'... not just the premier Christian bioethics
institute in Britain, but one of the finest in
the world, Christian or secular'.
The Most Rev. Anthony Fisher O.P.,
Archbishop of Sydney, Australia.
About Us
The Anscombe Bioethics Centre (originally known as the Linacre Centre for Healthcare Ethics) is a Roman Catholic academic institute that engages with the moral questions arising in clinical practice and biomedical research. It brings to bear on those questions principles of natural law, virtue ethics, and the teaching of the Catholic Church, and seeks to develop the implications of that teaching for emerging fields of practice. The Centre engages in scholarly dialogue with academics and practitioners of other traditions. It contributes to public policy debates as well as to debates and consultations within the Church. It runs educational programmes for, and gives advice to, Catholics and other interested healthcare professionals and biomedical scientists.
We also run an online bookshop, where you can buy our publications securely, and make conference bookings.
Michael Wee on EWTN – The History and Work of the Anscombe Centre
Recently, EWTN released a video interview recorded last year of our former Education and Research Officer, Michael Wee, who discussed the Anscombe Centre and the vocation of bioethics and bioethical research.
In this introductory clip, Michael introduces the Centre, its history, and its work.
For full video of the interview, see our YouTube channel, and please don’t forget to ‘like’ and subscribe!
‘Catholics in Health and Social Care: ethics and practice’
Are you (or aspiring to be) a health or social care professional, and looking for an opportunity to meet people motivated by their faith to care for others? Would you like to explore the unique contribution that faith makes to the health and social care sector? Are you interested in learning about the ethical challenges work in this sector may bring?
If so, join us in these special training days organised by St Mary’s University Twickenham, the Anscombe Bioethics Centre, and the Bios Centre. Two are ‘live’ in Scotland (Edinburgh) on 19 March and England (London) on 2 April and there will be one by Zoom in May which we will advertise nearer to the time.
Details below:
📆 Saturday, 19 March
â° 9.30am-3.30pm
📠The Gillis Centre, 100 Strathearn Road, Edinburgh EH9 1BB
🎟 Register here.
📆 Saturday, 02 April
â° 11.30am-4.45pm
📠St Patrick’s Catholic Church, 21A Soho Square, London, W1D 4NR
🎟 Register here.
Press Release: New Study Published on Relationship Between Euthanasia & Assisted Suicide (EAS) & Suicide Rates
A new peer-reviewed study by the Director of the Anscombe Bioethics Centre, Prof. David Albert Jones, and published in the Journal of Ethics in Mental Health, has shown that current European data shows a consistent association with increased suicide rates relative to countries without euthanasia or assisted suicide (EAS), debunking claims that legalising EAS would lead to fewer non-assisted suicides.
Some advocates of euthanasia and assisted suicide have argued that, paradoxically, legalising those practices would reduce suicides. This contention is based on the idea that people who want to end their own lives in medically difficult situations would find the option of assisted suicide or euthanasia comforting, giving them the psychological security not to end their lives prematurely as they might otherwise do.
Prof. Jones has previously demonstrated that data from the United States has shown no reduction in non-assisted suicide, but rather that assisted suicide is associated with a significant increase in total suicide (inclusive of assisted suicide itself) and with some evidence of an increase in non-assisted suicide. In this new study, Jones further shows that European data similarly shows that in countries that have introduced EAS into law and medical practice: • No reduction exists in non-assisted suicide relative to the most similar neighbouring non-EAS country; • EAS is followed by considerable increases in suicide (inclusive of assisted suicide and euthanasia); • In some EAS countries, there is a relative and/or an absolute increase in non-assisted suicide; • Data from both Europe and from the U.S. indicate that women have been placed most at risk of avoidable premature death by EAS.
This evidence suggests that so far from the introduction of EAS reducing suicides, it is actually associated with greater incidence of premature death (particularly amongst women), raising raise serious and concerning questions about the effect of assisted suicide and euthanasia on society’s commitment to and strategy for suicide prevention.
