Evidence of meeting #14 for Justice and Human Rights in the 42nd Parliament, 1st Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was suffering.

A recording is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Joseph Arvay  As an Individual
Graydon Nicholas  Former Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick, As an Individual
Udo Schuklenk  Professor and Ontario Research Chair in Bioethics, Philosophy, Queen's University, As an Individual
Harvey Chochinov  Professor of Psychiatry, University of Manitoba, As an Individual
Josh Paterson  Executive Director, British Columbia Civil Liberties Association
Jennifer Gibson  Director and Sun Life Financial Chair in Bioethics, University of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics, As an Individual

8:45 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Anthony Housefather

I call to order this meeting of the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights.

I'd like to welcome today's witnesses. It's a great pleasure to welcome Mr. Joe Arvay, who was the lawyer in the Carter case. I have to say that probably one of his greatest accomplishments is being a previous law partner of Mr. Rankin, or we could say the reverse, perhaps, too.

We have Mr. Graydon Nicholas, who is a former lieutenant-governor of New Brunswick.

We have Professor Udo Schuklenk, who is a professor and holds the Ontario research chair in bioethics at Queen's University.

We're going to go to Mr. Arvay to start.

8:45 a.m.

Joseph Arvay As an Individual

Thank you, Mr. Chair and members of the committee, for allowing me to appear before you today.

As the chair indicated, I was the lead counsel in Carter. In that context, I think I probably know better than anybody what this case is about and what it stands for, because I was involved in framing the case. Framing the case means what we decided it was going to be all about, how we pled the case, how the government responded to our pleadings, the evidence presented in the case, the arguments in the case, and the findings in the case.

I can tell you, based on all of that, which I'll elaborate on in the time permitted, that the definition of “grievous and irremediable” in Bill C-14 is clearly inconsistent with the Carter decision, and that in my view, an unquestionable view, it is clearly unconstitutional; and that if the bill is enacted, it will be struck down.

I tell you this not only because of my involvement as lead counsel in Carter. I've been litigating the charter since its very inception—that was 34 years ago—and I probably have more experience litigating the charter than any lawyer in private practice in Canada does, and I've had some notable successes. So when I say that in my view this bill, if the definition of “grievous and irremediable” is left in, is unconstitutional, I say it actually with great confidence.

There are really two issues I want to address in the time I have. One is whether there is anything in the Carter decision that would allow Parliament to enact this bill, insofar as it includes the “reasonably foreseeable” phrase, the meaning of which you all know, as well as the phrase dealing with an “advanced state of irreversible decline”, and, for that matter, “incurable”. I say there is nothing in the Carter decision that allows for these. In fact, there's much in the Carter decision that is inconsistent with these words.

I've handed out a fairly lengthy brief in which I walk through many of these more technical issues, and I'm not going to repeat it in the time I have. I asked the clerk, however, to hand out something to you just now, which I only discovered after I wrote the brief. It is a transcript from the Supreme Court of Canada hearing just last January, when the federal government was asking for an extension of six months in order to allow Parliament more time to enact the law.

You should have it; it's the Supreme Court of Canada case, Lee Carter v. Attorney General of Canada. It is an excerpt of an exchange between Justice Karakatsanis and Rob Frater, the federal government's lawyer, and also Justice Moldaver.

This is very telling, I think. If you go to bottom of page 18, at line 19, Justice Karakatsanis says,

Mr. Frater, can I ask you this: Does your position on the Québec legislation mean that you accept that it complies with Carter? I'm thinking particularly about somebody has to be a la fin de vie whereas in Carter we rejected terminally ill.

That can't be any clearer. The Supreme Court of Canada, in Carter, rejected any requirement that a person be terminally ill. If you go on, there's an exchange between Justice Moldaver and Mr. Frater in which he says that the Quebec legislation is “under-inclusive”. By that he meant that it didn't go as far as Carter required, and this obviously raises serious questions about the constitutionality of the Quebec legislation.

