In the weeks leading up to her death, Maynard was said to have become the face of the United States right-to-die debate, commanding public attention, with over 16 million unique visitors reading her story on
People's website.
Arthur Caplan, of
New York University's Division of
Medical ethics, wrote that because Maynard was "young, vivacious, attractive … and a very different kind of person" from the average patient seeking physician-assisted dying, then averaging age 71 in Oregon, she "changed the optics of the debate" and got people in her generation interested in the issue.
Marcia Angell, the former editor-in-chief of the
New England Journal of Medicine, wrote that Maynard was a "new face" of the assisted dying movement who had "greatly helped future patients who want the same choice." However, some terminally ill individuals publicly criticized Maynard's promotion of assisted suicide. Terminal cancer patients Kara Tippetts and Maggie Karner both sent letters to Maynard asking her to reconsider. Three days after Maynard's death, a top
Catholic church official mentioned her decision to die in the context of reiterating the Catholic Church's position on the right-to-die debate, noting that, "Suicide is not a good thing. It is a bad thing because it is saying no to life and to everything it means with respect to our mission in the world and toward those around us." The
National Right to Life Committee (NRLC) asserted that from its perspective, Maynard's chosen non-profit,
Compassion & Choices had "exploited the illness of Brittany Maynard to promote legalization of doctor prescribed suicide in the states." Maynard's mother defended her daughter's decision via a letter released by Compassion & Choices, stating "My twenty-nine-year-old daughter's choice to die gently rather than suffer physical and mental degradation and intense pain does not deserve to be labelled as reprehensible by strangers a continent away who do not know her or the particulars of her situation." At the time of Maynard's death, only three states had death-with-dignity laws, with two others having court rulings protecting physicians who help patients die, and bills having been introduced in seven other states. Polls have found the American public divided on the introduction of such laws. Maynard's activism has been a strong focus of Connecticut's proposed assisted death legislation. Maynard's family have played video testimony that she recorded for proposed legislative change in her home state of California. On September 11, 2015, California lawmakers gave final approval to Senate Bill (SB 128)
End of Life Option Act. A modified version of the bill, ABx2 15, was signed into law by Governor
Jerry Brown on October 5, 2015. It went into effect on June 9, 2016. On May 15, 2018, a state judge blocked this law on the grounds that it was improper to consider a right-to-die bill during a special session of the state legislature that was supposed to be focused on health care spending and access issues. The law was reinstated by a state appeals court the following month. Hawaii has become the seventh state to legalize medically assisted suicide. Hawaii Governor
David Ige signed the bill into law in Honolulu on April 5, 2018. The law took effect on January 1, 2019. ==See also==