These findings are crucial for legislators to consider, as they come whilst jurisdictions in the British and Irish Isles consider legislation which would introduce euthanasia and / or assisted suicide into law and medical practice.
• The Parliament of the United Kingdom’s House of Lords gave Second Reading to Baroness Meacher’s ‘Assisted Dying’ Bill in October last year.
• Liam McArthur MSP held a consultation on his proposed ‘Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland)’ Bill to be considered by the Scottish Parliament in Holyrood later this year.
• The Irish Joint Oireachtas Committee on Justice recommended that a Special Committee examine topics concerning euthanasia and assisted suicide following its scrutiny of Gino Kelly TD’s ‘Dying with Dignity’ Bill 2020.
• The States Assembly of Jersey voted in principle to introduce euthanasia and assisted suicide if it is satisfied that potential safeguards will be sufficient in a vote which will take place in October.
Prof. David Albert Jones said:
“This is further evidence that legalising assisted suicide or euthanasia will result in more people ending their lives prematurely. It will not save lives. It will not help prevent suicide. Legalising what is euphemistically called ‘assisted dying’ will endanger the lives of older people living with serious illness. We must say very clearly to all people irrespective of age, disability or illness, that they should not be made to feel that they are not a burden to the community. They are full members of our society and the human family. We are all enriched by their presenceâ€.
ENDS
‘Catholic Medical Ethics’:
A Bioethical Series for Healthcare Students
Beginning this month, a series of bioethical talks for those studying at university on the Catholic response to difficult issues, will be held throughout Hilary / Lent / Epiphany / Candlemas Term, led by the Anscombe Centre’s Education and Research Officer, Chris Wojtulewicz, and hosted by the King’s College London Chaplaincy.
📆 Mondays, beginning 14 February
â° 6pm-7:30pm
ðŸ“👨ðŸ¼â€ðŸ’» MS Teams
🎟 To sign up and get the video link, register via your university e-mail address, with King’s Catholic Chaplain for Guy’s Campus, Laurence Jasper: laurence.jasper@kcl.ac.uk.
Students in all areas relating to healthcare, be sure to sign up and join students across the UK in learning about how the Catholic moral tradition responds to these important issues!
Catholic Herald Piece by Anscombe Education and Research Officer, Dr Chris Wojtulewicz, on ‘Why Mandatory Vaccinations Are Wrong’
The Catholic Herald has today published a piece by our Education and Research Officer, Chris Wojtulewicz, discussing from Catholic ethical principles the reasons why it is both true that voluntary reception of COVID vaccines contribute to the Common Good, but fundamentally wrong for Governments to coerce people into taking them.
A timely contribution to a hot concern in current social and political discourse, which you can read here.
The recent article from the journal Vaccines which Chris mentions, showing that vaccines slash COVID transmission rates by two-thirds, compared with unvaccinated individuals, can be read here.
The previous occasion wherein our Director, Prof. David Jones, argued that mandating that adults be vaccinated without consent would be in important akin to mandating live organ donation, or mandating medical experimentation, in the sense of instrumentalising people for medical reasons without their consent, can be read here.
Reportage of Pope Francis exhorting people to take the COVID vaccines, is here.
New Paper in Euthanasia & Assisted Suicide (EAS) Briefing Series: ‘Euthanasia Case Studies from Belgium: Concerns About Legislation and Hope for Palliative Care’, by Prof. Benoit Beuselinck
In his paper, Prof. Beuselinck presents a number of real-life example cases from the medical front line of end-of-life care, and draws out some of the lessons that might be learned from those cases, such as the difficulty of estimating life expectancy, the confusion and distrust euthanasia causes in palliative care, how patients with major life-events to look forward to can live longer than prognosed, and the emotional cost of emphasising patient autonomy on the family of those presenting for EAS.
The papers in our EAS series clarify the issues at stake in the social, political, and medical discussion, examining the definitions concerning, and practical consequences of legalising physician involvement in assisting a patient to end their own life, or directly causing their death.
