Press Release

Press Release
Karlsruhe rules – what comes next?

On February 26, the Federal Constitutional Court (BVerfG) in Karlsruhe will decide whether and to what extent assisted suicide should be permitted again, in line with the situation before the 2015 Prohibition Act. Public and internal reflection on the significance of the ruling and what comes next is in full swing. A contribution by Gita Neumann.

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Press Release
Opposition or consent to organ donation? Neither bill is a solution to the real problem!

Tomorrow, Thursday, the Bundestag will hold a final debate on two draft bills to revise organ donation regulations. In the opinion of the Humanist Association of Germany (HVD), however, neither the so-called objection solution nor the consent solution can make a significant contribution to increasing the number of transplants. Instead, the registration of brain-dead donors in German clinics must be drastically increased, the lost trust of the population must be regained and, above all, educational work must be carried out. As an ideal support instrument, the HVD recommends open-ended counseling that also addresses reservations and ultimate uncertainties in the context of a living will with health care proxy.

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Press Release
Health Minister Spahn continues to deny seriously ill patients access to suicide drugs – and prevents transparency

According to experts, Health Minister Spahn has been openly breaking the law since 2018: he is denying seriously ill patients access to suicide drugs – contrary to a final ruling by the Federal Administrative Court. Spahn also refuses to make his actions more transparent. The Humanist Association of Germany (HVD) criticizes this in the strongest terms.

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Press Release
German Humanist Association welcomes BGH ruling on assisted suicide

The patient’s will counts – this was decided today by the Federal Court of Justice in Leipzig and confirmed the acquittals of two doctors who had assisted the suicide of patients. The Humanist Association of Germany hopes that this decision will also send a signal with regard to the controversial Section 217 of the German Criminal Code.

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