I can tell you the way we pled the case. It was my co-counsel and I who chose the words “grievous and irremediable”; those were our words. We deliberately left out “incurable”, because “incurable” doesn't capture the necessary requirement. We used “grievous and irremediable.”

The government asked what we meant by that. As you see in our brief, we spelled out what we meant by that, and it didn't include “terminal”. Then, in argument before the trial judge, the government lawyer said—and again, this is set out in the brief—that the problem with the plaintiff's definition of “grievous and irremediable” is that it doesn't include “terminal.” The trial judge may have used the word “terminal” a hundred times in her reasons, by reference to other regimes, etc., but she didn't require that a person be terminal in order to avail themselves of physician-assisted dying.

As I said, the Supreme Court of Canada, in its ruling, in its declaration as to who was entitled to physician-assisted dying, didn't limit it to “terminal”. You may say that “reasonably foreseeable” is different from terminal. Well, it's not different from terminal; it's just that there are different ways of defining terminal. Some people define terminal in an arbitrary way as six months from the end of life”. Other people define it in a vague way, such as “at the end of life”, as in the Quebec legislation.

This bill defines it in a similar way, but it's all to the same effect. It's imposing “terminal”, and that's simply contrary to Carter. The reason it's unconstitutional is that by defining those entitled to physician-assisted dying—I guess it's supposed to be called “MAID” today, medical aid in dying, and that's fine—Parliament has excluded an entire group of individuals who otherwise would enjoy the charter rights that the Supreme Court of Canada gave in Carter, and that group is the physically disabled, whose death is not reasonably foreseeable.

In the few minutes I have left, I want to tell you—and I've set this out in my brief in some detail—that as a physically disabled man, I was very sensitive and alive to the arguments made by the disabled rights organizations, organizations whose cause I ordinarily support, but on this point I thought they were just fundamentally wrong, insofar as they suggested that all physically disabled people are not really disabled. You're going to hear from Ms. Pothier and Mr. Baker. If they don't use the term “the social model of disability”, I can tell you that their entire premise before the trial court and the Supreme Court of Canada is that we're not really disabled; we're just impaired, and that society disables us because we live in a city where there are stairs to the buildings or in which ableist society has its own notion of what a dignified life is.

I accept that there's no one conception of a dignified life, but I reject the idea that people with serious medical illnesses or conditions, whatever the cause, are capable of suffering intolerably and capable of saying that this is not a dignified life, even if most disabled people conquer their disabilities and accept that what they have to do to get through the day is not undignified. The premise of Bill C-14, insofar as it has this reasonable foreseeability clause, is that most disabled people, all whose death is not foreseeable, are somehow incapable of making an informed decision about whether or not to seek assistance in death.

I've already read—and you will hear again—that the reason for this, they say, is that the disability could be transitional, situational, or transitory, and if you let a disabled person choose death, they might regret it later. You have to try to get your head around that. The trial judge heard all those arguments and rejected them. The idea that a disability may be transitional, transitory, or situational is something that the disabled groups put to the Supreme Court of Canada. The Supreme Court of Canada rejected that, yet this bill essentially provides that all disabled people are simply taken out of the protection of rights that the Supreme Court of Canada gave them in Carter. Parliament can't do that.

Parliament can't do that by claiming that it's a section 1 justification. Section 1 was fully argued in the Carter case. Carter created a floor of constitutional rights and entitlement, not a ceiling. Parliament can provide further rights and entitlements, and the courts can provide further rights and entitlements, but Parliament can't take away any of the rights and entitlements that the Supreme Court of Canada gave to the disabled. Bill C-14 actually carves right out of the Carter decision the rights given to the physically disabled, and it can't do that.

I see that my time is up. I'm obviously open to questions.

Thank you.

8:55 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Anthony Housefather

Thank you very much, Professor Arvay.

Mr. Nicholas, you're next. Welcome.

