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Luisa Rubbo and Nick Parmeter

'The only slippery slope is the one that I'm on': terminally ill woman looks to euthanasia law

Terminally ill Jane Cohen hopes New South Wales politicians will support the voluntary assisted dying bill. (Supplied: Janet Cohen)

A terminally ill woman from the New South Wales Mid North Coast hopes the state's politicians will support a new bill to allow terminally ill people to end their own lives.

Camden Haven resident Janet Cohen was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer in 2015.

She has previously considered moving to Tasmania and has recently been accepted to an assisted dying program in Basel, Switzerland.  

She hopes the legislation will be passed so she won't have to do either.

"I do hope that I don't have to take that option.

"It would be great, as in all other states in Australia ... if parliamentarians could pass this bill so that New South Wales residents aren't disadvantaged." 

Ms Cohen said opponents warning of a 'slippery slope', and possible exploitation of the laws ignored that most people wishing to access assisted dying were suffering the end of a terrible disease.

Ms Cohen hopes politicians will pass the bill so that NSW residents aren't disadvantaged.  (Supplied: Janet Cohen)

'Human rights issue'

Her local member, Port Macquarie MP Leslie Williams will co-sponsor the voluntary assisted dying bill which will be introduced in the NSW Parliament on Thursday.

The Liberal MP said the number of co-sponsors and the multi partisan support across the parliament was an acknowledgement that it was a human rights issue that transcended politics.

"Voluntary Assisted Dying is an uncomfortable subject for many people," she said. 

Port Macquarie MP Leslie Williams co-sponsors the voluntary assisted dying bill. (AAP: Joel Carrett)

Dying with Dignity's Shayne Higson said there was great support for voluntary assisted dying laws on the Mid North Coast, with more than 80 percent of people in the nearby seat of Oxley supporting it.

But it was still unclear which way the local Nationals member Melinda Pavey would vote, Ms Higson said.

"If this is not something that she wouldn't choose for herself, I don't think that's what it should be about.

"This is about giving control to a dying person who is at the end stage of their illness and who is experiencing unbearable suffering.

"My own mum had brain cancer where the end stages is horrendous and it's so traumatic to be forced to endure just the last few weeks of some of these illnesses.

"This is about giving dying people a compassionate, last resort choice.

"Data from the National Coronial Information System reveals that one in five suicides of people aged over 40 in NSW in 2019 were by people with a terminal or debilitating medical condition.

"And that is just unacceptable isn't it?"

It is four years since a similar bill was voted down in the Upper House.

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