There are already several official case reports and news stories about Lyme disease patients who do not feel that their lives are worth living. They are “freed” from their earthly bonds either through unofficial medical assistance or euthanasia.
In Canada, “communist” governments are leading the way in “thinning out” the population by “removing” “undesirable elements” through euthanasia. What has now blown the fuse is that recently an elderly lady was assisted in her suicide, even though she had no intention of leaving this world, but her heirs wanted to end her earthly suffering.
But what is the responsibility of a doctor who failed to recognise a serious illness, causing the patient to become obsessed with suicide?
A doctor who has deliberately caused the deaths of more than 400 patients is proud of his euthanasia achievements, including his latest case.
The 26-year-old man, R.I.P., had suffered from seasonal depression since his youth and then lost sight in one eye. He had had type 1 diabetes (an autoimmune disease of unknown origin) since the age of 4, but why was the possibility of Lyme disease and its associated infections not considered and properly investigated as a cause of his mental health problems?
After all, the doctor who, without his parents’ knowledge, approved euthanasia for their son, for whom “this work provides the greatest satisfaction in his life”, approved the procedure even though the legal requirement for it, a serious, terminal illness, did not exist. If he had tried not to treat the problem with the hammer he had in his hand… If he had tried to look for a serious illness behind the symptoms, he might have realised that a treatable infection could also be the cause.
I remember when, in the past, but even today, Lyme doctors are criticised for seeing everything as Lyme. OK. But let’s look at the other side! A missed diagnosis can lead to someone’s death. Which is better? An “unnecessary” examination or another possible Lyme suicide?




