A New Jersey law that permits terminally ill people to seek life-ending drugs applies only to residents of the state and not those from beyond its borders, a federal appeals court ruled.
The Philadelphia-based 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected arguments challenging New Jersey's residency requirement while acknowledging how fraught end-of-life decisions can be. The court noted that not all states have adopted the same approach.
''Death brings good things to an end, but rarely neatly,'' U.S. Circuit Court Judge Stephanos Bibas wrote in the Friday opinion. "Many terminally ill patients face a grim reality: imminent, painful death. Some may want to avert that suffering by enlisting a doctor's help to end their own lives. New Jersey lets its residents make that choice—but only its residents."
In addition to New Jersey, the District of Columbia and 10 other states permit assisted suicide in terminal cases. The majority of states limit the option to its residents. Oregon and Vermont authorize it for everyone.
The case was brought by a Delaware woman with stage 4 lymphoma who wanted the option of doctor-assisted suicide and challenged the New Jersey residency requirement but died after oral arguments in the case. Delaware will begin to allow doctor-assisted suicide on Jan. 1.
A New Jersey doctor who sought to help patients like the Delaware woman also challenged the law. Initially, there were other plaintiffs, including a Pennsylvania woman who had metastatic breast cancer but who died before the appeal of a lower court's dismissal of the challenge, as well as another New Jersey doctor who has retired.
Dr. Paul Bryman, one of the plaintiffs, said in a statement he was disappointed in the opinion.
''Terminal patients outside New Jersey should have the option of medical aid in dying without having to travel long distances,'' he said.