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Seeking Death: 'Suicide Tourism' to Switzerland Doubles

More than 600 people traveled to Switzerland to die between 2008 and 2012, and the numbers doubled over those years.
Overview picture shows Jet d'Eau and Lake Leman from the St-Pierre Cathedrale in Geneva
Geneva's iconic water fountain and Lake Leman are seen from the St-Pierre Cathedral on June 5, 2012.Denis Balibouse / REUTERS file

More than 600 people traveled to Switzerland to die between 2008 and 2012, and the numbers doubled over those years, researchers reported Tuesday. Many of those choosing to die came from countries with strict laws forbidding voluntary assisted death, Dr. Saskia Gauthier of the Institute of Legal Medicine at the University of Zurich reports in the Journal of Medical Ethics. “While assisted suicide is strictly restricted in many countries, it is not clearly regulated by law in Switzerland. This imbalance leads to an influx of people —‘suicide tourists’—coming to Switzerland,” Gauthier wrote.

Gauthier identified 611 cases of people, ranging in age from 23 to 97, who came to Switzerland to organize their own deaths with the help of “right to die” groups such as Dignitas. “The main reasons were neurological disease (47 percent), followed by cancer (37 percent), rheumatic and cardiovascular disease," Gauthier writes. Most came from Germany and Britain but the number of Italians coming ballooned from four in 2009 to 22 in 2012, while the numbers from France nearly tripled from seven in 2009 to 19 in 2012.

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— Maggie Fox