This is the introductory speech by Prof. David Albert Jones, who is Director of the Anscombe Bioethics Centre, and Professor of Bioethics at St Mary's University, Twickenham. His DPhil from Oxford was on the theology of death and dying. He is co-editor, with Prof Chris Gastmans and Dr Calum MacKellar, of Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide: Lessons from Belgium (Cambridge University Press, 2017).
The panel considered the place of euthanasia in the context of the history of eugenics. It was not only in Nazi Germany but also in England and the United States that euthanasia was promoted for the same reasons as eugenics, the characterising of some citizens as a burden on the state. The current debate over euthanasia and assisted suicide (EAS) is framed very differently but similar concerns about equality and vulnerability remain.
This is not only a faith issue but it is one that has had a profound effect on religious minorities in the past. The hope of participants is that interfaith discussion can help illuminate the debate over “assisted dying†and in this way contribute to the common good of society.
This event was co-sponsored by the Anscombe Centre with the University Jewish Chaplaincy and Catholic Chaplaincy for London’s Universities at Newman House. You can watch the entire discussion, here.
The papers in our EAS series clarify the issues at stake in the social, political, and medical discussion, examining the definitions concerning, and practical consequences of legalising physician involvement in assisting a patient to end their own life, or directly causing their death. You can read the full briefing paper series on its dedicated page on our website, here.
Prof. David Albert Jones on BBC Radio Jersey Discusses Euthanasia & Assisted Suicide (EAS), Jersey, and the Citizens’ Jury
On 24th October 2021, after the Second Reading of Baroness Meacher’s assisted suicide Bill, Prof. David Albert Jones gave an interview to BBC Radio Jersey in which he discussed the issue of euthanasia and assisted suicide (EAS), and the Citizens’ Jury held by the Government of Jersey on that issue, for which Prof. Jones had been one of three leading authorities to act as an independent content oversight advisers.
Have a listen to hear salient points of the debate on Jersey, and in the UK!
New Paper in Euthanasia & Assisted Suicide (EAS) Briefing Series: ‘Dignity in Living: Addressing Euthanasia by Affirming Patient Personhood in Dementia’, by Dr Pia Matthews
In her paper, Dr Matthews expounds the inclusive approach taken by the Alzheimer’s Society and others who serve people with dementia, so that people affected by that condition are supported, accepted and able to live in their community without fear or prejudice.
This is to change the fear-based narrative and ‘malignant social psychology’ that depersonalises people with dementia (as well as other conditions and disabilities), promoting and enabling unjust prejudice and discrimination and other abuses against people with dementia and their families, and reinforcing the false notion that EAS is the only solution to difficult medical situations.
Matthews shows how is is possible to live and die well with dementia, and that the alternative narrative of compassion and solidarity enshrines the real dignity deserving to those with dementia and their loved ones.
The papers in our EAS series clarify the issues at stake in the social, political, and medical discussion, examining the definitions concerning, and practical consequences of legalising physician involvement in assisting a patient to end their own life, or directly causing their death.
Prof. David Albert Jones: The Jersey Citizens’ Jury on Euthanasia & Assisted Suicide (EAS)
In advance of the Jersey States Assembly debate on the Proposition on euthanasia and assisted suicide (EAS) next week, our Director Prof. David Albert Jones has recorded this video discussing the Citizens’ Jury which took place on the island to consider the issue, and the consequent EAS proposals being considered by politicians there.
Prof. Jones was one of three leading authorities on EAS to act as an independent content oversight advisers for the Citizens’ Jury set up by the Government of Jersey to consider the possibility for legislating to licence those practices on the island.
In his video, Prof. Jones considers the Citizens’ Jury, how it was selected so as to have a preponderance of those in favour of EAS, the concerns of those who took part, and the implications of their proposals for the States Assembly of Jersey and the wider public in the Bailiwick.
