Out of Switzerland has come a new website, assistedlab.ch, devoted to exploring cultural productions that influence (and have been influenced by) the legal and political processes surrounding assisted dying. It is a curated clearinghouse for ideas and reflection on the topic.
But medically assisted death is not new. It has been present and debated since at least Greco-Roman antiquity and probably much earlier. However, its current status in various countries and within them is fraught with controversy even after legalization. For their involvement, euthanasia providers have been celebrated – and they have gone to jail. They have been portrayed as heroes or as villains, prominent among them American pathologist, Jack Kevorkian (1928-2011). Sometimes, health care workers are wrongly accused of killing their patients, especially when an unusual cluster of deaths arises – one example being the vicious prosecution of Canadian pediatric nurse Susan Nelles in 1981 for having murdered unhealthy neonates. She was later vindicated, absolved of all blame.
Yet those of us who have worked with seriously ill people on the hospital wards know that a therapeutic choice to help suffering can run the risk of shortening those few remaining days. I recall more than half a century ago, a diminutive, elderly patient, writhing in agony on her bed. A much-respected senior clinician on his rounds demanded to know why we had not given “enough” morphine. “But chief!” we protested, “to raise the dose could stop her breathing!” “Why are you giving morphine?” he asked. “To relieve the pain.” “Have you succeeded?” “No.” “Then give enough; enough to make her comfortable” We did. She stopped moaning and died soon after. Unforgettable. We realized that decisions like this must be happening everywhere, but they occur within a cloud of trepidation, as bereaved family members might choose to make accusations.
Prior to Canada’s 2016 legalization of medical assistance in dying (MAiD), people seeking help to end their lives with dignity would sometimes go to Switzerland. There, providing assistance to a person able to voluntarily self-administer lethal drugs had been legal (with variations) since the 1940s. In 1998, the Swiss non-profit organization Dignitas was founded to offer assisted death (or assurances thereof) to its members. In 2010, 89-year-old Kay Carter of Vancouver, who was suffering from spinal stenosis, went to Switzerland to end her life. It seemed outrageous that “death with dignity” was available to citizens who could afford to leave the country– yet everyone else was deprived. After her death, the Supreme Court decision that struck down Canada’s law against assisted suicide is known as “Carter vs Canada.” Considering that ordinary suicide had been illegal in Canada until 1972, these changes reflect a remarkable and relatively rapid shift in attitudes to death and dying.
But the controversies are not over. And Canada is far from alone. Religious objections can be found in many communities. Vulnerable and disabled people together with their caregivers worry that they could be targeted or urged to accept assisted suicide by institutions wanting to save money. The prohibitions on access for children or the mentally ill are repeatedly challenged and have been overturned in some jurisdictions. Psychiatrists argue that assisted suicide would rarely be contemplated if more mental health services were available. Palliative care doctors resent the implication that they should be the administrators of euthanasia; they saw themselves as purveyors of comfort for life, not death. They pointed to the World Health Organization emphasis on the global need for more palliative care, and they complained that the new law made patients even more hesitant to accept their help. Swirling throughout these debates is the well-intentioned question about how a society should treat the least of its members: humane treatment or humane killing.
It is scarcely surprising, then, Assistedlab.ch comes out of Switzerland; nor is it surprising that it finds a rich supply of sources. Launched in 2023, it claims to be “a living archive of assisted dying” that strives neither to endorse nor criticize the movement. Led by Anna Elsner, a professor of French Culture and Medical Humanities at the University of St Gallen whose 2011 doctorate from Cambridge focused on mourning in the work of Marcel Proust. Her polyglot team includes three other investigators and a manager, all with doctorates in either history or literature, all with Swiss affiliations. They are supported by ten assistants, mostly graduate students, seven from Canada and one each from the Netherlands, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom. They rely on an advisory board of four distinguished scholars from Montreal, Glasgow, London, and Garrison, New York (the Hastings Center).
Funded in part by a starting grant from the European Research Council for five years (2023-2028), assistedlab.ch also acknowledges support from several other universities. It is active on Bluesky with 1400 followers and, in mid-2025, launched a newsletter to feature the latest entries and events of interest.
Aside from its specific subject-matter, assistedlab.ch has many features in common with our own Medhum, the most obvious being the preparation of reviews by team members. The site is plain but attractive and color-coded for analysis of textual, performance, visual and audio sources, the majority being textual sources. Each menu entry sports a black and white image, which sometimes turns to color upon clicking. The sources – fiction and non-fiction books, short stories, essays, films, plays, artwork, podcasts, memoirs, news reports, and farewell letters from the recently deceased. Most sources are linked from the articles describing them, most from recent decades but some dating back to the 1990s. A bibliographic list of further reading in print or other media accompany each entry. Keyword tags and an efficient search function make exploration easy.
At the time of writing, assistedlab gathers more than a hundred articles, all in English, although the works examined can be in other languages. In addition, a news section, similarly color-coded, provides information about upcoming and recently past events: lectures, theatre, conferences, workshops, interviews and new publications. Thoughtful description takes precedence over hyperbolic criticism or praise, making the site welcoming for anyone approaching this dire matter with curiosity for themselves or their loved ones in terms of personal or professional life. It will be fascinating to learn usage statistics for assistedlab.ch, not only the numbers, but also the geographic origins and user traits, for it should serve a wide array of human beings as we wrestle with the most fundamental of existential questions facing us all.
Web image from Assistedlab.ch.










