived here 42 years.
636
00:35:10,275 --> 00:35:11,384
He paid his taxes.
637
00:35:11,384 --> 00:35:12,555
He was registered to vote.
638
00:35:12,765 --> 00:35:16,154
He was now on an Australian
pension, but because he didn't
639
00:35:16,154 --> 00:35:20,865
have Australian citizenship, he
did not qualify for royals to die.
640
00:35:21,015 --> 00:35:22,125
My very first patient.
641
00:35:22,335 --> 00:35:22,395
Oh,
642
00:35:23,175 --> 00:35:23,835
wow.
643
00:35:24,435 --> 00:35:24,885
That's it.
644
00:35:24,885 --> 00:35:27,225
That's sort of going
sidetracking from how you track.
645
00:35:27,825 --> 00:35:30,885
But Nick, how did, how
did that make you feel?
646
00:35:31,305 --> 00:35:32,235
Oh, it was devastating.
647
00:35:32,235 --> 00:35:32,385
You had
648
00:35:32,385 --> 00:35:32,610
to tell him,
649
00:35:33,410 --> 00:35:34,210
absolutely devastating.
650
00:35:34,210 --> 00:35:36,135
This, this, he was a lonely man.
651
00:35:36,225 --> 00:35:37,815
He had pancreatic cancer.
652
00:35:38,115 --> 00:35:39,525
He was going to die from this.
653
00:35:39,525 --> 00:35:41,475
It was a horrendous disease and.
654
00:35:43,170 --> 00:35:45,180
He, and of course I'd
never met him before this.
655
00:35:45,180 --> 00:35:47,610
I met him twice the second time I met him.
656
00:35:47,700 --> 00:35:49,620
And we just, it was all brand new.
657
00:35:49,620 --> 00:35:51,270
We thought there must
be a way around this.
658
00:35:51,270 --> 00:35:54,779
And we talked to lawyers and the
navigators and Peter McCallum
659
00:35:54,990 --> 00:35:58,800
lawyers, but I said, no, I now
realize it's very clear if you're
660
00:35:58,800 --> 00:36:00,960
not a citizen, you're not eligible.
661
00:36:01,500 --> 00:36:04,770
And Julian was absolutely devastated
'cause he'd hung his hopes,
662
00:36:04,770 --> 00:36:06,180
he'd followed the legislation.
663
00:36:06,180 --> 00:36:09,660
He had this disease, and that's
why as soon as it passed, he got in
664
00:36:09,660 --> 00:36:11,970
touch with me and Julian suicide.
665
00:36:11,970 --> 00:36:12,150
It.
666
00:36:13,319 --> 00:36:14,580
It was devastating.
667
00:36:14,819 --> 00:36:18,450
It was one of the most distressing
days of my life when I heard that.
668
00:36:19,080 --> 00:36:24,180
And instead of being able to go
through a, a medical process where
669
00:36:24,180 --> 00:36:27,629
it was all legitimate, he could do
it with whoever he wanted there.
670
00:36:27,930 --> 00:36:29,430
He had to do it on his own.
671
00:36:29,580 --> 00:36:32,279
Leaving a note from his, for
his neighbor who had the keys
672
00:36:32,279 --> 00:36:33,899
said, do not come into my house.
673
00:36:34,200 --> 00:36:35,580
Just call the ambos.
674
00:36:36,000 --> 00:36:39,569
And of course then those first
responders had to find a man
675
00:36:39,569 --> 00:36:40,935
who had suicided on his own.
676
00:36:41,820 --> 00:36:42,720
Horrible for them.
677
00:36:42,930 --> 00:36:44,160
Devastating for Julian.
678
00:36:44,580 --> 00:36:46,860
And what was a technicality in the law?
679
00:36:49,500 --> 00:36:51,930
Oh, I'm so sorry to to hear that.
680
00:36:52,290 --> 00:36:53,310
Thank you for sharing.
681
00:36:53,310 --> 00:36:53,910
It's not uncommon.
682
00:36:53,910 --> 00:36:57,540
We've got, we've got a lot of Kiwis
and, and Brits in this country.
683
00:36:57,540 --> 00:36:59,759
You've lived here a long time,
haven't taken out citizenship.
684
00:36:59,759 --> 00:37:00,840
You've probably come across that, Kate.
