Thank you very much.
I'm a physician and I have over 30 years' experience diagnosing, treating, and caring for frail older people, often suffering from Alzheimer's disease and other dementia. In addition to seeing patients in the clinic, I often visit their home as a geriatric consultant to a home care service.
My professional niche, as it were, includes capacity assessment, assessment in intervention for patients and families in crisis because of cognizant, psychiatric, and social problems. I regularly see abused and neglected patients, and I often testify in court for abused patients or for those whose families are fighting over powers of attorney or inheritance issues.
I'm also the President of the Physicians' Alliance Against Euthanasia, a group of doctors who see any law allowing doctors to intentionally end the life of their patients as contrary to the goals of medicine and the good of our patients, especially the most vulnerable and those who cannot speak for themselves. Founded in Quebec in 2012, the alliance now includes over 750 doctors, each of whom has signed our declaration and is supported by more than 14,000 citizens. We are, of course, aware that Bill C-14 will legalize medically assisted dying in some form, as is already the case in Quebec. While remaining completely opposed to these acts, we offer our suggestions for amendments to the bill in an attempt to protect patients' health care environment and the integrity of our profession.
We are somewhat relieved that there is a certain caution in the bill compared with the extreme recommendations of the special joint committee. We also note that the bill does not propose euthanasia and assisted suicide as medical acts or health care, as they are in Quebec. We agree that they are neither, so it cannot be required of our profession to perform them. The international medical community maintains to this day its opposition to these practices.
Since the vast majority of desires for death are caused by mental illness, which can and often does co-exist with the medical conditions that are considered to justify euthanasia or assisted suicide in the Carter decision and in this bill, we are called to exercise extreme caution. Such desires can also be caused by feelings of hopelessness, loneliness, fear, grief, shame, lack of access to support, insufficient palliative care, poverty, unemployment, violence, and abuse. These can also be addressed by health and social service professionals.
In this context my colleague, Mr. Racicot, talked about the fact that they are not charter rights. I argue that neither are they health care. We fail to understand the concerns about access to death that are being expressed in the public debate around this law. Elderly and chronically and terminally ill Canadians do not need access to death, they need access to care—medical treatment, home care, care by family members, residential care—all of which are seriously lacking.
You just heard some descriptions of sorely lacking care of elderly patients. I would argue that the alternative to that is not to kill them but to take better care of them, which we should be doing in Canada in 2016. To facilitate access to death while remaining unable to provide the care our citizens need is irresponsible, to say the least, and is unworthy of a progressive and prosperous country such as ours.
We appreciate the government's commitment to developing non-legislative measures that would support the improvement of a full range of options for end-of-life care, as is said in the preamble to this bill, but that would have to be implemented at truly high speed if we want the choice of life to be as available as death will be before long.
If you wish to show a true commitment to life for Canadians, this bill must contain protection for patients who are at risk of constraint to choose death. As it stands, it's certainly not as bad as it could have been if you had followed all of the committee recommendations, but the criteria are still ambiguous and open to subjective interpretation. This is inevitable to some extent, because it's impossible to define an eligibility criteria that would protect everybody, but we think you can do better.
The only way to ensure patient safety in a regime of legal euthanasia and assisted suicide is to require prior authorization of the death by a judge. In practice in medicine, we use courts all the time for committing patients who are dangerous to themselves or others to hospitals, to ordering that somebody be removed from their home if it's no longer safe.
It's something that's common. It can be done rapidly. It does not need to be a barrier, and the cases we've seen in recent months in other provinces have shown it happened relatively quickly. I think this should also be done after an evaluation of the patient and the patient's situation by health and social service professionals to explore the causes of suffering, as well as any inducements to choose death that could arise from non-medical conditions and circumstances, and that measures should be taken to address these sources of suffering before accepting a request for death.
This should not be seen as gatekeeping of access to death, but rather as promoting life wherever possible, which should be the goal of the law.
I have some brief comments on the criteria as currently written. The requirement that the request be made by a capable adult is essential, but most doctors lack the skills to assess decision-making capacity, and even experts disagree in complex cases. The terms “grievous and irremediable medical condition”, “advanced state of decline in capacity”, and “irreversible decline” are wide open to subjective interpretation and could be understood to include hundreds of thousands of Canadians with serious chronic illness who would be eligible for death under this criteria.
Enduring physical or psychological suffering that's intolerable, and that cannot be relieved under conditions the person considers acceptable, is entirely subjective and opens the door to anyone refusing effective treatment and demanding euthanasia instead. The requirement that natural death be reasonably foreseeable means nothing to us as physicians. Doctors are not able to accurately estimate life expectancy until the last days to maybe two weeks before death. Before that it's a guessing game. Call it “imminently dying”, and then we know what you're talking about.
To ensure a request for death is voluntary and without external pressure requires in-depth psychosocial and family assessment by a team of professionals well beyond medicine. Even then there may be no way of knowing that the patient is acting out of guilt or protecting an abuser. The written consent waiting time and requirement for a second doctor are not protections against abuse or coercion to request death. The first two can be waived, and patients or others can doctor-shop until they find two willing doctors.
There should be no opening even later to children or people with psychiatric illness. I wrote a separate brief in my own name, besides the brief of the physicians' alliance, that speaks to the dangers of euthanasia by advance directive that we can discuss in the question period if you choose.
My second point is about what is often called freedom of conscience, but is also about protecting health care services from becoming death-promoting environments and thereby protecting patients from those environments. I suggest you include in the law a prohibition against requiring any health professional to cause the death of a patient, or to refer a patient to another person to obtain their death—even through a third party, as is the case in Quebec—and against requiring any health care institution to euthanize patients under its care or to assist in a patient's suicide.
There's no justification for imposing any duty to implement this political decision, which is foreign to the medical profession, on medicine as a whole, or on any individual practitioner or institution. Attempts to do so are already being seen, both in Quebec and in Ontario, through requirements to refer. The federal law cannot just leave this question to the provinces. In Quebec, since December, doctors who are unwilling to euthanize patients must refer them to an administrative body that will ensure the death occurs. This does not protect the patient or the professional integrity of the physician. If I were a surgeon and a patient asked me for a procedure I thought was either not going to help them or would be too risky, I would refuse to do it, and I would also refuse to send the patient to someone else who would do it. They would, of course, be free to go and find a doctor of their choosing if they wanted to.
In palliative care in Quebec, one excellent palliative care physician has compared her daily life under this law to living in a war zone. You never know when a death request is going to land on you. You can't be giving hope to dying patients in one room and euthanizing them in the next.
Another doctor retired early the day the law came into effect for this reason. Highly skilled doctors and nurses who have given years and decades to the care of dying patients are suffering burnout, taking sick leave, and being driven from the field by confrontations over a supposed right to be killed, and by threats of losing funding if they insist on caring for people rather than killing them.
Patients are refusing treatment for their symptoms because of their fear of receiving the injection without having asked for it. Some patients who attempt suicide by overdose are not being resuscitated because the notion is being promoted that people who want to die should be helped to do so instead of being saved from their suicidal impulses. We need safe spaces for patients where inflicting death is not an option, and we need to respect the freedom of those health professionals for whom it is a violation of their fundamental principles and institutions whose basic philosophy rejects it.
Patients can be transferred to another professional or another institution, if necessary. This would not cause problems of so-called access, only inconvenience at times. If the professional or institution makes their position clear, the patient need not consult them. The protection of patients should always trump access to death.
In summary, at the very least we need prior authorization by a court after a careful evaluation of the situation, as I discussed. We need to create safe spaces for patients by respecting all individuals and institutions that refuse to collaborate with inflicting death.
Thank you.