In 2020, more people than ever died due to euthanasia in the Netherlands.

According to statistics of the official Regional Euthanasia Review Committees (RTE in Dutch), a total number of 6,938 asked for euthanasia (which includes both “termination of life on request” and “assisted suicide”) and died through the medical procedure legalized two decades ago.

The figure is not only the highest since the law was passed in 2002, but also represents a sharp 9 per cent increase since 2019.

According to the RTE, around 5,000 of the patients who asked for euthanasia suffered of cancer and a “vast majority” were elderly people.

Speaking to Dutch newspaper Trouw, the president of RTE said, “the figures fit in with a larger development … More and more generations see euthanasia as a solution to unbearable suffering.” In other words, “the thought that euthanasia is an option in the case of hopeless suffering is very reassuring.”

Men aged 70-79 with cancer

This shift in the thinking of the population is confirmed by the statistics. Euthanasia has been continually on the rise with the only exception of 2018. According to the last published annual report published on RTE’s website, slightly more men than women (52 per cent to 48 per cent) ask for euthanasia in the Netherlands, and - after cancer -  neurological diseases and cardiovascular disorders are the second and third illnesses suffered by those who begin the euthanasia procedure. Mental disorders represent just over 1 per cent of the cases.

According to the official statistics, people aged 70-79 represent one-third of the euthanasia requesters, followed by those aged 80-89 (one-fourth) and 60-69 (one-fifth). No minors aged 12-17 died by euthanasia in 2019.

In 2020, a total number of 162,000 people died in the Netherlands, 15,000 more than expected, mainly because of the Covid-19 pandemic. Euthanasia deaths represented 4.3 per cent of the total number.

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This story originally appeared at Evangelical Focus and is republished here with permission.