685
00:37:02,279 --> 00:37:05,520
Yeah, I was just going to say, having
been a paramedic myself and walked
686
00:37:05,520 --> 00:37:08,940
into exactly that kind of house,
you know, it, it devastates everyone
687
00:37:08,940 --> 00:37:10,950
around and that impact is ongoing.
688
00:37:11,970 --> 00:37:16,410
Ultimately, at the end of the day, for
a lot of people, and again, farming
689
00:37:16,410 --> 00:37:19,890
communities, if they're going to do
something, they're going to do it proper.
690
00:37:21,270 --> 00:37:25,049
A lot of people will suicide
if this isn't a, a seen to be a
691
00:37:25,049 --> 00:37:27,089
valid, accessible option for them.
692
00:37:27,720 --> 00:37:29,670
And again, at the end of the
day, we're not changing the
693
00:37:29,700 --> 00:37:30,960
outcome for these patients.
694
00:37:31,080 --> 00:37:32,220
We're changing that journey.
695
00:37:32,220 --> 00:37:34,470
We're giving them that
sense of control back again.
696
00:37:34,740 --> 00:37:38,339
Often in times where they don't feel
like they have control over their
697
00:37:38,339 --> 00:37:40,740
symptoms, their disease or their death.
698
00:37:41,805 --> 00:37:45,555
I think you can't emphasize that too much,
Kane, because one of the things often
699
00:37:45,555 --> 00:37:48,945
to say when people start the voluntary
assisted dying process mean know only
700
00:37:48,945 --> 00:37:51,825
around about 30 or 40% go through to end.
701
00:37:51,915 --> 00:37:53,235
End up taking the medication.
702
00:37:53,265 --> 00:37:54,165
They get sick, they die.
703
00:37:54,750 --> 00:38:00,870
Almost all never changes their mind, but
100% of the people who take part in the
704
00:38:00,870 --> 00:38:05,730
process get the comfort of getting back
some of that control and use that word
705
00:38:05,730 --> 00:38:07,380
ca. And I think it's so, so important.
706
00:38:07,650 --> 00:38:11,280
'cause these hideous diseases
rob us of our control.
707
00:38:11,280 --> 00:38:13,140
They take over ravage our bodies.
708
00:38:13,365 --> 00:38:19,095
Do terrible things to our minds and to
snatch back some little morsel of control
709
00:38:19,095 --> 00:38:21,524
towards the end is such a huge comfort.
710
00:38:21,944 --> 00:38:25,725
And the VAD process gives people that
comfort, even if they never end up using.
711
00:38:25,725 --> 00:38:26,984
It's so, so important.
712
00:38:26,984 --> 00:38:29,234
I think it's one of the most
important things about it.
713
00:38:30,750 --> 00:38:35,400
There was a, a beautiful exhibition and
I, I think that you were, were there Nick
714
00:38:35,759 --> 00:38:41,520
by Julian Kinga earlier this this year,
and beautiful black and white photography.
715
00:38:41,520 --> 00:38:46,109
And he had followed the families
of people who had chosen to go down
716
00:38:46,109 --> 00:38:47,970
the voluntary assisted dying path.
717
00:38:48,660 --> 00:38:52,410
And there was this amazing
photo of this woman, and I can't
718
00:38:52,410 --> 00:38:53,940
recall her name right now, but.
719
00:38:54,620 --> 00:38:56,270
She had, she was still alive.
720
00:38:56,270 --> 00:39:01,790
She had not chosen to go down voluntary
assisted dying and, and take the open,
721
00:39:01,790 --> 00:39:05,899
the black box, as you say, at, at
that point when we had the exhibition.
722
00:39:06,319 --> 00:39:09,259
But what really clearly
showed to me is that.
723
00:39:09,685 --> 00:39:14,575
The, the people that were being
highlighted, they're all people who have
724
00:39:14,665 --> 00:39:20,095
their own individual stories and their
families and the impact that, and the,
725
00:39:20,214 --> 00:39:26,605
the, the flow on effect that the option
and the choice has given those people.
726
00:39:26,845 --> 00:39:31,435
And, you know, the, the Julian, the
name of the book and the exhibition was
727
00:39:31,795 --> 00:39:37,404
the Power of Choice and, and it just
highlights that so beautifully and.
