(ZENIT News / Madrid, 01.28.2026).- Spain has crossed another sobering threshold in its short history with legalized euthanasia and assisted suicide.
Newly released official figures show that 426 people ended their lives through state-approved assisted suicide or euthanasia in 2021 — a 27.54% increase over 2023, when 334 deaths were recorded. Compared with 2022, the first full year after legalization, the rise is even sharper: nearly 48%.
Behind those percentages lies a rapidly expanding practice that is reshaping end-of-life medicine in Spain — and placing the country at the center of a wider international debate about how far assisted dying laws should go.
Unlike many jurisdictions, Spain imposes no six- or twelve-month prognosis requirement for eligibility. Patients do not need to be terminally ill. Instead, the law allows assisted death for those experiencing what authorities define as “serious and incurable” conditions or “serious chronic suffering,” a framework that has opened the door to a broad range of diagnoses.
In 2024, neurological disorders were the most common underlying condition among applicants, accounting for 302 cases. Cancer followed closely, with 276 people seeking assisted death. Cardiovascular and respiratory illnesses made up much of the remainder.
Another revealing indicator is the appeals process. In 2023, 188 requests were initially denied; 78 applicants appealed, and more than 40% of those appeals — 32 cases — were overturned, allowing euthanasia to proceed. In 2024, 157 applications were rejected at first instance. Seventy-five people appealed, and 20 of them, or 26.67%, ultimately received authorization.
These figures suggest a system in motion, where initial safeguards are frequently revisited and reversed — raising questions about how restrictive the process truly is.
At the same time, Spain’s Ministry of Health has explored further expansions. According to Diario Médico, officials considered revising the country’s Manual of Good Practice for Euthanasia in 2024 to explicitly include mental illness. A draft proposal stated that Spain’s euthanasia law “does not exclude mental illness,” potentially allowing people suffering from psychiatric conditions to request assisted death on equal footing with patients whose suffering stems from physical disease.
Although no final change has yet been enacted, the mere consideration reflects a broader international trend: once assisted dying is legalized, eligibility criteria tend to widen.
That pattern is already visible elsewhere.
In Victoria, Australia, lawmakers recently amended their assisted dying framework just six years after it came into force in June 2019. Previously, access was limited to those expected to live six months or less — or twelve months for neurodegenerative diseases. The revised law now doubles that timeframe to twelve months for all conditions, substantially expanding the pool of eligible patients.
Canada offers an even starker example. There, euthanasia is legal nationwide, and concerns are mounting over the program’s growing scope. Physicians have publicly argued that euthanasia for newborn babies with disabilities “could be an appropriate treatment.” Representing Quebec’s College of Physicians before a parliamentary committee, Dr. Louis Roy previously recommended allowing euthanasia for infants with “severe deformities” or “very serious medical syndromes.” The College reaffirmed this position as recently as August 2025.
Meanwhile, the debate is intensifying in the United Kingdom. A proposed Assisted Suicide Bill for England and Wales — formally titled the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill — is currently moving through the House of Lords. The legislation would permit assisted suicide for adults with a life expectancy of six months or less.
During its second reading, 67% of peers who spoke opposed the bill, with many pointing to the rapid expansion of assisted dying regimes abroad as a cautionary tale.
Catherine Robinson, spokesperson for Right To Life UK, cited Spain’s latest figures as evidence of what can follow legalization.
“This drastic increase in the number of people in Spain ending their lives through euthanasia or assisted suicide is incredibly worrying and deeply sad,” she said. “Where assisted suicide or euthanasia is legalized, the numbers tend to rise year after year, alongside calls to broaden eligibility even further.”
She warned that England and Wales could face a similar trajectory if the bill becomes law.
For Catholic leaders and ethicists, these developments touch on fundamental questions about human dignity, medical responsibility, and the role of the state in life-and-death decisions. The Church has consistently taught that euthanasia and assisted suicide are morally unacceptable, emphasizing instead palliative care and accompaniment for the suffering.
Spain’s experience now stands as one of Europe’s most striking case studies: a country where assisted death has moved swiftly from legalization to normalization — and where the boundaries continue to shift.
What began as an exception framed around extreme suffering is increasingly becoming part of routine healthcare policy. And as lawmakers across continents look to Spain and similar models, the debate is no longer merely about end-of-life choices. It is about how societies define care, vulnerability, and the value of human life itself.
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