Supreme Court: State's life preservation interest cannot overpower right to dignified death

The Supreme Court ruled on Wednesday that the state's interest in preserving life must yield to a patient's right to dignity when medical interventions become futile. The judgment upheld the withdrawal of life support from a 32-year-old man in a persistent vegetative state for over 12 years. Justice J.B. Pardiwala described dignity as the most sacred possession of a human being.

The Supreme Court held on March 11, 2026, that the state's absolute interest in preserving life becomes subservient to a patient's right to dignity at the point where medical interventions grow increasingly futile and invasive, while recovery prospects diminish. This ruling came in the case of a 32-year-old man who had been in a persistent vegetative state for over 12 years, upholding the withdrawal of his life support.

Justice J.B. Pardiwala wrote in the judgment, “When the degree of bodily invasion progressively increases, and the prognosis for recovery progressively decreases, there arises a certain point when the state’s absolute interest in preserving life must become subservient to the dignity of the individual, though he is unconscious or incompetent.”

The court emphasized that the state's interest should not overpower the dignity assured to individuals in both life and death processes. “Dignity is the most sacred possession of a human being. Its possession can neither be said to lose its sanctity in the process of death nor when death occurs,” Justice Pardiwala observed.

The judgment noted that using medical technological advancements to temporarily keep brain-dead or PVS patients alive compels them to endure a slow, agonizing death, which is incompatible with the constitutional ideal of dignity. “There would arise a point of precipice where such prolonged medical treatment would stand as an affront to basic human dignity… Merely prolonging an inevitable death comes with the heavy cost of pain and suffering, which directly impacts the right to die with dignity,” he added.

This decision reinforces discussions on passive euthanasia in India, underscoring the need to ensure dignity even in the final stages of life.

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