“…From the moment, the diagnosis is given one can be sure that it will never get better, only worse .” 20 In fact, in most cases hopelessness seems to be taken for granted. However, the fact that in one case (quote 64) the RTE ruled that attempts to improve the patient's situation should have been made, shows that dementia does not imply this absence by definition, and that alternatives, for example to comfort patients 32 , 33 , 34 , 35 may be explored more meticulously in the future. Also, the Royal Dutch Medical Association (KNMG) stated in their recently published “Guideline Medical Decisions at the End of Life,” that the mere fact that a person has (advanced) dementia is insufficient grounds for euthanasia and that the physician should always investigate whether there are other ways to eliminate, or alleviate, the suffering.…”