Context:
India witnessed its first implementation of passive euthanasia following a Supreme Court order (March 2026) in the case of Harish Rana, reinforcing the right to die with dignity.
Key Highlights:
- Case Facts / Legal Development
- Harish Rana (31), in permanent vegetative state since 2013, allowed withdrawal of life support.
- Supreme Court upheld principles from Common Cause v. Union of India (2018).
- Withdrawal involved removal of nutrition via PEG (gastrostomy) tube.
- Death occurred at AIIMS, New Delhi.
- Ethical and Social Dimensions
- Family provided long-term care for 13 years, facing emotional and financial strain.
- Post-death, family donated corneas and heart valve.
- Legal Framework
- 2018 judgment recognized:
- Right to die with dignity under Article 21.
- Validity of advance directives (living wills).
- Passive euthanasia allowed under strict safeguards.
- Stakeholders Involved
- Supreme Court & Judiciary
- Patient’s family
- Medical institutions (AIIMS)
- Ethical and legal experts
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Passive Euthanasia: Withdrawal/withholding of life support.
- Active Euthanasia: Illegal in India (involves deliberate act to cause death).
- Permanent Vegetative State (PVS): No awareness despite wakefulness.
- Article 21: Right to life includes right to die with dignity.
- Living Will: Legal document specifying medical treatment preferences.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Raises ethical debate between:
- Sanctity of life vs autonomy of individual.
- Legal evolution:
- From prohibition to conditional acceptance.
- Issues:
- Misuse potential.
- Lack of awareness about living wills.
- Emotional and financial burden on families.
- Importance of safeguards:
- Medical boards, judicial oversight.
- Reflects shift towards patient-centric healthcare ethics.
- Way Forward
- Create clear standard operating procedures (SOPs) across hospitals.
- Promote awareness of advance directives.
- Strengthen palliative care infrastructure.
- Ensure robust legal and medical oversight mechanisms.
UPSC Relevance:
- GS Paper 2: Polity (Judiciary, Fundamental Rights)
- GS Paper 4: Ethics (End-of-life decisions, dignity)
- GS Paper 2: Social Justice (Healthcare rights)
- Prelims: Passive euthanasia, Article 21, Living Will