728
00:39:38,160 --> 00:39:42,720
It brings me to, to ask you about, you
know, we, we have in our healthcare
729
00:39:42,720 --> 00:39:47,190
system in Australia, the, a lot of
religious organizations that are
730
00:39:47,190 --> 00:39:52,770
actually, you know, either patrons or
they're actually involved in healthcare.
731
00:39:52,950 --> 00:39:56,215
And what sort of things do people
need to consider when they're thinking
732
00:39:56,430 --> 00:40:00,210
about voluntary assisted dying and the
care facility that they're actually
733
00:40:00,210 --> 00:40:02,010
choosing or that is nearby them?
734
00:40:02,400 --> 00:40:06,360
Because I'm, I'm assuming that that would,
there would be some tension there as well.
735
00:40:08,085 --> 00:40:12,195
The majority of palliative care in this
country is provided by the Catholic sector
736
00:40:12,645 --> 00:40:15,255
and quite a lot of residential care also.
737
00:40:15,690 --> 00:40:19,920
And some of those places are
more inclined to look favorably
738
00:40:19,920 --> 00:40:22,920
at voluntary assisted dying, and
some of them are very vehemently
739
00:40:22,980 --> 00:40:24,660
against voluntary assisted dying.
740
00:40:25,410 --> 00:40:29,430
And we encourage our older patients
who are looking at aged care who might
741
00:40:29,520 --> 00:40:33,120
think about this for the future, to
take that in mind and die with Dignity.
742
00:40:33,299 --> 00:40:36,990
Victoria, we've actually set up a.
Which will show you which aged care
743
00:40:36,990 --> 00:40:41,370
facilities are on board with voluntary
assisted dying, which are a bit equivocal
744
00:40:41,370 --> 00:40:45,630
and which are against, and it's not
comprehensive 'cause we haven't managed
745
00:40:45,630 --> 00:40:47,460
to get that information from some of them.
746
00:40:48,060 --> 00:40:49,259
And it's a very important thing.
747
00:40:49,259 --> 00:40:53,700
If it, if you're considering aged care
and voluntary assisted dying is something
748
00:40:53,700 --> 00:40:58,380
which you might want to have as an option
for yourself, then that's a question
749
00:40:58,380 --> 00:40:59,910
that needs to be asked at The Aged Care.
750
00:41:00,025 --> 00:41:02,910
I, I dunno, you may not have
so many options as in the
751
00:41:02,910 --> 00:41:03,865
community where you work, Kate.
752
00:41:05,340 --> 00:41:09,870
No, and we have had, uh, several cases
now of VAD in the aged care setting.
753
00:41:10,230 --> 00:41:13,560
I'm a little bit grateful that the,
the first question we kind of get
754
00:41:13,560 --> 00:41:15,900
is, oh, well, tell me more about it.
755
00:41:16,080 --> 00:41:19,830
It's often that lack of information
or lack of knowing about the process.
756
00:41:20,295 --> 00:41:24,195
Once we sit down with the people that
run the facilities, explain it through.
757
00:41:24,495 --> 00:41:27,525
Fortunately, we've, we've actually had
a lot of success and a lot of people
758
00:41:27,525 --> 00:41:29,775
being on board with the, the process.
759
00:41:30,195 --> 00:41:33,315
You know, we appreciate that people
are going to object to VAD on
760
00:41:33,315 --> 00:41:37,125
moral, religious, or philosophical
grounds, and we respect that.
761
00:41:38,055 --> 00:41:42,315
But the hope is that they also
respect patient's ability to be able
762
00:41:42,315 --> 00:41:45,225
to choose and, and be involved and
make that choice for themselves.
763
00:41:46,725 --> 00:41:50,085
And just anecdotally, I was
doing a, a teaching session for
764
00:41:50,384 --> 00:41:52,935
GP registrars just last week.
765
00:41:53,174 --> 00:41:56,295
It was about 40 registrars and one
of the first questions I asked,
766
00:41:56,295 --> 00:41:57,525
this was about voluntary system.
767
00:41:57,674 --> 00:42:01,214
One of the first questions I asked
anonymously was a did little poll and
768
00:42:01,214 --> 00:42:03,045
I dropped people to rate where they.
769
00:42:03,470 --> 00:42:06,740
Felt about voluntary assisted dying from
fully supportive through to objecting.
770
00:42:06,800 --> 00:42:11,780
And one of my options was I object
on the grounds of my faith, and
771
00:42:11,780 --> 00:42:17,210
15% of the registrars at that
meeting ticked that particular box.
