Terminally-ill Australians opting to end their lives using voluntary assisted dying still make up a small sliver of total deaths yet growing demand has prompted calls to streamline the process and bolster the workforce. or signup to continue reading In a landmark Go Gentle Australia report into voluntary assisted dying - now legal in every jurisdiction except the Northern Territory - 2,460 people were found to have opted to end their lives with the service. In 2017, Victoria became the first state to legalise voluntary assisted dying, intended for those with a terminal illness suffering immense pain and wanting control over the circumstances of their death.

Chief executive officer of the charity, Linda Swan, said the evidence painted a "reassuring picture of systems fulfilling their aim" with health professionals providing "kind and meticulous" support. "None of the dire predictions from opponents have come to pass and systems are working safely and with great compassion," she said. The typical applicant was in their 70s with a terminal cancer diagnosis and were slightly more likely to be male, the report found.

Applicants were usually well-educated, English speakers, and four in five were receiving palliative care. Applicants were three times more likely to die at home. While voluntary assisted dying only made up somewhere between 0.

5 per cent and 1.6 per cent in total deaths, demand was growing and there were still a number of barriers to access. While a "person-directed" p.