Palliative care is deeply underfunded and unequal. Assisted dying cannot go ahead until politicians right that wrong Time is running out to right the wrongs of England and Wales’s assisted dying legislation. The House of Lords is holding committee sittings, which involve line-by-line examinations of the bill, on 5 and 12 December. Meanwhile, the second stage of the Scottish assisted dying for terminally ill adults bill has recently been completed. In many ways, the Scottish legislation is even more troubling. The issue with the private member’s bill on assisted dying has always been a question of priorities. The shocking revelations from the National Audit Office and Hospice UK in October about the worsening financial crisis faced by end-of-life care are a sharp reminder of what needs to be changed if we are to be fair to dying people. Gordon Brown was UK prime minister from 2007 to 2010 Continue reading...