HomeNews UpdateFrench National Assembly passes assisted dying Bill, with tweaks

French National Assembly passes assisted dying Bill, with tweaks

The French National Assembly has passed the assisted dying Bill – a law that has sparked controversy countrywide – with 295 votes versus 232 against, after it was rejected by the Senate in January, reports Euronews.

The Bill, sparking debate on how to regulate end-of-life assistance, has undergone several amendments since its first proposal. Critics are divided, with some arguing it has been watered down in the process, while others still consider it too permissive.

However, the members of the Assembly in charge of the law noted that the final text “has reached a point of balance”.

The proposed law creates a right to aided dying for adults with grave incurable illnesses in an advanced or terminal phase. One key change in the final text is that psychological suffering alone has been excluded from access to assisted dying.

Only patients who are physically unable to administer the substance themselves would be allowed to have a doctor or nurse do it for them.

Patients must be over 18 and be French citizens or residents in the country.

A team of medical professionals would need to confirm that the patient has a grave and incurable illness “at an advanced or terminal stage”, with constant suffering from intolerable and untreatable pain, and is seeking lethal medication of their own free will.

The proposed law would also create a conscience clause for healthcare professionals who do not wish to participate in this procedure and would then require them to refer the patient to other healthcare professionals.

Long road to approval

The end-of-life legislation was first officially proposed in 2024, before being approved by the National Assembly in May 2025.

However, on 28 January, the Senate rejected the bill by 181 votes against and 122 in favour.

After the disagreement between the chambers, a joint committee made up of seven senators and seven deputies met to find a balance but failed to reach a compromise, sending the bill back to the National Assembly.

Now that the text has once again been approved, it will return to the Senate again, and if the two chambers still fail to reach an agreement, the National Assembly can have the final word.

 

Euronews article – France’s National Assembly approves assisted dying bill after Senate rejection

 

See more from MedicalBrief archives:

 

France votes to legalise assisted dying

 

France plans assisted suicide law change

 

French court orders resumption of life support in ‘right-to-die' controversy

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