Latest Paper in our Euthanasia & Assisted Suicide (EAS) Briefing Series: the Position Paper of the Abrahamic Monotheistic Religions on Matters Concerning the End of Life
The Position Paper was commissioned by Pope Francis at the suggestion of Rabbi Avraham Steinberg, who is a paediatric neurologist and co-chair of the Israeli National Council on Bioethics and whom the Pope had appointed as a
member of the Pontifical Academy for Life in 2017.
The papers in our EAS series clarify the issues at stake in the social, political, and medical discussion, examining the definitions concerning, and practical consequences of legalising physician involvement in assisting a patient to end their own life, or directly causing their death.
New Event: ‘Assisted Dying: eugenics, euthanasia, and medicine’ (Wednesday 17th November, 5pm-6:30pm)
In order to look to the future it is necessary to acknowledge the past. Universities and other institutions are beginning to do this with the troubled history of eugenics. A new event organised by the University of London Catholic Chaplaincy, and co-sponsored by the University Jewish Chaplaincy and the Anscombe Bioethics Centre event places the issue of assisted dying or euthanasia in the context of that history.
This event will happen via Zoom. You can see full details in our Upcoming Events section on the right of this page, and register for attendance here.
It was not only in Nazi Germany but also in England and the United States that euthanasia was promoted for the same reasons as eugenics, the characterising of some citizens as a burden on the state. The current debate over assisted dying is framed very differently but similar concerns about equality and vulnerability remain. This is not only a faith issue but it is one that has had an impact on religious minorities in the past. Our hope is that interfaith discussion can help illuminate the debate over “assisted dying†and in this way contribute to the common good of society.
Speakers (N.B. All speakers will be speaking in a personal capacity. They will be speaking from a religious perspective but not as representatives of any institutions or organisations to which they are affiliated.):
• Rabbi Dr Moshe Freedman is Rabbi, New West End Synagogue, London and Jewish Chaplain to the Canary Wharf Multifaith Chaplaincy. He is also a member of the Moral and Ethical Advisory Group (MEAG), which provides independent advice to the UK government on moral, ethical and faith considerations on health and social care related issues. He has a PhD in medical physics and has recently published, with Dr Aryeh Greenberg, a Rapid Response to a BMJ article on religious views on assisted dying.
• Prof. David Albert Jones is Director of the Anscombe Bioethics Centre. He also is Professor of Bioethics at St Mary’s University, Twickenham. His DPhil from Oxford was on the theology of death and dying. He is co-editor, with Prof Chris Gastmans and Dr Calum MacKellar, of Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide: Lessons from Belgium (Cambridge University Press, 2017). The Anscombe Centre has recently launched a series of briefing papers on euthanasia and assisted suicide.
• Prof. David Katz, Emeritus Professor of Immunopathology at University College, London, has provided advice within the Jewish community about medical and research issues, both scientific and ethical. He chaired fitness to practice panels for many years.
• Rev. Dr Philip Miller is Senior Catholic Chaplain for the universities in the Archdiocese of Westminster. He did his own university studies in Natural Sciences at Cambridge, and then completed a PhD in radio-astronomy at the Cavendish Laboratory. As well as his new post as Senior Chaplain, he has a number of other responsibilities in Westminster Diocese, including sitting on the Sick & Retired Priests’ Committee, and being Co-ordinator of the Ethnic Chaplains.
• Mohamed Omer MBE is Chair of Redbridge Faith Forum. He is Board Member for External Affairs at Gardens of Peace, the largest dedicated Muslim Cemetery in the United Kingdom. He is also a member of the Moral and Ethical Advisory Group (MEAG).
• Prof. Daniel Sulmasy is Director of the Kennedy Institute of Ethics, Senior Research Scholar at the Pellegrino Center for Clinical Bioethics and Andre Hellegers Professor of Biomedical Ethics, with co-appointments in the Departments of Philosophy and Medicine at Georgetown. He has written extensively on end of life ethics and is co-editor, with Dr Sheldon Rubenfeld, of Physician-Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia Before, During, and After the Holocaust (Rowman and Littlefield, 2021).