8:55 a.m.

Graydon Nicholas Former Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick, As an Individual

Thank you very much. I appreciate the opportunity to be here with honourable members on this matter that is very important to our country as well as here in Ottawa.

I filed my submission, and the three areas I addressed are the sanctity of life, palliative care, and freedom of conscience. I hope you've had a chance to read it; it's limited by your limitation of 750 words.

I want to say first of all that I think it is important to acknowledge two things. One is that I'm here as an aboriginal person. My tribe is Wolastoqiyik from New Brunswick. Maliseet is what the English call us; in French they call us Malécite. In my teachings—from my elders, of course—life is respected in all of its stages. I mention this in my brief. Also I'm here as a Catholic. A principle of our Catholic faith as well is that life is respected in all its stages.

Since I was coming here, a friend of mine gave me a copy of legislation entitled an act to establish Pope John Paul II Day, which was enacted by Parliament and assented to on December 16, 2014, in which Parliament acknowledged the important role that Saint John Paul II played not only in this country but in the world as well.

I want to refer in particular to his “Prayer for Life”. If you don't mind, I'm going to hold on to my eagle feather, Mr. Chairman.

O Mary, bright dawn of the new world,
Mother of the living, to you do we entrust
the cause of life: Look down, O Mother,
upon the vast numbers of babies not
allowed to be born, of the poor whose
lives are made difficult, of men and
women who are victims of brutal
violence, of the elderly and the sick killed
by indifference or out of misguided mercy.
Grant that all who believe in your Son
may proclaim the Gospel of Life with
honesty and love to the people of our
time. Obtain for them the grace to accept
that Gospel as a gift ever new, the joy of
celebrating it with gratitude throughout
their lives and the courage to bear witness
to it resolutely, in order to build, together
with all people of good will, the civilization
of truth and love, to the praise and glory of God,
the Creator and lover of life.

That was on March 25, 1995.

With respect to the issue of palliative care, when two ministers announced Bill C-14, the Minister of Health indicated that there would be some money invested in palliative care. I'll refer honourable members to a study that was done, the report from which was called “Not to be Forgotten: Care of Vulnerable Canadians”. It was done by a parliamentary committee here in 2011. It's an extensive report, a comprehensive report, but I would recommend that at least your researchers look at it, because there's a very strong statement in it about looking at palliative care and making sure that governments uphold this portion. It requires simply an amendment of the Canada Health Act for it to happen. Many people are placed in hospices and other centres and literally wait for their time to die. I know many people, my friends and relatives and family, who have been in that situation. It's important that the government make life as comfortable as possible for these people in the last days of their lives.

The other area I will concentrate on is freedom of conscience. Of course we know it's a fundamental right within our charter.

I remember when this was being debated in 1980. Mind you, I was on the other side; I was advocating for indigenous and aboriginal rights back then throughout our country, making sure that the document would in fact protect our people.

One of the writers of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was an individual from New Brunswick, Professor Humphrey. Article 18 of that document says that “Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion”. This same phrase, of course, is also repeated in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, again in article 18.

Canada not only acknowledged the existence of these particular declarations, but Canada as a country also signed what's called the optional protocol, which allows a citizen of this particular country to question the decision-making power of Parliament and whether it is in fact fulfilling the obligations under international instruments.

My cousin Sandra Lovelace of course was the first one who took the optional protocol to the United Nations, and she's a senator now. It was about dealing with her identity as an indigenous woman who had lost her rights through marriage to a non-native. Ultimately, Canada was sanctioned by the United Nations, and Canada changed the law in 1985.

I put that on record maybe because as I look at this legislation, I'm not sure if the advisers at the Department of Justice examined this legislation in terms of conscience rights—because there's an absence there—so does it in fact comply with international law? Does it comply with the instruments at the United Nations level? Of course, the Department of Justice has all kinds of experts. I just raise that with the committee, Mr. Chairman, because I think it's something that shouldn't be overlooked. I remember how in the 1980s, when legislation was passed and they would sometimes say, “Okay, hold your nose and let it pass, even if you don't agree with it.”

