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Spanish euthanasia and assisted suicide deaths increase by almost 30% in 2024

Spain has experienced an almost 30% increase in assisted suicide and euthanasia in 2024 compared with the previous year, according to newly released data.

Released at the end of last year, the statistics have revealed that 426 people ended their own lives by assisted suicide or euthanasia in Spain in 2024, a 27.54% increase from 2023, when 334 people ended their lives in this way. The total number of individuals who have ended their lives by assisted suicide or euthanasia has increased by 47.92% since 2022, the first full year after its legalisation. 

Unlike in some other jurisdictions, there is no six or twelve-month prognosis limit for eligibility for assisted suicide or euthanasia in Spain.

Of the 188 people whose request for euthanasia was denied in 2023, 78 lodged an appeal with the relevant regulatory body. Of the 78 appeals, over 40% (32 cases) had their decision reversed, and the individuals were allowed to proceed with ending their lives. In 2024, of the 157 applications whose requests for assisted suicide or euthanasia were denied, 75 lodged an appeal. Of these, 20 (26.67%) were subsequently permitted to proceed with ending their lives by assisted suicide or euthanasia. 

The most common underlying illness of the individuals who applied for assisted suicide or euthanasia in 2024 was a neurological condition, accounting for 302 applicants. 276 applicants had a form of cancer, while other conditions, including cardiovascular and respiratory issues, made up the remainder. 

Discussion of expanding the assisted suicide and euthanasia law in Spain for those with mental illness

According to the Diario Médico journal, the Spanish government’s Ministry of Health had considered modifying the “Manual of Good Practices for Euthanasia” to include mental illnesses in 2024. The draft of the planned change stated that the Organic Law for the Regulation of Euthanasia “does not exclude mental illness, allowing people with an unbearable suffering due to the presence of a mental illness to request [state-assisted suicide or euthanasia] on ​​equal terms with those whose suffering comes from a bodily illness”.

Recently, in Victoria, Australia, the eligibility criteria for its assisted suicide and euthanasia programme expanded significantly, just six years after the law came into effect in June 2019. Previously, individuals had to have been given a prognosis of six months in order to access state-assisted suicide or euthanasia, unless they had been diagnosed with a neurodegenerative disease, in which case, their prognosis could be extended to 12 months. Now, the law has been changed to double the eligible life expectancy to 12 months for all conditions. 

Additionally, doctors in Canada, where euthanasia is legal, have said euthanasia for newborn babies who are born with disabilities “may be an appropriate treatment”, as concerns grow about the expansion of Canada’s euthanasia and assisted suicide programme.

Speaking on behalf of the Quebec College of Physicians (CMQ) to the Special Joint Committee on Medical Assistance in Dying, Dr Louis Roy previously recommended that euthanasia be introduced for babies with “severe deformations” and “very grave… medical syndromes”. The CMQ reiterated that this was their position as recently as August.

This development comes at the same time as the assisted suicide Bill in England and Wales makes its way through the House of Lords. The proposed legislation, named the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill, would make it possible for individuals who are thought to have six months or less to live to end their lives by assisted suicide.

During the Bill’s Second Reading, at which 67% of Peers who spoke did so in opposition to the Bill, the rapid expansion of assisted suicide laws was a key worry for those who opposed the Bill.

Spokesperson for Right To Life UK, Catherine Robinson, said “This drastic increase in the number of people in Spain who ended their lives by euthanasia or assisted suicide is an incredibly worrying and sad development”.

“It would appear that where assisted suicide or euthanasia are made legal, the number of people who end their lives this way tends to increase each year, alongside discussions to expand the eligibility for these programmes further still”.

“It seems highly likely that if assisted suicide were to become legal in England and Wales, we would experience a similar trajectory. Lawmakers in Westminster must work to ensure that such an awful regime never becomes law here”.

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Help stop three major anti-life threats.

Dear reader,

Thanks to the hard work and dedication of people like you across the UK, the McArthur assisted suicide Bill in Scotland was defeated in March by 69 votes to 57.

Then, in April, the Leadbeater assisted suicide Bill fell in the House of Lords.

Many commentators thought both Bills would become law.

If that had happened, governments in England, Scotland and Wales would now be preparing to roll out assisted suicide services.

Over the coming decades, this would have led to the deaths of many thousands of vulnerable people.

But that is not what happened.

Because supporters like you acted, those Bills were stopped.

Because of you, many vulnerable lives have been saved.

These were two very significant victories. But sadly, they are not the last battles we face this year.

The new Parliamentary session began on Wednesday. We now face three major threats.

  1. Attempts to bring back the Leadbeater assisted suicide Bill and bypass the House of Lords

    The assisted suicide lobby, led by Dignity in Dying, a multi-million-pound pressure group, has made it clear that it is going to attempt to bring back the Leadbeater assisted suicide Bill in the next parliamentary session.

    It then plans to use the Parliament Acts to bypass the House of Lords and force the Bill into law.

  2. Labour Government plans for a major expansion of abortion provision, including financial incentives for ‘lunch-hour’ abortions

    Under these plans, the Government would financially incentivise major abortion providers, BPAS and MSI Reproductive Choices, to provide ‘lunch-hour’ or ‘same-day’ abortions.

    ‘Lunch-hour’ abortion services are walk-in abortion services designed to fit into a woman’s lunch hour.

    Women facing an unplanned pregnancy need time, care and support, not a system that gives abortion clinics a financial incentive to rush them through consultations, scans and abortions on the same day.

    If these plans go ahead, many more lives are likely to be ended by abortion here in the UK.

  3. Extreme abortion up to birth proposals in Scotland

    In Scotland, plans are moving forward to introduce an extreme abortion up to birth law. This would go far beyond the abortion law change recently backed by the Lords for England and Wales.

    A review of abortion law in Scotland, commissioned by Humza Yousaf when he was Scottish First Minister, recommended that the Scottish Government scrap the current 24-week time limit – and abortion be available on social grounds, including for sex-selective purposes, right up to birth.

    The final plans are expected to be brought forward as a Government Bill in the new Scottish Parliament, which begins this Thursday.

If these three major threats succeed, thousands of vulnerable lives will be lost.

We cannot allow this to happen.

We can only defeat these three major threats with your help.

We ran our biggest campaigns ever to help defeat the assisted suicide Bills at Westminster and in Scotland.

That work has made a serious dent in our limited resources.

To cover this gap and ensure we can effectively defeat these three major threats in the coming months, we are aiming to raise at least £199,250 by midnight this Sunday (17 May 2026).

We are, therefore, appealing to you to please give as generously as you can.

Every donation, large or small, will make a crucial difference in saving the lives of the unborn and many others. Plus, if you are a UK taxpayer, £1 becomes £1.25 with Gift Aid at no extra cost to you.

By stopping these threats, YOU can save lives during this new Parliamentary session.

Will you donate now to help protect vulnerable lives from these three major threats?

EMERGENCY
APPEAL
to SAVE
lives

Help stop three major anti-life threats.

Help stop three major anti-life threats.