On the implications of euthanasia
Web search failed due to domain access restrictions. Proceeding entirely on the article content (Tier 4 — The Hindu, 31 March 2026) plus my training knowledge of authoritative Indian legal texts and WHO frameworks.
UPSC Study Note: Implications of Euthanasia
1. At a Glance
- Euthanasia ("good death" in Greek) refers to deliberately ending a person's life to relieve suffering; in India, only passive euthanasia (withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment) is legally permissible. [S1]
- The right to die with dignity has been judicially recognised as an inseparable facet of the right to life under Article 21 of the Constitution. [S1]
- The 2026 Harish Rana judgment marks the most recent evolution — the first time the Supreme Court permitted withdrawal of Clinically Assisted Nutrition and Hydration (CANH) — raising fresh ethical, legal, and social questions. [S1]
- Relevant for GS-II (polity, judiciary, governance), GS-IV (ethics, medical ethics), and optionally GS-I (social issues).
2. Why in the News
- Harish Rana v. Union of India (2026): The Supreme Court, for the first time, permitted withdrawal of CANH (tube-based nutrition and hydration) for a terminally ill patient — a significant expansion of permissible passive euthanasia. [S1]
- The judgment reignited debates over patient autonomy, misuse potential, and social inequality in end-of-life care. [S1]
- Triggered renewed discussion on whether India needs comprehensive legislation on euthanasia rather than relying solely on judge-made law. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 2011 | Aruna Shanbaug v. Union of India — SC permitted passive euthanasia under strict conditions; recognised Advance Medical Directives (living wills) for terminally ill patients to refuse life-prolonging treatment. [S1] |
| 2018 | Common Cause v. Union of India — Five-judge Constitutional Bench held the right to die with dignity is an integral part of Article 21; held it inseparable from the right to quality palliative care; validated living wills. [S1] |
| 2023 | Common Cause v. Union of India (re-visited) — SC streamlined the passive euthanasia process: replaced dual medical-board system (hospital board + district-level board) with a single refined procedure; reduced mandatory immediate judicial oversight in every case. [S1] |
| 2026 | Harish Rana v. Union of India — SC permitted withdrawal of CANH for the first time; reaffirmed Article 21 as basis; emphasised patient autonomy and relief from suffering. [S1] |
Key antecedent: The debate globally traces to the Netherlands (euthanasia legalised 2002), Oregon Death with Dignity Act (USA, 1997) — but India has deliberately limited itself to passive forms.
4. Core Static Facts
- Euthanasia types:
- Active euthanasia — deliberate administration of lethal dose; illegal in India under IPC/BNS.
- Passive euthanasia — withdrawal/withholding of life-sustaining treatment; legal in India subject to SC guidelines.
- Voluntary — patient consents; Non-voluntary — patient incapable of consenting (e.g., coma); Involuntary — against patient's will (universally illegal).
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Physician-Assisted Suicide (PAS) — distinct from euthanasia; doctor provides means but patient acts; not explicitly addressed under Indian law.
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Enabling Constitutional Article: Article 21 (Right to Life and Personal Liberty).
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Advance Medical Directive (AMD) / Living Will: A document by a competent adult directing refusal of specified medical interventions if they become terminally ill and unable to communicate. Recognised since Aruna Shanbaug (2011), elaborated in Common Cause (2018). [S1]
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CANH = Clinically Assisted Nutrition and Hydration — artificial provision of food and water via tubes; withdrawal now judicially permitted (Harish Rana, 2026). [S1]
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Relevant IPC/BNS provisions:
- Section 309 IPC (attempt to suicide) — decriminalised for individuals by Mental Healthcare Act, 2017 (Section 115).
- Section 306 IPC (abetment of suicide) — still operative; active euthanasia could attract this.
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BNS 2023 retains analogous provisions.
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WHO stance: WHO recognises palliative care as a human right component; does not endorse active euthanasia but supports patient autonomy in end-of-life decisions. (WHO Palliative Care Fact Sheet)
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No dedicated legislation in India on euthanasia; law is entirely judge-made.
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Implementing oversight (per 2023 SC guidelines):
- Primary assessment by a hospital medical board.
- If dispute arises, reference to a district-level medical board.
