Harish Rana, first person in India to be allowed passive euthanasia, dies
Passive euthanasia is allowing a patient to die by withdrawing or withholding life-sustaining treatment or support.
PTI
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Harish Rana fell from a fourth-floor balcony, suffered severe head injuries, and remained in a coma for over 13 years (Screengrab)
New Delhi, 24 Mar
Harish Rana, the first person in India to be allowed passive euthanasia, passed away on Tuesday at AIIMS-Delhi after more than 13 years in a coma, sources said.
The
31-year-old, who has been in a coma since 2013, was shifted from his Ghaziabad
home to the palliative care unit at Dr BR Ambedkar Institute Rotary Cancer
Hospital at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences on 14 March.
Three days
before that, the Supreme Court, in a landmark judgment on 11 March, allowed
passive euthanasia for Harish, who was a BTech student at Panjab University who
fell from a fourth-floor balcony in 2013 and suffered severe head injuries. He
had been in a coma since, with artificial nutrition support and occasional
oxygen support.
Passive
euthanasia is the intentional act of letting a patient die by withholding or
withdrawing life support or the treatment necessary to keep him alive.
Harish's
nutritional support was gradually withdrawn after he was admitted to the
hospital, the sources said on Tuesday. He is survived by his parents, Ashok and
Nirmala Rana.
Harish's
family had said after the apex court judgment that the withdrawal of artificial
life support won't bring any personal benefit to the family but in the larger
public interest, the decision could help others facing similar situations.
His father
had said passive euthanasia will restore Harish's dignity after years of
irreversible suffering.
The apex
court had directed AIIMS-Delhi to ensure that life support is withdrawn with a
tailored plan so that dignity is maintained.
A
specialised medical team headed by Dr Seema Mishra, professor and head of the
department of anaesthesia and palliative medicine, was constituted to implement
the process, the first ever in India.
The team
comprised doctors from departments of neurosurgery, onco-anaesthesia and
palliative medicine, and psychiatry.
The Supreme Court, in its 11 March judgment, allowed passive euthanasia for a
person for the first time in the country.
Ruling on
the long-discussed emotive issue, a bench of Justices JB Pardiwala and KV
Viswanathan asked the Union government to consider bringing comprehensive
legislation on passive euthanasia.
The top
court noted that Rana survived only through clinically administered nutrition
via 'percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy' tubes, and medical boards had
unanimously concluded that continuation of treatment merely prolonged
biological existence without any possibility of recovery.
When
primary and secondary boards have certified withdrawal of life support, there
is no need for judicial intervention, the apex court said.
It also
asked the Union of India to ensure that chief medical officers in all districts
maintain a panel of registered medical practitioners for nomination to
secondary medical boards.
The court
made special mention of Rana's parents, expressing its appreciation to them for
showing their immense love and care for their son. "His family never left
his side," the court said.
The order
allowing passive euthanasia is in line with the court's 2018 Common Cause
judgment, which was modified in 2023 and recognised the fundamental right to
die with dignity.
In the
2018 judgement, a constitution bench had recognised passive euthanasia and the
right to die with dignity as a fundamental right under Article 21. The court
had held that passive euthanasia could be carried out using "Advance
Medical Directives".
On 24 January 2023, a five-judge Constitution bench modified the 2018 guidelines to ease the process of granting passive euthanasia to terminally ill patients.
A
primary and a secondary medical board will have to be formed for an expert
opinion on the withdrawal of artificial life support for a patient in a
vegetative state, the guidelines stated.
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