Yes, I have. That's precisely part of the challenge here. This is why it's not an issue, as Ms. Long presents it, of autonomy. It's not an issue of capacity of the patient. It's the capacity of the assessor to honestly judge when the person won't get better—and they can't make that assessment, which is the problem.
Just yesterday, I was on a panel at the U of T faculty of law with the former head of the Ontario Bar Association, Mr. Orlando Da Silva. If you get a chance to see that streamed, I highly recommend watching his portion of it. He very poignantly describes his own experience of repeated, severe depression when he was suicidal, and also, by the way, functioning, doing cases, trial law, and completely competent. He knows he would have been able to get it, and he would have wanted it. He is very concerned about what this would do to people who would be in situations like he was.