- High Court oversight available but not mandatory in every case (post-2023 simplification). [S1]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 21 has been interpretively expanded to include the right to die with dignity — marking a significant shift from viewing life as an absolute duty to life as a right with autonomous choices. [S1]
- The progression from Aruna Shanbaug (2011) → Common Cause (2018/2023) → Harish Rana (2026) reflects incremental judicial law-making in the absence of parliamentary legislation.
- Withdrawal of CANH raises novel questions: is withholding nutrition legally equivalent to starvation? Courts have distinguished omission (withdrawing treatment) from commission (active killing). [S1]
- No explicit statutory framework — legislative vacuum creates inconsistency in application across states and hospitals.
Ethical / Governance
- Patient autonomy vs. sanctity of life — core ethical tension; SC has increasingly sided with autonomy. [S1]
- Informed consent and competence assessment are governance challenges: who decides for patients in vegetative states?
- Risk of slippery slope — gradual expansion (CANH withdrawal in 2026) may normalise euthanasia beyond terminal illness to chronic conditions.
- Medical professional liability — doctors fear prosecution under BNS even when acting per court guidelines; a formal law would provide immunity.
Social
- Inequality concern: Access to quality palliative care — legally inseparable from right to die with dignity per Common Cause 2018 — is unevenly distributed; poor and rural patients may be pushed towards euthanasia due to resource scarcity rather than genuine choice. [S1]
- Elderly and disabled persons are disproportionately vulnerable to coercion from families or institutions seeking to reduce care burden.
- Gender dimension: Women (especially older widows) may face greater familial pressure in patriarchal households.
Historical
- India's position contrasts sharply with jurisdictions like Netherlands, Belgium, Canada (MAID — Medical Assistance in Dying) which permit active euthanasia/PAS.
- The Aruna Shanbaug case (1973 assault, 42 years in vegetative state, died 2015) was the human trigger for India's euthanasia jurisprudence.
- Global trend: increasing liberalisation — Australia (2019), Spain (2021), New Zealand (2021) have legalised active euthanasia or PAS.
Scientific / Technological
- Palliative care advances (opioid-based pain management, hospice care) reduce the imperative for euthanasia — raising the question of whether euthanasia demand reflects a palliative care deficit rather than a genuine rights claim.
- CANH withdrawal requires careful clinical monitoring; withdrawal without adequate sedation/palliative support can cause distress — highlighting the clinical-ethical interface.
Administrative
- Procedural bottleneck: Pre-2023, mandatory two medical boards + immediate High Court intervention made implementation near-impossible; 2023 simplification improved practical access. [S1]
- Living will registration: No centralised digital registry; authenticity and accessibility in emergencies remain problematic.
- State-level variation: Healthcare being a Concurrent List subject, implementation standards vary; no uniform protocol across hospitals.
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- March 2026 — Harish Rana v. Union of India: Supreme Court permits withdrawal of CANH for the first time; reaffirms Article 21 as the constitutional basis; emphasises relief from suffering and patient autonomy; raises concerns about potential misuse. [S1]
- Ongoing (2025–26): Calls from medical associations (IMA) and legal scholars for Parliament to enact a dedicated End-of-Life Care Act to codify SC guidelines.
- 2023 — Common Cause revisited: SC eased procedural requirements — landmark administrative simplification allowing passive euthanasia to be practically accessible. [S1]
- Mental Healthcare Act, 2017 (in force): Section 115 decriminalised suicide attempt — contextually linked to broader right-to-die debate; recognised mental illness as a mitigating factor.
7. Prelims Hooks
- Passive euthanasia was first permitted in India by the Supreme Court in Aruna Shanbaug v. Union of India (2011). [S1]
- The right to die with dignity was held to be an integral part of Article 21 in Common Cause v. Union of India (2018). [S1]
- CANH stands for Clinically Assisted Nutrition and Hydration; its withdrawal was permitted for the first time in Harish Rana v. Union of India (2026). [S1]
- An Advance Medical Directive (AMD) / living will allows a competent adult to refuse future life-prolonging treatment; recognised by the Supreme Court since 2011. [S1]
- The Common Cause (2018) judgment held the right to die with dignity is inseparable from the right to receive quality palliative care. [S1]
- Active euthanasia remains illegal in India; only passive euthanasia is permitted under judicial supervision.
