Defining moment for law on passive euthanasia in India

Harish Rana was once a 18 year-old engineering student with the easy confidence of youth and the promise of a long life ahead. A tragic fall from the fourth floor of a building changed everything. Doctors managed to save his life, but not his brain. For the past 13 years, Harish has remained trapped in a body that breathes but does not live. The lives of his parents have been consumed by an exhausting cycle of caregiving, emotional anguish, financial burden and helplessness. This forced his family, and then the courts, to confront one of the most difficult ethical questions of modern medicine: Are we extending his life or merely postponing his inevitable death? What does dignity demand?

The Supreme Court of India has already recognised the right to die with dignity in the landmark Common Cause judgment. Yet, the Delhi High Court rejected Harish’s parents’ petition to allow him to pass away. The Court observed that earlier rulings on passive euthanasia largely concerned patients who were kept alive through life-support systems such as ventilators, dialysis or heart-lung machines. Harish, however, was not dependent on such equipment.

The Supreme Court directed the constitution of two independent medical boards to examine his condition. Both boards concluded unequivocally that there was no chance of meaningful neurological recovery.

Still, a difficult legal question remained unresolved. Withdrawal of medical support such as a ventilator is one thing; withholding artificial feeding is another. Would withholding feeding amount to active euthanasia? If so, it would be illegal in India.

After a long wait, the judgment was delivered, fortunately, in favour of Harish and his parents.

Harish may soon be gone. But his story will live on in the minds of countless families who face — or may one day face — similar situations caused by devastating neurological injuries, advanced age, or conditions such as Alzheimer’s or terminal illnesses such as cancer.

This case is likely to have a lasting impact on medical ethics and end-of-life decision-making in India. Even today, the Code of Medical Ethics considers euthanasia — except in cases of brain death for organ donation — to be an “unethical act”. In a public interest litigation that I filed before the Bombay High Court, I highlighted this contradiction between evolving constitutional principles and outdated ethical guidelines. In April 2024, the High Court directed the National Medical Commission to examine the issue; yet, those directions have still not been implemented. The Supreme Court’s order in the Harish Rana case will now push medical regulators to adopt a more humane and practical understanding of passive euthanasia.

The case also exposes serious gaps in the implementation of the Common Cause guidelines. Harish’s parents must have had to approach the courts because they had no practical way to access a medical board. Under the Common Cause framework, the responsibility of setting up such boards lies with the hospital in which the patient is admitted. But Harish was being cared for at home.

Furthermore, the guidelines require one doctor on the board to represent the district’s chief medical officer. In my PIL, I had urged the Court to direct the state to create panels of such doctors in every district. Unfortunately, most states have not acted on this requirement.

The Harish Rana case also highlights the importance of living wills, or advanced medical directives. A living will is a document in which an individual records his or her wishes regarding medical interventions such as ventilators, dialysis, feeding tubes or other invasive procedures in the event of serious and irreversible illness. Such directives can guide both doctors and family members when the patient is unable to communicate.

Expecting a healthy 24-year-old Harish to create such a document would have been unrealistic. But, hypothetically, if such a directive had existed, the legal and ethical dilemma might have been far easier to resolve.

After the Supreme Court clarified the law on living wills in 2023, I prepared my own advance directive. Yet I could not find a custodian in Mumbai because the state had not appointed one. Following directions in my PIL, the Maharashtra government finally appointed 413 custodians in March 2024. To my knowledge, very few other states — except Goa — have taken similar steps.

To talk about death remains a taboo in India. Many elders assume their families will automatically make the right decisions when difficult medical questions arise. In reality, such situations often lead to confusion, disagreement, emotional distress and enormous financial strain. Clear written instructions in the form of a living will can spare families this suffering and ensure that the patient’s own wishes remain central.

Without widespread awareness of living wills, reform of medical ethics around end-of-life care, accessible palliative care and an administrative system that allows families to seek timely medical review, the constitutional right to die with dignity will remain largely theoretical.

For 13 years, Harish Rana’s life has been suspended between biology and humanity filled with unimaginable suffering. If this case helps India to speak more openly about death, encourages people to write living wills, and pushes institutions to act with compassion, then Harish’s silent death will leave behind a powerful legacy.

Nikhil Datar is a senior obstetrician-gynaecologist. The views expressed are personal

Latest

New bill marks a regressive turn in transgender rights

The Bill attacks the fundamental principle that people can self-identify with their gender identity

Equity must underpin energy transition policy

Policies to promote clean transportation must keep two objectives in mind — reduction of non-renewable resource consumption and equity in promotion of new tec

Purges in China’s PLA and Xi’s tightening grip

Xi’s anti-corruption campaign has felled hundreds of senior cadres since its inception in 2013

30 years later, deja vu for Rajinikanth as out-of-politics Thalaiva is dragged into politics

Thirty years ago, the Superstar owned the 1996 election with his swag, style and one-liner. He had famously said, ''Even God cannot save Tamil Nadu if the AIADM

Nato’s ‘nay’ to Trump: Why Europe wants no part of America’s war on Iran

The conflict initiated by Donald Trump has escalated into a difficult war with Iran, but European Nato allies have largely refused to support it, arguing it is

Topics

Neural Dispatch: AI is slop, an unripe fruit and an insomniac

The biggest AI developments, decoded. 18 March 2026.

Heart surgeon with 25 years of experience warns minutes matter during a stroke; shares warning signs to never ignore

A stroke occurs when blood flow to the brain is disrupted, leading to brain cell death. Key symptoms can be remembered with BE FAST, Dr Jeremy suggests.

Reliance accelerates plans for Jio IPO, DRHP likely in the next 2-3 weeks

The Jio IPO DRHP will include the December-end financials, setting the stage for a highly anticipated listing at a valuation seen at $100-120 billion.

Oscars producers defend In Memoriam segment amid growing backlash over Dharmendra, Eric Dane omissions

Broadcast executives defended the decision to omit some names from the In Memoriam segment during the Oscars 2026 broadcast. 

Adani secures $1.7-bn takeover of bankrupt Jaypee Group in major infra win

The acquisition of Jaiprakash Associates, or Jaypee Group, adds cement, real estate and a Formula One racetrack to Adani Enterprises' portfolio.

Nirav Modi uses Bhandari judgment in bid to ‘reopen’ his extradition

International Business News: TOI correspondent from London: Fugitive jeweller Nirav Modi appeared at the high court here on Tuesday in a bid to get the court to

Bollywood bets on Dhurandhar 2 to script a box office redemption

Given the buzz around the sequel, Jio Studios have also re-released the original film in 1,200 screens across India.

KD The Devil director’s wife Rakshita on Sarke Chunar row: ‘When Peelings, Choli ke Peeche came out, it seemed fine’

The song Sarke Chunar from director Prem's upcoming Kannada film, KD: The Devil, has landed in controversy over its suggestive lyrics.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img