Euthanasia & Assisted Suicide Briefing Paper Series Launched
Ahead of the Second Reading of Baroness Meacher’s ‘Assisted Dying’ Bill, as well as the consideration of proposals to introduce euthanasia in the Bailiwick of Jersey which will take place in late November, and the continuing debate about assisted suicide in Scotland, the Anscombe Bioethics Centre has launched a series of briefing papers dealing with the legalisation of physician involvement in causing the death of patients.
These papers clarify the issues at stake in the social, political, and medical discussion, examining the definitions concerning, and practical consequences of, legalising physician involvement in assisting a patient to end their own life, or directly causing their death.
The first three papers have been published on the Centre’s website, and others will follow in the coming weeks and months:
The second by Prof. John Keown addresses the ‘slippery slope’ problems of voluntary euthanasia and assisted suicide.
The third by Dr Mark S. Komrad discusses the Canadian euthanasia law and how it has followed the Benelux countries in enabling suicide for people with psychiatric disorders.
It has never been more important to achieve clarity in debates concerning euthanasia and assisted suicide, and to appreciate the full range of evidence from those jurisdictions which have experimented with physicians bringing about the death of their patients. The Anscombe Centre’s briefing paper series will inform medical professionals, legislators, opinion-formers, and the general public, about the most crucially important realities of these practices.
You can read the full briefing paper series on its dedicated page on our website, here.
‘Assisted Dying’ Bill Second Reading (Friday 22nd October)
The second reading of the ‘Assisted Dying’ Bill is forthcoming on 22nd October 2021 in the House of Lords. The Bill seems to license doctors to enable terminally ill adult patients, under certain conditions, to end their own lives by the provision of lethal drugs (physician-assisted suicide).
Below we provide links to some articles and resources pertinent to this debate.
Statement (5 Aug 2021)
The Alta Fixsler case: Subsidiarity and the importance of circumstances
The Anscombe Bioethics Centre has released a statement commenting on the ethical aspects of the Alta Fixsler case. The case involves a dispute between the parents of a seriously ill child and the healthcare team over the withdrawal of treatment and has gone before the court.
Reiterating the Centre's position on previous similar cases, David Albert Jones, Director of the Anscombe Centre, said: 'One fundamental problem in these cases is the idea that there can be only one option that is in the child’s best interests because "there can only logically be one best option". The judge therefore seeks to identify what is best for the child independently of the wishes of the parents. However, this approach rests on the mistaken utilitarian idea that moral reasoning is a matter of mathematical calculation. [...] There are many ways to live that are morally upright and many decisions a parent may make on behalf of a child that are within reason. The question that judges should ask is not "What would I do if I were the parent of this child?" but "Is the decision of parents in this case reasonable, or does it place the child in undue danger of suffering harm?".'
Prof. Jones also noted: 'It is extraordinary that, in the overwhelming majority of such cases, decisions are reached by consensus between parents and healthcare professionals. Only very rarely do such cases lead to conflict that is irresolvable and that ends up in court. When this happens, it is important that courts do not take the decision away from parents except in cases where the decision of the parents would lead to the child suffering significant harm. Whether such action by a court is justified in a particular case depends crucially on the circumstances. Furthermore, even when such action by the court is justified, the inability of doctors and parents to find a common mind still represents a failure of communication and a breakdown of trust. Taking the decision away from the parents cannot but add to their grief.'
For more information on this issue, read the full statement.
Statement and Press Release (21 June 2021)
Mandatory vaccines for care home workers ‘profoundly unethical’
The Centre has spoken out against government proposals to make vaccination for COVID-19 mandatory for care home workers and other healthcare professionals.
Director, David Albert Jones, has said: To threaten unvaccinated workers with dismissal or redeployment ‘fails to show respect for those on whom society depends to deliver care, and who have also suffered disproportionate risk and hardship during this pandemic.’
