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


2. Why in the News


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


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Social

Historical

Scientific / Technological

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Passive euthanasia was first permitted in India by the Supreme Court in Aruna Shanbaug v. Union of India (2011). [S1]
  2. 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]
  3. 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]
  4. 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]
  5. The Common Cause (2018) judgment held the right to die with dignity is inseparable from the right to receive quality palliative care. [S1]
  6. Active euthanasia remains illegal in India; only passive euthanasia is permitted under judicial supervision.
  7. The Common Cause (2023) ruling eliminated the requirement for mandatory immediate High Court intervention in every euthanasia case, simplifying earlier guidelines. [S1]
  8. Physician-Assisted Suicide (PAS) is distinct from euthanasia — not explicitly legalised or addressed by Indian courts as of 2026.
  9. Section 309 IPC (attempt to suicide) was effectively decriminalised for persons with mental illness under Section 115 of the Mental Healthcare Act, 2017.
  10. Euthanasia jurisprudence in India is entirely judge-made — no dedicated parliamentary legislation exists as of 2026.
  11. The Aruna Shanbaug case originated from a 1973 assault; Shanbaug remained in a vegetative state for 42 years (died 2015).
  12. Pre-2023, passive euthanasia required approval from two medical boards (hospital-level + district-level) plus mandatory High Court oversight in every case. [S1]
  13. 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:

  1. "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)

  2. "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)

  3. "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

  1. 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.

  2. 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.

  3. 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]

  4. 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]

  5. 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


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.