France approves assisted dying for terminally ill patients
France’s National Assembly gave final approval to a project that allows adults with incurable diseases to receive medication to induce death. The vote was 291 in favor and 241 against, after three previous readings. President Emmanuel Macron recalled his 2022 commitment:
“With seriousness, with humility, and with total respect for our democracy, that commitment has been fulfilled.”
What changes with this law?
Assisted dying is now available to some 300 million people in the world, in different formats. France, a country with a Catholic tradition, had a law that allowed terminal patients to be sedated, but without active assistance in dying. Now, adults with incurable diseases will be able to request lethal medication, as long as they meet the medical requirements.
The legislative debate
Yael Braun-Pivet, president of the National Assembly, called the discussion “the longest since the 1980s.” Many French people traveled to neighboring countries where these practices were legal. The new law seeks to avoid these trips and offer an option within the French health system.
Reactions and context
The debate about the end of life is also advancing in the United Kingdom. A bill to legalize assisted dying in England and Wales will return to Parliament on September 11, five months after time ran out in the previous session. France, with an aging population and a growing number of chronic patients, thus joins the countries that regulate this option.