Conscience is so important and so critical. If you force somebody to do something against their will and they have firm beliefs, what's going to happen to the medical profession? What's going to happen to those institutions that exist and do not wish to participate in this particular arrangement that's going to be enacted by Parliament? Almost everybody is saying that it's inevitable that it's going to pass, but there has to be a reason, and I think parliamentarians should realize that this thing has to be studied. Although they say they'll study it five years from now, you can't wait five years. Circumstances change.

That is what I wanted to put on the record, Mr. Chairman and honourable members, because I understand that all three parties are represented here. I want to thank you very much for allowing me to come here.

I asked to be here because from May 31, 1991, when I was appointed as a provincial court judge, to October of 2014, when I finished my term as lieutenant-governor of the province of New Brunswick, I was in a virtual sphere of silence. As a judge, you can't make comments on public issues, and definitely as a representative of Her Majesty you're not allowed to, so finally, then, I was relieved of this particular burden in October of 2014. I come here today saying that there should be great compassion for people who are ill, suffering, or facing death, but we all should also make their lives comfortable in those last stages.

Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman and members of the committee, for listening to me. I want to wish you well, but I also want to let you know one thing. In my term as lieutenant-governor, I visited schools in New Brunswick. There are certain schools, believe it or not, that pray for parliamentarians and pray for judges every day, because it's part of their school regime. I was impressed. I didn't realize they were doing that.

Even today, as you're meeting here and as you continue your debate, you have people in certain schools in the province of New Brunswick who are praying for you, and prayer is powerful. We need prayer; we need a higher power, and we need a higher authority in order to make just decisions.

Merci beaucoup.

9:05 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Anthony Housefather

Thank you very much, sir.

Professor Schuklenk, you're up.

9:05 a.m.

Dr. Udo Schuklenk Professor and Ontario Research Chair in Bioethics, Philosophy, Queen's University, As an Individual

Thank you.

Looking at your briefing document, I thought I should spend at least one minute telling you who I am, because you probably don't know me.

Between 2009 and 2011, I chaired an international expert panel that was tasked by the Royal Society of Canada with drafting what they hoped at the time would be a landmark national report on end-of-life decision-making in our country. We recommended at the time that medical aid in dying be decriminalized for decisionally competent people.

We further recommended that terminal illness—and this I think is the thing I want to talk about most today—not be made a threshold condition for a person to be eligible for medical aid in dying, for two reasons. One reason was flagged already and it is correct: there's no precise science to providing a prognosis of terminal illness in terms of a specific length of time. Second, if the term ”terminal illness” is made a necessary condition of the statute, by necessity it would be under-inclusive; there can be no doubt about it.

The Supreme Court justice in Carter v. Canada concurred on the subject matter. The justice department tried to justify the limitation that it seeks in the draft legislation, to be for persons with foreseeable natural death, and it says basically that the justice has stated in paragraphs 1 to 7 in Carter that they were responding to the factual circumstances before the court.

What the department fails to mention is that immediately preceding that statement, the court clearly stated that the impugned sections of the Criminal Code are void insofar as they prohibit physician-assisted death for a competent adult who clearly consents to the termination of life and has a grievous and irremediable medical condition.

The thing is this. The statement about the circumstances must be read in light of the criteria that were laid down. The court applied its criteria to the factual circumstances and not the other way around. Its clarification cannot be read to justify the inclusion of terminal illness, then, as a threshold condition for access to “MAID”, to medical aid in dying.

As it is proposed now, throwing everyone other than those near foreseeable death in a catch-all category of “vulnerable” inevitably will result in the very excessive breadth and gross disproportionality that the Supreme Court identified when it struck down the current Criminal Code provisions.

