Right to Palliative Care and End-of-Life Decisions in Uttar Pradesh
Reviewed by the Commoner Law Editorial Team. Sourced from Indian central (Union) law — Constitution of India, central Acts of Parliament, and Supreme Court decisions. State-level information reflects each state's own Acts and High Court rulings. Written in plain language for general understanding — this is educational content, not legal advice. Our editorial standards
What is this right?
The Supreme Court in Common Cause (2018) recognised the right of a terminally ill patient to refuse life-sustaining treatment — upholding the concept of "dying with dignity" as part of Article 21.
- Passive euthanasia is legal in India — withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment (ventilator, artificial nutrition) at the patient's informed refusal is permitted, and courts have allowed it with procedural safeguards.
- Advance Medical Directive (Living Will): The Supreme Court (Common Cause, 2018) permitted competent adults to make a valid advance directive specifying that they do not wish to be put on artificial life support in terminal illness. The directive must be:
- In writing, signed by the person and two witnesses.
- Countersigned by a Judicial Magistrate First Class.
- A Nominated Representative must be named to carry out the directive.
- Palliative care: The National Health Policy, 2017 recognises the need for universal access to palliative care — pain management (including opioid analgesics for terminal patients) is a part of the right to health under Article 21.
- Opioid access: The Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act (amended 2014) allows essential narcotic medicines (morphine, oxycodone) for pain management in palliative care through government hospitals and licensed institutions.
- Right to information: A terminally ill patient has the right to know their diagnosis and prognosis — doctors cannot withhold a terminal diagnosis from a competent patient (though family wishes can be considered).
When does it apply?
- You or a family member is terminally ill and wishes to refuse further curative treatment and focus on comfort/palliative care.
- You want to make an advance medical directive (Living Will) specifying your wishes for end-of-life care.
- A terminally ill person is in severe pain and requires access to opioid pain management.
What to Do If a Terminally Ill Person in India Is Being Denied Adequate Palliative Care
- To make an Advance Medical Directive: prepare a written document specifying your wishes, have it signed before two witnesses and a Judicial Magistrate First Class (JMFC), and keep a copy with your nominated representative and your family doctor.
- Discuss palliative care options with the treating doctor — every major government hospital must have a palliative care wing (National Health Policy mandate). Ask for a referral to the hospital's palliative care team or a specialist palliative care facility.
- If a family member is dying in pain and opioid medication is being withheld due to prescription reluctance, escalate to the hospital's pain management department or request a palliative care specialist's involvement.
What should you NOT do?
- Do not confuse passive euthanasia (legal) with active euthanasia (illegal) — the Supreme Court has only permitted withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment, not active steps to end life.
- Do not make an advance directive without the proper formalities (magistrate's countersignature) — an informal written note does not have the legal standing of the advance directive under Common Cause.
- Do not keep the advance directive secret from your nominated representative, family doctor, and the hospital — it must be accessible at the time of need to be acted upon.
How Uttar Pradesh differs from central law
Uttar Pradesh has been progressively developing palliative care services, though coverage remains limited compared to states like Kerala. The state follows the central NDPS (Amendment) Act, 2014 which simplified access to opioid medications for palliative care by reducing the regulatory requirements for hospitals to stock morphine and other essential pain medicines.
Major centres providing palliative care in UP include SGPGI Lucknow, KGMU Lucknow, BHU Varanasi, and the cancer hospitals in the state. The UP government has included palliative care in the state's public health framework, and the National Programme for Prevention and Control of Cancer, Diabetes, Cardiovascular Diseases and Stroke (NPCDCS) operates in select districts with a palliative care component.
Access to opioid pain medications remains a challenge in many parts of UP. The state's Drug Controller issues the necessary licenses for hospitals to procure and stock morphine. Patients requiring palliative care can also access home-based palliative care through certain NGOs and government programmes in urban areas.
Additional Steps in Uttar Pradesh
For palliative care services, contact the oncology or palliative care department at SGPGI Lucknow (0522-2668700), KGMU Lucknow, or BHU Varanasi. For issues with access to pain medication, contact the UP Drug Controller. The KIRAN helpline for mental health support in terminal illness: 1800-599-0019. The Indian Association of Palliative Care can help locate nearby palliative care providers.
Relevant Law: NDPS Act, 1985 (as amended 2014); UP NDPS Rules; National Programme for Palliative Care, Government of India
Common Questions
When does right to palliative care and end-of-life decisions apply?
You or a family member is terminally ill and wishes to refuse further curative treatment and focus on comfort/palliative care.You want to make an advance medical directive (Living Will) specifying your wishes for end-of-life care.A terminally ill person is in severe pain and requires access to opioid pain management.
What should I do if a hospital in India is refusing to allow my terminally ill family member to refuse further curative treatment?
To make an Advance Medical Directive: prepare a written document specifying your wishes, have it signed before two witnesses and a Judicial Magistrate First Class (JMFC), and keep a copy with your nominated representative and your family doctor.Discuss palliative care options with the treating doctor — every major government hospital must have a palliative care wing (National Health Policy mandate). Ask for a referral to the hospital's palliative care team or a specialist palliative care facility.If a family member is dying in pain and opioid medication is being withheld due to prescription re...
What mistakes should I avoid with right to palliative care and end-of-life decisions?
Do not confuse passive euthanasia (legal) with active euthanasia (illegal) — the Supreme Court has only permitted withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment, not active steps to end life.Do not make an advance directive without the proper formalities (magistrate's countersignature) — an informal written note does not have the legal standing of the advance directive under Common Cause.Do not keep the advance directive secret from your nominated representative, family doctor, and the hospital — it must be accessible at the time of need to be acted upon.
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