Jane Morris, President of Dying with Dignity Victoria, traces her lifelong commitment to voluntary assisted dying, shaped by childhood experiences, nursing practice, bioethics study, and the traumatic death of her mother from motor neurone disease.
She reflects on the pioneering advocacy of Rodney Syme and the catalytic public impact of Andrew Denton. She outlines Victoria’s recent VAD law reforms, including improved access, reduced safeguards, expanded practitioner roles, removal of the gag clause, workforce support, and patient choice in administration. Jane also highlights ongoing challenges, particularly institutional objection and the unresolved issue of dementia and advance directives.
Dying with Dignity Victoria
https://www.dwdv.org.au/
Comprehensive information on Voluntary Assisted Dying in Your State is provided on the Go Gentle website at https://www.gogentleaustralia.org.au/vad_in_your_state or by contacting your State Health Department.
If listening to this podcast raises distressing issues for you, please contact one of the following support services:
Griefline (https://griefline.org.au/) 1300 845 745
Grief Australia (https://www.grief.org.au/) 1800 642 745
Lifeline (https://www.lifeline.org.au/) 13 11 14, or chat online 24 hours a day

Episode 18 - Kimberly
22:09

Episode 17 – How the NT led the world on assisted dying
37:07

Episode 16 – Dr Arnold’s opposition to acceptance of VAD: a personal journey
22:13