It seems to me the justice department is quite cognizant of the fact that its proposed legislation is too restrictive. Yet it fails to provide a sound rationale for its terminal illness threshold, because when you think about it, respect for human life surely is not undermined when we accede to a competent person's request for medical aid in dying who suffers from an intractable clinical condition that renders their life not worth living to them.

Denying such patients' requests for medical aid in dying serves no desirable objectives and it certainly does nothing to protect the vulnerable. If anything it condemns these very same vulnerable people to continue in suffering and arguably to haphazardly undertake suicide attempts. I could give you plenty of examples if you were to ask me about individual situations that I'm very well aware of in which exactly that happened. It's not just a theoretical exercise here.

Last year, in the Journal of Medical Ethics, I published an article jointly with a clinical professor at Erasmus University medical school, Suzanne van de Vathorst, I argued that competent patients who suffer, for instance, from intractable depression, should be eligible for medical aid in dying. While I can't go into the details of that paper today, I want to tell you that fundamentally it's based on the recognition that some intractable psychiatric illnesses are known to cause severe suffering that is just as painful as the most painful physical ailments, and that existing treatment modalities fail a significant number of these patients. We're looking at about 30% of people with clinical depression. The depressed patients are not per se incompetent, and their evaluation of their quality of life is often actually very realistic.

There's nothing in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms that suggests that if we label such people as mentally ill or vulnerable we are justified in removing their agency in questions of life and death, because this is what is proposed in the current draft legislation.

A lot has been said, and you have heard some of this from various expert witness statements with regard to this category of patients. Dark warnings were sounded about supposed dangers involving our most vulnerable. The substance of these expert witness accounts was rejected unanimously by the justices of the Supreme Court. In fact, you will hear right after us from Harvey Chochinov, whose expert witness account was completely rejected by the Supreme Court. It was also rejected by the expert panel advising the provinces and territories on this subject matter as well as the joint special parliamentary committee.

The justice department in its misrepresentations of the current legal and policy situation in Belgium, for instance, relies on its legislative background document, not at all on peer-reviewed, large-scale research studies, but on a handful of cases—think about it—that make the rounds on the Internet. That's the level of expertise that we have gotten with this background document.

The Supreme Court has in fact rejected this anecdote-based approach to this issue. I quote from the judgment:

The resolution of the issue before us falls to be resolved not by competing anecdotes, but by the evidence.

The fact of the matter is this. Any major piece of peer-reviewed research on this subject matter has come to the same conclusion: medical aid in dying does not constitute a threat to vulnerable people. The existing evidence base also puts to rest arguments suggesting that we first need to study what the implications of a regime that meets the court's criteria would likely be. The reason for this is that all the available scientific evidence on any of the jurisdictions that have decriminalized assisted dying does not support abuse-related concerns made even by some disability rights activists, as we have pointed out earlier.

I want to talk quickly about this a bit, because you have heard a lot about it. I want to give you some data about both Belgium and the Netherlands, because these are the two straw men that are being used in this context.

Today, neuropsychiatric cases involve about 4% of all medical aid in dying cases in Belgium. That translates into about 70 cases out of more than 1,800 euthanasia cases. The vast majority of requests from such patients are rejected, arguably out of an abundance of caution. It's true that the overall percentage of such cases has slowly increased over the last few years, but it appears to have plateaued at its current levels. Typically, these cases are actually handled by specialized teams of clinicians.

The same is true for the Netherlands. In 2013 they had 42 psychiatric patients; in 2014, 41 patients; and in 2015, 56 patients. There is no sudden deluge of euthanasia cases involving psychiatric patients. Depression is mentioned in about half of these cases. The backgrounder that you got from the justice department tells you about a letter that 65 psychiatrists and psychologists wrote to the local newspaper or a newspaper in that country, no kidding.

