But opponents of the bill are concerned, among other things, that assisted dying being legal would create implicit pressure on those who were eligible for it.
Becki Bruneau has cancer which has spread to her lungs. She is against any change to the law.
“My absolute worry is that if I am in a position like I was two years ago, where I was in so much excruciating pain, and I don’t have someone with me, I could potentially make the wrong decision,” she tells us. “And the wrong decision is not something you can come back from. You’re dead.”
Her view is partly informed by her religious beliefs but also that the bill would be a danger to people with disabilities or terminal illnesses.
It’s an argument often made by opponents of the legislation and especially those who live with disabilities. They are concerned the proposed law would devalue the lives of many vulnerable people.
Becki shares those fears. She says it would open the door to people being subjected to coercive control or being pressured to end their lives prematurely.
“This law potentially puts people in a position where they think they are a burden and the easy option is to end their life. That’s very worrying, especially at a time when people are at their most vulnerable.”
The proposed bill in England and Wales comes with safeguards supporters say will make it the strictest set of rules in the world
But others worry that, if approved, the law on assisted dying could later become looser, meaning more people could have an assisted death.