‘For the state to threaten people who are economically vulnerable with termination of employment is a fundamental failure to respect them as persons. Such threats also undermine the freedom of the consent that is needed before administering vaccination, or any other medicine.’
Statement and Press Release (3 June 2021)
Bioethicists condemn relaxation of 14-day embryo experimentation limit
The International Society for Stem Cell Research recently abolished the 14-day limit on lab-grown embryo experimentation. In a statement released today by the Centre, Prof. David Albert Jones highlights the dangers of this decision. ‘Once the 14-day rule falls away, the only real limit, it seems, to experimentation would be the scientific limit as to how long embryonic or foetal human beings can be sustained outside the womb.’
‘The further the limits of research are pushed, the more scientists will be confronted with research subjects that look more recognisably human. To experiment on human embryos that are up to 14-days-old – extremely vulnerable human lives – is already a grave injustice and a form of exploitation.’
Conscientious Objection - Briefing Paper 13 May 2021
World Medical Association Consultation
The World Medical Association (WMA), which represents doctors throughout the world has proposed a new International Code of Medical Ethics. The draft revision of the Code would impose on doctors a requirement to refer patients for euthanasia or assisted suicide.
This requirement contradicts agreed WMA policy and exposes doctors in countries with euthanasia or assisted suicide to increased pressure to facilitate these practices.
It is important that as many people as possible write to the WMA to express their wish to see physicians behave in a conscientious manner, which at times may require conscientiously objecting to practices or procedures.
The Anscombe Bioethics Centre has produced a briefing paper on the issue.
Submissions can be made here, the closing date is 28 May 2021.
The Ethics of Vaccine Passports
An interview with Prof. David Albert Jones
As the UK gradually moves out of lockdown, the government has been considering multiple strategies for reopening. Among these is the well-known, and somewhat controversial proposal for ‘Vaccine Passports’. Plans have also been put forward to introduce ‘COVID Status Certificates.’
What would these certificates, or ‘passports’, mean for citizens? And what are some of the ethical implications of them?
David Albert Jones is videoed here in conversation with Becky Short exploring these questions and more.
Detailed information on the topic can be found in Prof. Jones’ response to the government’s ‘vaccine passport’ consultation in March.
A Bioethical Series for Students During Hilary / Lent / Epiphany / Candlemas Term led by the Anscombe Centre’s Education and Research Officer, Dr Chris Wojtulewicz, and hosted by the King’s College London Chaplaincy.
The talks will be on a variety of hot topics relevant in contemporary medicine and ethics:
📆 Mondays, beginning 14 February
â° 6pm-7:30pm
ðŸ“👨ðŸ¼â€ðŸ’» MS Teams
🎟 To sign-up for the group and attend this lecture series exclusive to it, please register with Laurence Jasper, Catholic Chaplain of Guy’s Campus, King’s College London’s at laurence.jasper@kcl.ac.uk using your university e-mail account.
Students in all areas relating to healthcare, be sure to sign up and join students across the UK in learning about how the Catholic moral tradition responds to these important issues!
Catholics in Health and Social Care: ethics and practice
Are you (or aspiring to be) a health or social care professional, and looking for an opportunity to meet people motivated by their faith to care for others? Would you like to explore the unique contribution that faith makes to the health and social care sector? Are you interested in learning about the ethical challenges work in this sector may bring?
If so, join us in these special training days organised by St Mary’s University Twickenham, the Anscombe Bioethics Centre, and the Bios Centre. Two are ‘live’ in Scotland (Edinburgh) on 19 March and England (London) on 2 April and there will be one by Zoom in May which we will advertise nearer to the time.
Details below:
📆 Saturday, 19 March
â° 9.30am-3.30pm
📠The Gillis Centre, 100 Strathearn Road, Edinburgh EH9 1BB
🎟 Register here.
📆 Saturday, 02 April
â° 11.30am-4.45pm
📠St Patrick’s Catholic Church, 21A Soho Square, London, W1D 4NR
🎟 Register here.