A 47-year-old woman in Peru living with an incurable and degenerative illness was granted the right to euthanasia amid a long and painful court battle, trailblazing the country’s laws regarding people’s choice to end their lives. For the past thirty years, Ana Estrada, from Lima, Peru, lived with polymyositis, condemning her to stay bedridden and requiring a ventilator to breathe. According to Johns Hopkins Medicine, polymyositis is a disease that causes muscles to become irritated and inflamed. 

Share icon Image credits: América Noticias The muscles eventually start to break down and become weak. Additionally, the condition can affect muscles all over the body. Experts think that polymyositis may be related to or triggered by a virus or an autoimmune reaction. Following decades of pain, a lengthy court battle in the Peruvian capital ended in a landmark ruling, allowing her to end her life with medical assistance, Estrada’s lawyer, Josefina Miro Quesada, said on Monday (April 22). Share icon Image credits: adn40Mx Taking to X (formerly known as Twitter), Miro Quesada announced that her client officially died on Sunday (April 21). Estrada, who used to work as a psychologist, went to court in 2016 to fight for access to euthanasia, which is illegal in Peru, Reuters reported. As of 2023, euthanasia is legal in Belgium, Canada, Colombia, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Portugal (law not yet in force, awaiting regulation), Spain, and all six states of Australia.

Announcing Estrada’s death on social media, her lawyer said she had “exercised her fundamental right to a dignified death”

Share icon Image credits: Josefina_28 Euthanasia must not be confused with assisted suicide, which is legal in Austria, Belgium, Canada, Germany, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Portugal, Spain, Switzerland, parts of the United States, and all six states of Australia. According to the Maxim Institute, euthanasia is when an attending medical or nurse practitioner takes an action with the singular intention of causing a patient’s death. Generally, this is in the form of a lethal injection. Meanwhile, assisted suicide is when a suicide is intentionally aided by the attending medical or nurse practitioner, and the person self-administers the medication. That is, the medical practitioner will prescribe a lethal drug that the patient will usually take orally. Share icon Image credits: adn40Mx In 2022, Peru’s Supreme Court reportedly confirmed a ruling that gave Estrada an exemption to end her life. “Ana has left us grateful to all the people who helped give her a voice, who were with her through this fight and who supported her decision unconditionally, with love,” Miro Quesada said, as per Reuters. In an interview with Reuters published in July 2022, following her court win, Estrada said she hoped her case would set a legal precedent for the right to assisted suicide (it is currently unclear whether Estrada died by euthanasia or assisted suicide).

Estrada was left bedridden and required a ventilator to breathe before being finally euthanized on Sunday (April 21)

Share icon Image credits: América Noticias Under Peruvian law, assisting someone’s suicide and killing terminally ill patients are punishable with prison time. While the Supreme Court ruling did not legalize assisted dying, it exempted the doctor who supplied the drug to end Estrada’s life from any punishment. “There will come a time when I will no longer be able to write, or express myself,” Estrada said at the time. “My body fails, but my mind and spirit are happy. I want the last moments of my life to be just like this.”

Image credits: Associated Press The reason it took two years for Estrada to finally be euthanized is unclear for now. Bored Panda has contacted Miro Quesada for comment.

“We treat our dying pets better than we do humans,”  a reader commented

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