The Dutch psychiatric association, the actual professional association in the country, represents about 3,600 psychiatrists. They have drafted specific guidelines for these kinds of cases, requiring that each patient be seen by two psychiatrists and another physician. That ensures that they're competent and that no treatment options have been overlooked. That's the reality in that country.

I think these figures illustrate that there's a fairly small number of psychiatric patients receiving medical aid in dying, but it is patients such as these that the current legislative draft would condemn to continuing needless suffering, and this is why it's so important that this draft legislation be amended.

The ongoing public debate about eligibility criteria features phrases such as “reasonable compromise” and “a cautious approach”, using some of the same rhetoric that was deployed by the justice department, and I think this misses something rather basic. The rather basic thing is this: the Supreme Court actually has stipulated clear minimum criteria that the new legislation must meet. These criteria would have been developed with a view to reasonable limits in section 1 of the charter. The proposed draft legislation, for the reasons mentioned, does not actually meet those criteria.

I urge you, then, to amend the existing draft legislation as outlined in my witness statement, keeping in mind that the Supreme Court's minimum standard is this: the request for medical aid in dying must be made by a competent adult; the condition must be intractable; and life must be considered to be not worth living by the patient. There's nothing else to it beyond that.

Let me quickly in the last minute talk about both advance directives and mature minors. Today, we allow patients to make advance decisions about what types of care they will accept when they are no longer capable. Such advance decisions may even have the effect of hastening death, for instance. These kinds of advance directives are generally respected.

It is fair to say that the Supreme Court arguably does not require government today to admit advance directives in the context of medical aid in dying or to include mature minors among those eligible for medical aid in dying. It is my considered view, though, that both are desirable and logical extensions of the rationale driving the judgment. I recommend therefore—and you have this also in my witness statement—that these subject matters be studied during the next 18 to 24 months and that this be a statutorily mandated process codified in the act.

Thank you for your time.

9:10 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Anthony Housefather

Thank you very much to all of the witnesses for your very compelling testimony.

Now we're going to move to the questions section, and we're going to start with Mr. Nicholson.

9:15 a.m.

Conservative

Rob Nicholson Conservative Niagara Falls, ON

Thank you very much.

I'd like to welcome all of you to the panel today and thank you for your representations.

I will express a special welcome to you, Mr. Arvay, and I know that Mr. Bittle will agree with me. You come from our part of Canada, originally, so we're pleased to have you here.

I'll start with you, Mr. Arvay. You have as much experience as anyone, I guess, in terms of arguing cases and making sure of the constitutionality of various pieces of legislation. You've had a career in that area.

I'd like to have your opinion on the provisions within this law in terms of protecting people on matters of conscience with regard to whether they would participate in this. Do you think that would stand constitutional scrutiny if that had been...? Of course, it depends on how it's drafted, and I appreciate that, but what are your thoughts on that area in general?

9:15 a.m.

As an Individual

Joseph Arvay

Mr. Nicholson, I appreciate the question, and quite frankly, those portions of the bill are not something I've put my mind to. I've come here to deal with the definition of “grievous and irremediable”.

9:15 a.m.

Conservative

Rob Nicholson Conservative Niagara Falls, ON

This is free legal advice on this—

9:15 a.m.

As an Individual

Joseph Arvay

Yes, I appreciate that.

I can say this, though. Certainly when we argued the Carter case, it was our position that no doctor should be forced to provide physician-assisted dying, and the Supreme Court of Canada accepted that.

Beyond that I'm not prepared to answer that question. I'm sorry I can't be more helpful.

9:15 a.m.

Conservative

Rob Nicholson Conservative Niagara Falls, ON

That's fair.

Mr. Nicholas, congratulations on the interesting and fulfilling career that you've had in the province of New Brunswick, in serving New Brunswick and this country.

As a judge and someone who has studied this area, you'd be very aware of the history. I think since I've been a member of Parliament, the whole question of assisted dying has been rejected three times by Parliament, but that's not the world we're living in right now. The court has indicated that in fact it is constitutional and we have to deal with it. I appreciate the fact that there are people praying for parliamentarians, and we're very appreciative of that.