772
00:42:17,600 --> 00:42:21,110
So we must remember that
objection on the grounds of.
773
00:42:21,690 --> 00:42:25,890
Philosophical or faith-based
beliefs is very common.
774
00:42:26,010 --> 00:42:30,240
And I've often said that there
is only one really true, strong
775
00:42:30,240 --> 00:42:32,160
argument against voluntary cys dying.
776
00:42:32,160 --> 00:42:36,810
And that's the one of of moral
philosophical belief or faith.
777
00:42:37,320 --> 00:42:39,960
Because when you look at data, when
you look at the science, when you look
778
00:42:39,960 --> 00:42:44,730
at research around the world, there's
almost no other reason why you would be
779
00:42:44,760 --> 00:42:49,500
opposed to it because it works well at
every jurisdiction where it's studied.
780
00:42:49,590 --> 00:42:50,040
But if you.
781
00:42:50,270 --> 00:42:53,330
Don't believe that it's right
for you or it's not right for
782
00:42:53,330 --> 00:42:55,460
your religion, then absolutely.
783
00:42:55,460 --> 00:42:57,290
Of course you should
have the right to say no.
784
00:42:57,440 --> 00:43:02,420
I would just say exactly like you did
Kane earlier, just now that, that's fine.
785
00:43:02,420 --> 00:43:05,300
You can have that decision for
yourself, but please don't, don't
786
00:43:05,300 --> 00:43:07,310
try and impose it on others.
787
00:43:09,080 --> 00:43:14,060
And so for someone who is interested
in voluntary assisted dying, where can
788
00:43:14,060 --> 00:43:19,100
they go to receive information and, and
sort of navigate, you know, this space?
789
00:43:23,070 --> 00:43:26,460
Hopefully there's already a bit
of knowledge amongst the general
790
00:43:26,460 --> 00:43:30,720
practitioners in the area or the, the
health practitioners, and I think at
791
00:43:30,720 --> 00:43:34,170
the moment at least the, the majority of
referrals that I get are actually from
792
00:43:34,170 --> 00:43:38,430
colleagues where I've let them know that
I, I do participate in practice VAD, and
793
00:43:38,460 --> 00:43:41,040
so I get referrals from that in Victoria.
794
00:43:41,040 --> 00:43:46,380
Thankfully we have, and most states do,
a incredible team of care navigators.
795
00:43:46,740 --> 00:43:50,790
That if you are not sure where to
go or who to contact, a quick little
796
00:43:50,790 --> 00:43:52,140
Google search can find them out.
797
00:43:52,170 --> 00:43:56,190
But they're based out of the
Peter Mac cancer center and are
798
00:43:56,190 --> 00:43:58,140
available via phone, hypothetically.
799
00:43:58,140 --> 00:44:03,090
It might be 0385595823, but
to, to give people a way to at
800
00:44:03,090 --> 00:44:04,560
least link into the service.
801
00:44:04,770 --> 00:44:09,555
While lists of BAD doctors aren't
publicized anywhere, they do have a, a
802
00:44:09,560 --> 00:44:11,550
list behind the scenes where they can say.
803
00:44:11,890 --> 00:44:13,810
You are in this area,
you have this condition.
804
00:44:13,810 --> 00:44:16,990
Hey, let's try and link you in with these
people to get your assessment started.
805
00:44:19,544 --> 00:44:22,125
And it is something that we'll
definitely include in the show notes.
806
00:44:22,125 --> 00:44:26,115
And you, you've also, we've also mentioned
the resources that are available on
807
00:44:26,475 --> 00:44:31,335
Dying, dying With Dignity Victoria's
website, which is, is exceptionally good.
808
00:44:31,785 --> 00:44:35,725
One thing that I find that a lot
of people ask about is, you know.
809
00:44:36,720 --> 00:44:41,340
The advanced care directives, how
do, how do they fill those out when
810
00:44:41,340 --> 00:44:43,800
it's about voluntary assisted dying?
811
00:44:43,800 --> 00:44:45,360
How do they cover off on that?
812
00:44:45,810 --> 00:44:48,570
How do they even start that process?
813
00:44:48,570 --> 00:44:51,300
So do you have any, any thoughts on that?
814
00:44:52,080 --> 00:44:54,570
Very simply, you cannot put
voluntary assisted dying
815
00:44:54,570 --> 00:44:56,130
into advance care directive.
