With new voluntary assisted dying (VAD) laws recently passed in the ACT, it’s time to recap the status of VAD laws across Australia and their effects on residential aged care providers.
Although the precise definition varies across jurisdictions, VAD generally refers to the administration of a voluntary assisted dying substance to end a person’s life. In most Australian jurisdictions, VAD is (or will be) available to people who are suffering and dying from an advanced and progressive life-threatening condition. Strict eligibility criteria set out who can access VAD. An important criterion, as the term “voluntary” indicates, is that to access VAD the individual must have decision-making capacity throughout the entire process.
The Voluntary Assisted Dying Act 2024 (ACT) passed the Legislative Assembly in June 2024, but VAD will not be legal in the ACT until 3 November 2025.
According to the ACT Government, “the government will spend 18 months setting up the necessary systems and safeguards for the legislation's implementation, ensuring that voluntary assisted dying becomes a legal option for eligible people”.
The ACT laws are largely similar to the VAD laws in other jurisdictions but differ in two notable ways:
Similar to laws in South Australia, the ACT laws impose penalties on aged care facilities that hinder a resident’s access to VAD.
Jurisdiction |
Legislation |
Commencement |
Queensland |
Voluntary Assisted Dying Act 2021 (Qld) |
Commenced 31 January 2023. |
South Australia |
Voluntary Assisted Dying Act 2021 (SA) |
Commenced 1 July 2021. |
Western Australia |
Voluntary Assisted Dying Act 2019 (WA) |
Commenced 1 July 2021. |
Victoria |
Voluntary Assisted Dying Act 2017 (Vic) |
Commenced 19 June 2019. |
Tasmania |
End of Life Choices (Voluntary Assisted Dying) Act 2021 (Tas) |
Commenced 23 Oct 2022. |
New South Wales |
Voluntary Assisted Dying Bill 2021 (NSW) |
Commenced 28 November 2023. |
Northern Territory |
No legislation as at July 2024. Plans are underway. |
Until recently the territories did not have power to make VAD laws. That situation changed with the passing of the Restoring Territory Rights Act 2022 (Cth).
According to the Northern Territory Government, the NT Government carried out a community consultation in 2023-24 to develop a framework for VAD. Consultation closed 30 April 2024. An expert advisory panel is expected to consider all feedback from the consultation and report to Government by July 2024. |
Australian Capital Territory |
Voluntary Assisted Dying Act 2024 (ACT) |
VAD will become legal in the ACT on 3 November 2025. Between now and then the ACT Government will set up the necessary systems and safeguards for the legislation's implementation. |
Although the detail of VAD laws differs across the states and territories, there are some common features.
There are strict eligibility criteria that an individual must meet to access VAD. Generally, the person must:
The timeframe in which the disease, illness or medical condition must be expected to cause death differs across each jurisdiction but is generally within six to 12 months (although the timeframe will not apply at all in the ACT). A person is not eligible for VAD if their “medical condition” is a mental illness or disability.
To access VAD the individual must have decision-making capacity throughout the entire process. The individual must understand the information or advice about VAD and be able to use that information as part of the process of making their decision. The specific definition of decision-making capacity differs for each state/territory.
Residential aged care staff and health care practitioners have the right to refuse to participate in VAD if they have a conscientious objection.
Health care workers, including residential aged care staff, must not initiate discussions about VAD, this includes raising the topic of VAD with a resident or suggesting VAD to a resident. Doing so is considered an offence and unprofessional conduct. (There is a limited exception in Western Australia, where a medical practitioner or nurse practitioner can discuss VAD with a person under very specific circumstances). If, however, a resident requests information or they initiate a discussion about VAD, healthcare workers can provide information or answer questions about VAD that have been asked of them, provided they have the knowledge and are comfortable doing so.
VAD laws present aged care providers with operational, legal, and ethical challenges. Aged care providers should consider what role, if any, they wish to play in the VAD process. Aged care providers should:
Alyssa is a Senior Legal Content Associate at Ideagen CompliSpace. Having graduate from Macquarie University in Sydney, she holds a double bachelor’s degree in Commerce and Law. She has experience working as a lawyer in both private practice and in-house roles with a focus on employment and privacy laws.
Mark is a Content Team Lead at Ideagen CompliSpace and the editor for ACE. Mark has worked as a Legal Policy Officer for the Commonwealth Attorney-General’s Department and the NSW Department of Justice. He also spent three years as lead editor for the private sessions narratives team at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. Mark holds a bachelor’s degree in Arts/Law from the Australian National University with First Class Honours in Law, a Graduate Diploma in Writing from UTS and a Graduate Certificate in Film Directing from the Australian Film Television and Radio School.