SC upholds ‘right to die’ for man in vegetative state
Here is the complete UPSC study note:
SC Upholds 'Right to Die' for Man in Vegetative State — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- The Supreme Court of India on 12 March 2026 upheld the right to die with dignity of Harish Rana, a 32-year-old in a persistent vegetative state (PVS), by permitting withdrawal of Clinically Assisted Nutrition and Hydration (CANH) — the first-ever implementation of the Court's 2018 Constitution Bench guidelines on passive euthanasia. [S1][S4]
- The case is constitutionally significant because Article 21 (right to life and personal liberty) has been interpreted to include the right to die with dignity as an intrinsic facet. [S2][S3]
- UPSC relevance: intersects GS-II (fundamental rights, judiciary), GS-IV (ethics of end-of-life decisions), and GS-I (social issues).
- Marks India's first judicially supervised, procedurally compliant passive euthanasia case. [S1][S4]
2. Why in the News
- On 12 March 2026, a two-judge bench of Justices J.B. Pardiwala and K.V. Viswanathan delivered judgment allowing withdrawal of CANH for Harish Rana, who had been in a persistent vegetative state (PVS) for nearly 13 years following a fall in 2013. [S1]
- This was explicitly described by the Court as the first time the Supreme Court had implemented the procedural guidelines it had framed in its landmark 2018 Constitution Bench ruling (Common Cause v. Union of India). [S1][S4]
- The Court directed AIIMS Delhi to shift Rana to its palliative care centre for a well-structured withdrawal process. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
Chronological Milestones:
- 1994 — P. Rathinam v. Union of India: SC upheld right to die, but reversed by a larger bench in 1996 (Gian Kaur v. State of Punjab). [S3]
- 1996 — Gian Kaur v. State of Punjab (5-judge bench): Overruled P. Rathinam; held Article 21 does not include right to die, but distinguished "right to die with dignity" (natural death) from suicide. [S3]
- 2011 — Aruna Shanbaug v. Union of India: SC for the first time permitted passive euthanasia in specific circumstances (withdrawal of life support in PVS); established a framework awaiting legislative backing. [S3][S5]
- 9 March 2018 — Common Cause v. Union of India (Constitution Bench, 5 judges): Landmark ruling affirming right to die with dignity as fundamental under Article 21; legalised passive euthanasia and Advance Medical Directives (living wills); issued detailed procedural guidelines binding till Parliament legislates. [S2][S3][S4]
- January 2023 — SC streamlined and relaxed the 2018 procedural guidelines to reduce barriers to implementing advance directives. [S2]
- 12 March 2026 — Harish Rana case: First actual implementation of the 2018 guidelines; SC grants passive euthanasia. [S1][S4]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Right involved | Right to die with dignity — implied in Article 21 (Right to Life & Personal Liberty) |
| Type permitted | Passive euthanasia only (withdrawal/withholding of life-prolonging treatment) |
| Active euthanasia | Remains illegal in India |
| Key case 2018 | Common Cause v. Union of India, decided 9 March 2018 |
| 2018 bench strength | 5-judge Constitution Bench |
| Instrument recognised | Advance Medical Directive (AMD) / Living Will |
| 2026 bench | Justices J.B. Pardiwala + K.V. Viswanathan (2-judge bench) |
| Patient — Harish Rana | 32 years old; PVS for ~13 years; 100% quadriplegic; sustained severe head injuries from fall (4th floor, paying guest accommodation, 2013) |
| Medical act authorised | Withdrawal of Clinically Assisted Nutrition and Hydration (CANH) |
| Directing agency | AIIMS Delhi Palliative Care Centre |
| Legislation | No dedicated legislation exists; SC guidelines operate in vacuum pending Parliamentary law |
| 2023 modification | SC relaxed procedural safeguards in January 2023 to simplify the advance directive process |
Key Definitions:
- Passive euthanasia: Withdrawing or withholding life-prolonging medical treatment (e.g., ventilator, feeding tube, CANH) allowing the patient to die naturally. [S3][S5]
- Active euthanasia: Administering a lethal substance to cause death — illegal in India.
