Thank you. I will try to deal with the foreseeable future issue first.
We will support whatever the legislation ultimately states. I want to reiterate that we see our position as to help the physicians have confidence that if they enter into this dialogue with the patient and operationalize it and have interpreted the legislation correctly, they will be free from prosecution when they act in good faith. That means they have consent, that they did all the things and interpreted the law correctly.
What we're saying is that the wording as it currently exists is not clear. Whether you want it to be, as legislators, broader with a longer time frame, or narrower where imminent death is definable by whatever time frame you choose, we will support that.
We want you to say it clearly so when the physician phones—and they will call us for advice—we can say this is what we understand the legislation to mean, and this is what we're advising you to do as you enter into and provide access to the patient who receives medical assistance in dying.
The fuzzier the legislation is, the more difficult it is for us to interpret and the more difficult it is for us to give guidance to the physician who will want to act in good faith believing they are doing something that is an appropriate medical act, but don't want to be prosecuted.
We're agnostic about which way you want to go. Just make it clear which way you want to go.