Thank you, Mr. Chair.
My name is Sonu Gaind. I'm a psychiatrist, professor and governor at the University of Toronto, the chief of psychiatry at Sunnybrook, a past president of the Canadian and Ontario psychiatric associations and now the president of the new Society of Canadian Psychiatry. I'm not a conscientious objector and was the physician chair of my previous hospital's MAID team. My roles inform my expertise, but I'm here as an individual. I'm not representing any group.
I want to first express appreciation for the decision to pause the planned expansion of MAID for mental illness. In all honesty, this was the only responsible choice to make because there remain three critical unresolved issues.
First, MAID is for irremediable medical conditions—ones that can be predicted to not improve. Worldwide evidence shows we cannot predict irremediability in cases of mental illness—meaning that the primary safeguard underpinning MAID is already bypassed—with evidence showing such predictions are wrong over half the time. Second, scientific evidence shows we cannot distinguish suicidality caused by mental illness from motivations leading to psychiatric MAID requests. Overlapping characteristics suggest there may be no distinction to make.
Combining these inconvenient truths with the fact that those with mental illness have higher rates of social suffering, like homelessness and poverty, means that MAID assessors would be wrong most of the time when predicting irremediability. They would wrongly believe they are filtering out suicidality and would instead be providing death this March to marginalized, suicidal Canadians struggling with social distress who could have improved.
People talk of false hope. This would be assessors colluding with the patient's mental illness symptoms and providing false despair. They would be wrongly reinforcing that the situation is hopeless to the most marginalized who could have gotten better. That would be the ultimate discrimination.
How did we get here—twice being at the brink of providing MAID for mental illness and twice saying we are not ready? I think it's because those entrusted to provide evidence as experts have pushed ideology instead.
Senator Kutcher's sunset clause in 2021 never asked if we could responsibly provide MAID for mental illness, but set an agenda predetermining that we would. The CAMAP mental illness module claims to train assessors to weed out suicidality from psychiatric MAID requests, yet it does nothing of the sort and there is no evidence that we can actually do that.
The expert panel tasked with providing safeguards refused to recommend any additional legislative safeguards, despite Canada lacking a due care requirement before providing death by MAID. One-sixth of that panel resigned, yet the panel chair doubled down on pushing expansion, testifying that she is not concerned by the two-to-one gender gap of more women than men getting psychiatric MAID where it is allowed. It's remarkable.
Now, the dissenting senators, unhappy with the pause to expand, aim to convince the Senate to disregard Bill C-62's call to pause, with Senator Kutcher saying they need to “protect against the tyranny of the majority”. Wow.
While citing their historical medical credentials and claiming they are addressing medical and procedural issues of the report, the dissenting senators neglect to provide any evidence to address the key medical issues of the inability to predict irremediability, the inability to filter suicidality and the risks to the marginalized when providing MAID for mental illness.
We're an outlier among peer nations in not even having a national suicide prevention strategy, and these dissenting senators are pushing easier death for mental illness. With any due respect to the dissenting senators, zealotry should not trump reality.
I'm confident that this committee, and I hope the rest of the Senate, will not follow the dissenting senators in their march against evidence.
I must point out the impact that expansionist activism has already had. After Bill C-7's expansion of MAID for any disability in 2021, MAID deaths shot up by 30% to over 13,000 Canadians in 2022, and 2023 will no doubt be higher. Of these tens of thousands of Canadians, over one-third cite that feeling like they are a burden is a suffering that leads them to MAID. Nearly one-fifth cite loneliness, and for over half it was a loss of dignity.
The debate about providing earlier, easier death has sucked all the oxygen out of the room. What are we now providing death for?
As I wrote in the Toronto Star recently, I hope this focuses us on the real issues of our fellow Canadians' suffering and propels us somewhere better than pushing death to solve life suffering. “If we're serious about addressing these issues,” to quote that piece, “Canada has a chance to be a forerunner in the world by, instead of striving to be number one globally in assisted suicide, establishing the world's first portfolio for a Minister for Living with Dignity.”
Thank you again for your thoughtful review of this issue.
I'm happy to answer any questions.