816
00:44:56,410 --> 00:44:58,990
So you could state that that
would be your preference, but
817
00:44:58,990 --> 00:45:01,330
it has no legal weight at all.
818
00:45:01,870 --> 00:45:07,029
Advanced care directive is a very useful
document to help doctors know how you
819
00:45:07,029 --> 00:45:08,439
want to be treated towards you, your life.
820
00:45:08,734 --> 00:45:10,674
But it can't include
voluntary assisted diet.
821
00:45:12,845 --> 00:45:16,600
Uh, and so for, for those
people, they, they have to go
822
00:45:16,600 --> 00:45:17,830
through that formal process.
823
00:45:17,830 --> 00:45:20,859
It's not something that they
can just pop on that form.
824
00:45:20,859 --> 00:45:21,310
Is it?
825
00:45:22,600 --> 00:45:25,810
I think one of the most common
questions I get about that is.
826
00:45:26,565 --> 00:45:31,815
Everything's going okay now, but
if I develop a dementia or I'm in
827
00:45:31,815 --> 00:45:34,605
that position where I can't make
these decisions, why can't I do it?
828
00:45:35,565 --> 00:45:38,925
And again, it kind of highlights at the
moment the, the importance of those safety
829
00:45:38,925 --> 00:45:42,735
checks to make sure, and, and one of those
criteria is you need to be of sound mind.
830
00:45:43,215 --> 00:45:47,145
The whole point of voluntary assisted
dying is that it's voluntary.
831
00:45:48,345 --> 00:45:51,795
And so if you're not in the position to
be able to make that decision, the rest
832
00:45:51,795 --> 00:45:52,820
of the framework kind of falls apart.
833
00:45:54,105 --> 00:45:54,315
So
834
00:45:54,315 --> 00:45:54,645
change's
835
00:45:54,645 --> 00:45:59,655
raised the funny question of dementia
and the commonest reason my patients
836
00:45:59,655 --> 00:46:03,134
come to me saying that they may want
to consider bone assisted dying in
837
00:46:03,134 --> 00:46:08,655
the future is if I develop dementia
and I've yet to meet anyone who sits.
838
00:46:08,655 --> 00:46:11,445
If I develop dementia, look
after me, keep me going at all
839
00:46:11,445 --> 00:46:13,634
costs, and don't worry about how.
840
00:46:13,855 --> 00:46:14,185
Bad.
841
00:46:14,185 --> 00:46:15,625
I am on how much I've lost.
842
00:46:15,625 --> 00:46:17,425
My marbles just keep me alive.
843
00:46:17,815 --> 00:46:19,165
I've yet to meet that person.
844
00:46:19,165 --> 00:46:21,565
They probably do exist, but they
haven't spoken to me about it.
845
00:46:21,685 --> 00:46:25,585
Nearly everybody says if I'm in
that situation, I would like to
846
00:46:25,585 --> 00:46:26,695
have voluntary assisted dying.
847
00:46:26,725 --> 00:46:29,125
That's not an option in
this country anywhere.
848
00:46:29,395 --> 00:46:33,685
It's not likely to be anytime soon, but
so the area which we are dealing with
849
00:46:33,685 --> 00:46:36,295
dignity Victoria, are talking about a lot.
850
00:46:36,580 --> 00:46:38,605
We plan to try and address it.
851
00:46:38,605 --> 00:46:42,339
It is an option In some countries
it's very hard to make it work.
852
00:46:42,730 --> 00:46:46,990
It's done on very few occasions, but
I'm gonna work at it furiously hard.
853
00:46:46,990 --> 00:46:48,730
'cause I want it for when I need it.
854
00:46:52,180 --> 00:47:00,250
And so tell me as the sort of final sort
of thoughts on the topic Ni and Kane.
855
00:47:00,250 --> 00:47:04,779
What can I, what can I ask you that
you've, you've learned through your.
856
00:47:05,520 --> 00:47:09,089
Patients and taking them
through this process, what
857
00:47:09,089 --> 00:47:10,319
have, what have they taught you?
858
00:47:16,140 --> 00:47:17,100
Happy I'll, I'll start.
859
00:47:17,339 --> 00:47:17,640
Sure.
860
00:47:17,819 --> 00:47:18,210
EAD.
861
00:47:18,629 --> 00:47:20,910
I've been a relatively
recent practitioner.
