ERGO/Euthanasia Research & Guidance 
Organization
24829 Norris Lane • Junction City, 
OR
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
 Contact: 
Ellen Barfield, (410) 243-5876
DEATH WITH DIGNITY ADVOCATE DR. LAWRENCE EGBERT 
DIES
Lawrence D. Egbert, MD, MPH, the Baltimore 
anesthesiologist whose leadership in the right-to-die movement cost him his 
Maryland license to practice medicine, died of a heart attack June 9. He was 
88.
Dr. Egbert, a retired professor of anesthesiology and 
public health, championed the right of individuals to choose to die rather than 
suffer intolerable circumstances or unremitting pain—and the right of 
physicians, family and friends to be present with those making that choice. He 
helped found and served as medical director of Final Exit Network, which 
provides education and compassionate presence to those facing end-of-life 
choices; he also acted as a FEN exit guide accompanying those who hastened their 
own deaths. He willingly paid a high price for his activism; newspapers dubbed 
him “the new Dr. Death,” the State of Maryland revoked his license to practice 
medicine there in 2014, and at various times he was under indictment in three 
states for supposedly assisting suicides (although he was never convicted of any 
charges).
Dr. Egbert's activism also included the peace/anti-war 
and anti-nuclear movements, opposition to the death penalty and racism, advocacy 
for civil liberties, single-payer health care and simple living. He served on 
the boards of Physicians for Social Responsibility and the Maryland Civil 
Liberties Union, volunteered overseas with Doctors Without Borders, lived 
without a cell phone, air-conditioning, or a car, and traveled by bicycle around 
Baltimore until less than a year before his death. He was an active Unitarian 
Universalist for much of his life but attended a Quaker Meeting his last few 
years.
Dr Egbert's wife Ellen Barfield said, "Larry was 
scheduled for an aortic heart valve procedure on June 21. I grieve the cruel 
twist of fate that got our hopes up, but I am so proud of the many ways he stood 
up for suffering and abused people and against war, racism, poverty, and 
coercion."
Lawrence Deems Egbert Jr. was born in Champaign, IL, in 
1927 and grew up in Washington, DC.  
After serving in the U.S. Army in Japan after World War II, he finished a 
bachelor's degree at Johns Hopkins University, earned a medical degree from the 
University of Maryland, served in the Navy as a doctor, and returned to Hopkins 
later to get a Masters in Public Health. He worked at Harvard University and 
Massachusetts General Hospital, Johns Hopkins University, and the University of 
Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. He also served for several years as 
visiting faculty at Pahlavi University Medical School in Shiraz, Iran, and the 
American University of Beirut in Lebanon.
He became a nationally recognized anesthhttp://www.psr.org/esiologist and 
published significant articles about patient care and racism in various medical 
journals. His (and two colleagues') 1963 article on the “Therapeutic Benefit of 
the Anesthesiologist–Patient Relationship” in the Journal of the American 
Medical Association is still cited today and is deemed a “classic” by the 
American Society of Anesthesiologists.
He is survived by Ellen, his wife and activist partner of 
more than 25 years, five children, nine grandchildren, and three 
great-grandchildren. A Baltimore memorial service will be August 27. Donations 
in his memory can be made to Physicians for Social Responsibility, Final Exit Network, or Veterans For Peace.