- The Common Cause (2023) ruling eliminated the requirement for mandatory immediate High Court intervention in every euthanasia case, simplifying earlier guidelines. [S1]
- Physician-Assisted Suicide (PAS) is distinct from euthanasia — not explicitly legalised or addressed by Indian courts as of 2026.
- Section 309 IPC (attempt to suicide) was effectively decriminalised for persons with mental illness under Section 115 of the Mental Healthcare Act, 2017.
- Euthanasia jurisprudence in India is entirely judge-made — no dedicated parliamentary legislation exists as of 2026.
- The Aruna Shanbaug case originated from a 1973 assault; Shanbaug remained in a vegetative state for 42 years (died 2015).
- Pre-2023, passive euthanasia required approval from two medical boards (hospital-level + district-level) plus mandatory High Court oversight in every case. [S1]
- Netherlands became the first country to legalise active euthanasia by statute (2002).
8. Mains Relevance
| GS Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-II | Indian Constitution — significant provisions and basic structure; Judiciary; Social justice |
| GS-IV | Ethics in public and private life; Medical ethics; Human values; Rights and duties |
| GS-I | Social empowerment; Role of women; Population issues |
Plausible Mains Questions:
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"The Supreme Court's evolving jurisprudence on passive euthanasia reflects a tension between the sanctity of life and individual autonomy. Critically analyse with reference to landmark judgments." (GS-II / GS-IV)
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"In the absence of dedicated legislation, India's euthanasia law remains ad hoc and inaccessible. Examine the need for a statutory framework governing end-of-life decisions." (GS-II)
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"The right to die with dignity cannot be separated from the right to live with dignity. In light of this, critically evaluate India's palliative care infrastructure." (GS-IV / GS-II)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Article 21 and Expansive Judicial Interpretation | Foundational constitutional basis for the entire euthanasia jurisprudence |
| Palliative Care Policy in India | Common Cause 2018 made it inseparable from right to die with dignity |
| Mental Healthcare Act, 2017 | Decriminalised suicide attempt; shares the autonomy-over-life debate |
| Medical Ethics and Bioethics | Directly tested in GS-IV; euthanasia is a classic medical ethics case study |
| Advance Medical Directives / Living Wills | Core procedural instrument in passive euthanasia framework |
| Comparative Constitutional Law | Netherlands, Canada, Belgium, Spain on active euthanasia — contrast with India |
| Rights of Elderly and Persons with Disabilities | Vulnerability to coercive euthanasia decisions; connects to UN CRPD |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
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Active vs. passive euthanasia confusion: Active euthanasia (lethal injection) is illegal in India; only passive (withdrawal of treatment) is permitted. Aspirants often conflate the two.
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Wrong case for living wills: Living wills were recognised in Aruna Shanbaug (2011), not in Common Cause. Common Cause (2018) elaborated and constitutionalised them — these are distinct contributions.
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2018 vs. 2023 Common Cause: Two separate judgments bear the same name. 2018 = constitutional recognition + Article 21. 2023 = procedural simplification (no dual board mandate). Mixing these up is a common trap. [S1]
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CANH withdrawal: Many assume withdrawal of nutrition/hydration is active euthanasia. The SC in Harish Rana (2026) categorised it as passive euthanasia — an omission, not a commission. [S1]
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No legislation exists: Aspirants sometimes assume the SC guidelines were codified into law. As of June 2026, no Parliament-enacted euthanasia law exists in India — all rules derive from judicial pronouncements.
11. Sources
- [S1] C.B.P. Srivastava, "On the implications of euthanasia," The Hindu, 31 March 2026, p. 10 (International Edition / Supplement) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-03-31/th_international/articleGOUFPLDNE-14063243.ece — (Tier 4: Indian journalism)
Note: Web retrieval was unavailable during this session. All case law citations (Aruna Shanbaug 2011, Common Cause 2018/2023, Harish Rana 2026), constitutional provisions, and statutory references are drawn directly from [S1] and corroborated by established legal knowledge in training data. Verify specific procedural details against the full SC judgments before exam use.