862
00:47:20,910 --> 00:47:24,210
I only started at the beginning
of last year and already it has
863
00:47:24,210 --> 00:47:30,450
profoundly changed the way I practice
day-to-day through my roles with
864
00:47:30,450 --> 00:47:33,960
ambulance, through my roles as an ed
doctor, then through general practice.
865
00:47:34,694 --> 00:47:35,835
Death is a bit of an old friend.
866
00:47:36,345 --> 00:47:40,005
I've seen good deaths, seen
some not so good deaths.
867
00:47:40,214 --> 00:47:41,234
Seen some terrible deaths.
868
00:47:43,065 --> 00:47:45,975
Having seen now numerous VAD deaths.
869
00:47:46,875 --> 00:47:48,225
I can tell you how I wanna go.
870
00:47:48,915 --> 00:47:51,105
It's peaceful, it's lovely.
871
00:47:51,105 --> 00:47:52,605
It's a celebration of life.
872
00:47:52,785 --> 00:47:55,875
You choose the time,
the location, the music.
873
00:47:55,875 --> 00:47:59,595
We had one family that was
blasting highway to hell in the
874
00:47:59,595 --> 00:48:01,395
background for the entire afternoon.
875
00:48:02,085 --> 00:48:02,895
For that person.
876
00:48:02,895 --> 00:48:06,195
That was their sendoff, that was the
celebration of, of who they were,
877
00:48:06,195 --> 00:48:12,315
such as, there's tears, there's often
laughter and joy and, and just people
878
00:48:12,495 --> 00:48:14,325
with love surrounding that person.
879
00:48:15,375 --> 00:48:17,055
Uh, you put that so beautifully, Cain.
880
00:48:17,055 --> 00:48:18,465
I could not agree more.
881
00:48:18,465 --> 00:48:22,815
It's, it's one of the astonishing things
I found about this work is I meet someone
882
00:48:23,025 --> 00:48:24,675
maybe only two or three times, but.
883
00:48:25,890 --> 00:48:29,400
Almost at the end of the first assessment,
we're hugging and crying, breaking all
884
00:48:29,400 --> 00:48:32,670
the kind of boundaries you're supposed
to have about doctor patient interaction.
885
00:48:32,700 --> 00:48:36,960
'cause it's such an intimate,
profound experience and it
886
00:48:36,960 --> 00:48:38,460
matters so much to these people.
887
00:48:38,460 --> 00:48:39,660
They're so grateful.
888
00:48:40,080 --> 00:48:44,280
And it sounds weird to talk about
death as beautiful, but like you
889
00:48:44,280 --> 00:48:47,610
K and I've seen, I've never been a
paramedic, so I haven't seen it the way
890
00:48:47,610 --> 00:48:49,650
you have, but I've seen lousy deaths.
891
00:48:49,650 --> 00:48:50,940
I've seen okay deaths.
892
00:48:51,090 --> 00:48:52,290
But every single.
893
00:48:52,620 --> 00:48:53,190
VAD.
894
00:48:53,190 --> 00:48:56,730
Death has been beautiful and I
actually had the experience from the
895
00:48:56,790 --> 00:48:58,500
other side just a few months ago.
896
00:48:58,500 --> 00:49:01,860
'cause my own beloved sister-in-law
died through voluntary assisted
897
00:49:01,860 --> 00:49:04,470
dying, developed a hideous cancer.
898
00:49:05,279 --> 00:49:06,630
She knew she was going to die.
899
00:49:06,630 --> 00:49:07,799
A very practical person.
900
00:49:07,799 --> 00:49:09,660
She'd been an ICU nurse herself.
901
00:49:10,410 --> 00:49:13,740
She also knew that this cancer
could erode something nasty.
902
00:49:13,740 --> 00:49:16,950
She could die by ex San grating
at two in the morning or something
903
00:49:17,279 --> 00:49:18,779
really hideous like that.
904
00:49:18,779 --> 00:49:20,100
And she wasn't prepared to.
905
00:49:20,520 --> 00:49:22,140
To, to have that happen.
906
00:49:22,470 --> 00:49:25,529
And instead she died, had to
be intravenous administration.
907
00:49:25,529 --> 00:49:31,080
The lovely VAD came along, team came
along and we had this beautiful day and
908
00:49:31,080 --> 00:49:36,569
we all remember it as, as you say, came
very sad, lots of tears, but with this
909
00:49:36,569 --> 00:49:38,790
fond memory of this gorgeous last day.
