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Juliet GuichonThe Supreme Court of Canada’s unanimous decision on assisted suicide last Friday means that, soon, doctors (and only doctors) may lawfully help competent adults, who are grievously and irremediably ill, to end their lives.

Even though this litigation began in 2011 and is likely to cause less than 1 percent of all Canadian deaths annually, our nation is probably not ready for this momentous event.

Symbolically, this decision changes Canada. It forces acceptance of the fact that, for some people who suffer terribly and have no prospect of adequate relief, death is not feared but welcomed. Physicians, who have traditionally preserved life, may soon take the lives of consenting patients. Although many people, including many physicians, agree with the decision, others do not like this change and some people are afraid.

On a practical level, only Quebec has legislation to address such fear. The Supreme Court acknowledged that Parliament and the provincial legislatures may choose to respond by passing laws consistent with the judgment, reconciling the Charter rights of patients and physicians.

Ideally, these governments should work together to regulate assisted dying despite the challenges of developing legislation rapidly. Ordinarily, politicians might choose to avoid such a politically contentious matter but, given the societal changes this judgment has engendered, politicians simply must act and physicians should help.

First, we must reduce fear. Since the litigation began, we have heard healthcare providers and some members of the public express significant fear. Some people incorrectly believe that this decision will disproportionately affect the elderly, and include the killing of infants or the mentally infirm.

Anecdotal healthcare stories report families where younger members attempt to make adverse surrogate medical decisions to gain access to the patient’s money sooner rather than later. Although many senior citizens are relieved to have choice at the end of life, others worry that the decision, if not properly legislated, could increase their vulnerability.


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Some physicians are conscientiously opposed to physician-assisted dying and though the Supreme Court of Canada acknowledged their right to refuse, some doctors are afraid of being forced to participate.

Such fears will prove ill-founded with proper regulation. Provincial legislatures must act quickly by stipulating through legislation and accompanying regulations how physician assisted dying will be conducted. At least five jurisdictions in the United States and Europe have experience and law that can serve as precedent.

This task will be daunting. According to the Canadian Medical Association (CMA), the challenges have been understated because the consequences are grave and resources are constrained. Nevertheless, the CMA has consulted the Canadian public and doctors, and medical associations in permissive jurisdictions to devise possible protocols for Canada.

Given the enormity of the task of ensuring that those, and only those, who qualify under the Supreme Court decision actually receive medical aid in dying, we propose that:

  1. The CMA collaborate with other national medical organizations such as the Canadian College of Family Physicians, the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada and the Canadian Society of Palliative Care Physicians;
  2. These physicians form a committee and include a representative from each of the Canadian Nurses Association, Canadian Pharmacists Association and the Canadian Bar Association;
  3. The committee have between eight and 12 members, balancing a variety in professional background against the need to be timely in making concrete recommendations;
  4. The CMA fund the work of the committee and a small secretariat;
  5. The committee be independent of its funding source;
  6. The committee members immediately make themselves knowledgeable about the judicial ruling and the evidence on which it was based, and the regulatory regimes in permissive jurisdictions, especially Quebec;
  7. The committee propose regulation of physician assisted dying and medical standards for the provinces and territories other than Quebec;
  8. The committee attend to the values expressed in the reasons for judgment of the majority of the Supreme Court of Canada judges (respecting autonomy, alleviating suffering and protecting the vulnerable, such as the bullied and the depressed); and
  9. The committee offer draft regulations and standards for review or adoption by federal, provincial and territorial governments and colleges of physicians and surgeons.

Legislating physician-assisted dying is bound to be difficult. Canadians will undoubtedly be comforted to know that politicians have been offered the assistance of physicians and other professionals to get this right.

Juliet Guichon is a professor in the Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary.

Juliet is a Troy Media contributor. Why aren’t you?

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Assisted suicide

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