- CANH (Clinically Assisted Nutrition and Hydration): Medical provision of food/fluids through tubes; considered a form of medical treatment, not basic care. [S1]
- PVS (Persistent Vegetative State): Condition of severe brain damage where patient is in a state of wakefulness without awareness. [S3]
- Advance Medical Directive (AMD) / Living Will: A legal document by which a competent adult specifies desired medical treatment (or lack thereof) in case of future incapacity. [S2]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 21 jurisprudence has expanded significantly: from mere right to physical life (A.K. Gopalan, 1950) to encompassing dignity, privacy, and now death with dignity. [S2][S3]
- Common Cause 2018 settled the split created by Gian Kaur 1996 and Aruna Shanbaug 2011 — dignity in dying is now a fundamental right. [S2]
- Absence of enabling legislation (akin to the UK's Mental Capacity Act 2005) means India still operates on judicially created safeguards, creating uncertainty. [S3]
- Harish Rana 2026: First judicial translation of 2018 guidelines into an operative order, establishing a procedural precedent for future cases. [S1][S4]
Ethical / Governance
- Court's language emphasised compassion over surrender: "You are not giving up on your son. You are allowing him to leave with dignity." — Justice Pardiwala. [S1]
- Three ethical conditions the Court requires: (i) treatment discontinued/withheld; (ii) primary goal to avoid prolonging inevitable death; (iii) justified in patient's best interests. [S2]
- Medical ethics tension: Between the physician's duty to preserve life (non-maleficence) and patient autonomy (beneficence). [S3][S5]
- Risk of misuse (family/financial motivations) countered by multi-stage medical board and judicial oversight under the 2018 guidelines. [S2]
Social
- Case underscores the burden on families of PVS patients — nearly 13 years of caregiving with no prospect of recovery. [S1]
- Highlights gaps in India's palliative care infrastructure: AIIMS Delhi's palliative unit is among very few with capacity for structured withdrawal. [S1]
- The right to die debate intersects with disability rights: critics argue PVS patients may retain some quality of life perceptions. [S5]
Administrative
- Procedural flow under 2018 guidelines (as relaxed in 2023): Patient/family application → Hospital Medical Board review → District Medical Board review → High Court (if contested) → implementation. [S2]
- The 2023 simplification removed the mandatory High Court referral in non-contested cases, reducing delays. [S2]
- Lack of standardised palliative care protocols across states creates federal inconsistency. [S3]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- January 2023: SC (in an earlier order) streamlined passive euthanasia procedural guidelines — notably removing mandatory High Court referral in non-contentious cases — making advance directives more practically viable. [S2]
- 12 March 2026: SC Bench (Pardiwala + Viswanathan JJ.) delivers 286-page judgment in Harish Rana case — India's first operationalised passive euthanasia. [S1][S4]
- Judgment directed AIIMS Delhi to receive the patient and conduct withdrawal of CANH within a "well-structured, tailored, robust" palliative care plan. [S1]
- Justice Pardiwala authored the lead 286-page opinion; Justice Viswanathan delivered a separate concurrent opinion. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)
- The right to die with dignity is held to be a fundamental right under Article 21 of the Indian Constitution. [S2]
- Passive euthanasia (withdrawal of life support) is legal in India; active euthanasia remains illegal. [S3]
- The landmark case establishing the legal framework for passive euthanasia and living wills is Common Cause v. Union of India (2018), decided by a 5-judge Constitution Bench. [S2]
- Advance Medical Directive (AMD) / "Living Will" was legally recognised for the first time in India by the 2018 SC Constitution Bench ruling. [S2]
- SC guidelines on passive euthanasia remain in force in lieu of Parliamentary legislation — no dedicated law yet exists. [S2]
- Aruna Shanbaug v. Union of India (2011) was the first SC ruling to conditionally permit passive euthanasia in India. [S3]
- Gian Kaur v. State of Punjab (1996, 5-judge bench) held Article 21 does NOT include right to commit suicide, but carved out right to die with dignity. [S3]
- The SC relaxed the procedural guidelines for passive euthanasia in January 2023, removing mandatory High Court referral. [S2]
- In the Harish Rana judgment (March 2026), the SC permitted withdrawal of CANH — Clinically Assisted Nutrition and Hydration. [S1]
- Harish Rana is the first instance where the SC implemented its own 2018 guidelines on passive euthanasia. [S1][S4]
- The 2026 Harish Rana bench comprised Justices J.B. Pardiwala and K.V. Viswanathan. [S1]
- Harish Rana had been in PVS for ~13 years (since 2013) with 100% quadriplegic disability from a fall. [S1]
- The Court directed AIIMS Delhi's palliative care centre to manage the withdrawal process. [S1]
- Justice Pardiwala's opinion in the Harish Rana case was 286 pages long. [S1]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers: - GS-II: Fundamental Rights (Article 21), Judiciary, landmark SC judgments, social justice. - GS-IV: Ethics — end-of-life decisions, compassion vs. duty to preserve life, medical ethics, family vs. patient autonomy.
Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: Structure, Organisation and Functioning of the Judiciary; Fundamental Rights. - GS-IV: Ethics in Public and Private Relationships; Case studies on difficult decisions.
Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The Supreme Court's judgment in the Harish Rana case (2026) is not merely a judicial ruling but a statement on human dignity and compassion." Critically examine the legal and ethical dimensions of passive euthanasia in India. (GS-II + GS-IV) 2. "India's passive euthanasia framework, built entirely through judicial interpretation, exposes the gap between constitutional rights and legislative action." Discuss with reference to the evolution from Aruna Shanbaug (2011) to Harish Rana (2026). (GS-II) 3. "The right to die with dignity raises fundamental questions about autonomy, state paternalism, and the nature of personhood." Examine the ethical challenges in framing a legislative framework for euthanasia in India. (GS-IV)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Article 21 — Expansive Interpretation | Right to die is an Article 21 right; critical to understand the full arc of Article 21 jurisprudence. |
| Advance Medical Directives / Living Wills | Directly created by the 2018 SC judgment; understanding the instrument is essential. |
| Palliative Care Policy in India | AIIMS Delhi's role in the Rana case highlights India's palliative care gap; connects to health policy in GS-II. |
| Mental Capacity / Legal Competence | The basis for determining who can execute an AMD; compare with UK Mental Capacity Act 2005. |
| Aruna Shanbaug Case (2011) | Immediate predecessor; first conditional permission for passive euthanasia in India. |
| Medical Ethics (Bioethics) | GS-IV staple: autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, justice in end-of-life contexts. |
| Disability Rights in India | PVS and quadriplegic conditions intersect with disability rights frameworks (RPwD Act, 2016). |
| Right to Privacy (Justice K.S. Puttaswamy case, 2017) | Reaffirmed dignity as a constitutional value; directly informs right to die with dignity. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing active and passive euthanasia: Active euthanasia (administering lethal substance) is still illegal in India. Only passive (withdrawal of treatment) is permitted. Examiners often test this distinction.
- Wrong year for the Constitution Bench ruling: The landmark 5-judge Constitution Bench ruling on passive euthanasia and AMDs is 2018 (Common Cause), not 2011 (Aruna Shanbaug) — which was only a 3-judge bench with conditions.
- Assuming legislation exists: There is no Parliamentary Act on euthanasia/advance directives in India; the regime is entirely judge-made.
- Attributing right to die to* P. Rathinam *(1994): While that case upheld it temporarily, it was overruled by Gian Kaur 1996. The current right to die with dignity derives from Gian Kaur itself (through carve-out) and Common Cause 2018.
- Treating Harish Rana 2026 as a new right: The Court emphasised this was an implementation of existing 2018 guidelines, not creation of a new right — important for Mains answers about judicial overreach vs. judicial innovation.
11. Sources
- [S1] SC upholds 'right to die' for man in vegetative state — The Hindu, 12 March 2026 (article supplied as primary source) — (Tier 4)
- [S2] The Right to Die with Dignity: The Indian Supreme Court Allows Passive Euthanasia and Living Wills — Oxford Human Rights Hub — https://ohrh.law.ox.ac.uk/right-to-die-with-dignity-a-fundamental-right-indian-supreme-court-allows-passive-euthanasia-and-living-wills/ — (Tier 3)
- [S3] Passive Euthanasia in India: Right to Die With Dignity — Evolution through Landmark Judgments — Legal Service India — https://www.legalserviceindia.com/Legal-Articles/passive-euthanasia-india-right-to-die-with-dignity/ — (Tier 3)
- [S4] SC Allows 1st Passive Euthanasia in Harish Rana Case — Drishti IAS — https://www.drishtiias.com/daily-updates/daily-news-analysis/sc-allows-1st-passive-euthanasia-in-harish-rana-case — (Tier 3)
- [S5] In a first, Supreme Court gives green signal for passive euthanasia — SC Observer — https://www.scobserver.in/journal/in-a-first-supreme-court-gives-green-signal-for-passive-euthanasia/ — (Tier 3)