910
00:49:38,819 --> 00:49:41,730
And her last words were, she
looked at me and she said, I
911
00:49:41,730 --> 00:49:43,560
cannot wait for this sleep.
912
00:49:44,310 --> 00:49:46,680
And then she had her sleep
and it was beautiful.
913
00:49:46,859 --> 00:49:47,250
So.
914
00:49:47,985 --> 00:49:49,305
Immensely moving.
915
00:49:49,335 --> 00:49:50,235
Very powerful.
916
00:49:50,235 --> 00:49:54,495
And like you Kane, I think it's completely
changed how I feel about being a doctor
917
00:49:54,855 --> 00:49:59,415
and the work and given me a, an area
that I now absolutely love working
918
00:49:59,415 --> 00:50:01,154
in, which I would never have expected.
919
00:50:04,485 --> 00:50:05,384
And I think that.
920
00:50:06,540 --> 00:50:10,650
Those beautiful photos that we saw
at that Julian King and, and what's
921
00:50:10,650 --> 00:50:15,210
in that book, the Power of Choice
are a real testament to that, that
922
00:50:15,720 --> 00:50:20,069
it shows beautifully and has captured
beautifully, those stories and that.
923
00:50:20,535 --> 00:50:24,615
Those final moments where they've
had the choice and they've made it
924
00:50:24,645 --> 00:50:26,385
and they're supported by family.
925
00:50:26,565 --> 00:50:31,785
I can't thank you enough, both
you, Nick and Kane, for sharing
926
00:50:31,785 --> 00:50:33,465
your stories with us today.
927
00:50:33,495 --> 00:50:37,245
And yeah, and just letting us
know some of the challenge that
928
00:50:37,455 --> 00:50:40,875
that still exists when it comes to
voluntary assisted dying in Victoria.
929
00:50:41,270 --> 00:50:43,700
Thank you, Catherine, and thank you
for your great work with your podcast.
930
00:50:44,730 --> 00:50:45,855
Thank you so much.
931
00:50:46,425 --> 00:50:47,175
Thank you, Catherine.
932
00:50:47,175 --> 00:50:47,475
Um.
933
00:50:47,850 --> 00:50:51,390
Absolutely massive fan of your work
and hope to hear more in the future.
934
00:50:52,470 --> 00:50:52,950
Thank you.
935
00:50:57,404 --> 00:51:00,825
We hope you enjoyed today's
episode of Don't Be Caught Dead,
936
00:51:01,125 --> 00:51:02,895
brought to you by Critical Info.
937
00:51:03,645 --> 00:51:07,904
If you liked the episode, learn something
new, or were touched by a story you
938
00:51:07,904 --> 00:51:09,855
heard, we'd love for you to let us know.
939
00:51:09,975 --> 00:51:13,605
Send us an email, even tell
your friends, subscribe so you
940
00:51:13,605 --> 00:51:15,345
don't miss out on new episodes.
941
00:51:15,524 --> 00:51:17,145
If you can spare a few moments.
942
00:51:17,405 --> 00:51:21,395
Please rate and review us as it
helps other people to find the show.
943
00:51:21,695 --> 00:51:23,015
Are you dying to know more?
944
00:51:23,195 --> 00:51:24,185
Stay up to date with.
945
00:51:24,185 --> 00:51:28,085
Don't be caught dead by signing up to
our newsletter and follow us on social
946
00:51:28,085 --> 00:51:34,295
media Head to Don't Be Caught dead.com for
more information and loads of resources.
Read Less
Resources
- Visit the Website: Dying With Dignity Victoria
- Care Navigators (Victoria)
Phone (03) 8559 5823 (Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre)
- Visit the Website: Go Gentle Australia
- Visit the Website: “The Power of Choice” photography exhibition by Julian Kingma
- Dr Nick Carr, GP at St Kilda Medical Group
- Make Death Admin Easy with The Critical Info Platform
A simple system to sort your personal paperwork for when your information becomes critical.
- My Loved One Has Died, What Do I Do Now?
Our guide, ‘My Loved One Has Died, What Do I Do Now?’ provides practical steps for the hours and days after a loved one's death. Purchase it here.
- Support Services
If you're feeling overwhelmed by grief, find support through our resources and bereavement services here.