How much do you think Parliament can actually do at this particular time? Parliament was clear on its position, but now the courts have indicated very clearly that the present law, the law that's been on the books and maintained by Parliament is unconstitutional. How much can parliamentarians do, in your opinion?

9:15 a.m.

Former Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick, As an Individual

Graydon Nicholas

My memory goes back to the original charter that was being drafted in the 1980s, and the discussions that would have occurred then; and the notwithstanding clause was put in there for a purpose. I remember specifically why it was put in there: in order to make sure that this would in fact pass not only Parliament, but that it would get 70% of the vote of the provinces across this country.

I'm sure at the time the government would have consulted with individuals as to the effect of the notwithstanding clause. Of course, we know that has been invoked a few times in our country within the jurisdiction of various legislatures. Now we're saying that it's been spent.

I was disappointed that neither the previous government nor the current government explored publicly the notwithstanding clause. That option is off the table, as far as I'm concerned, according to what the current government is saying as well.

The law is the law. The Supreme Court has made its decision, but the judges also know that the ultimate judge is Parliament. Parliament is the one that enacts legislation, and if one of our fundamental rights is freedom of conscience, then I think Parliament has to protect that right as well so that it's not left to a particular province to ask whether these agencies can then force medical people to do this. Mr. Arvay has indicated that the chief justice said not to force.

I think the weakness of this current legislation is that there's nothing in there that respects that fundamental right, and if it's not in there under criminal law, it will be brought up as a defence, and it will be litigated from provincial court all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada, which will probably involve a five-to-seven-year span, and there will be a lot of litigation on this as well.

I don't see why Parliament cannot insert freedom of conscience in that bill for those who don't want to participate, including institutions. For example, the hospice that's been created in Fredericton and the hospice in Saint John have both said there's no way they're going to comply with this law if they're forced to participate in it.

9:20 a.m.

Conservative

Rob Nicholson Conservative Niagara Falls, ON

There certainly has been precedent for that even at the federal level with the Civil Marriage Act. There are provisions in there that someone can't be forced to do something against their conscience.

9:20 a.m.

Former Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick, As an Individual

Graydon Nicholas

I assume that the Coalition for HealthCARE and Conscience is going to appear here. Here's what they said:

No other foreign jurisdiction in the world that has legalized euthanasia/assisted suicide forces health care workers, hospitals, nursing homes or hospices to act against their conscience or mission [or] values.

9:20 a.m.

Conservative

Rob Nicholson Conservative Niagara Falls, ON

I agree with you completely.

9:20 a.m.

Former Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick, As an Individual

Graydon Nicholas

Thank you very much for that—

9:20 a.m.

Conservative

Rob Nicholson Conservative Niagara Falls, ON

Thank you very much for that.

Dr. Schuklenk, you made an interesting comment about the various laws. You talked specifically with respect to Belgium and the Netherlands.

One of the things you said is that there's no evidence that this causes a threat to vulnerable people. Many of us who have dealt with individuals on other levels and in other cases find that there is a group of people who are quite vulnerable. In the last Parliament, we dealt with the situation of people preying on teenagers and encouraging them to commit suicide. This was a considerable problem.

Also, many of us know people—it's not necessarily connected—who sometimes find themselves vulnerable as they advance through life. Those of us who practise law sometimes find individuals who have been taken advantage of and who get pressured by other individuals in a wide range of areas. Many times, it's with respect to money, with respect to taking money away from them and forcing them to do certain things. We do get quite a lot of emails, phone calls, and letters on this area. That is actually one of the areas that has been raised with us. There are people who may be vulnerable, or it may be in their family's interest to have them acquiesce to assisted suicide.

You were quite categorical in your comments here that this does not pose a threat to vulnerable people. I wonder if you could expand on that.

9:20 a.m.

Professor and Ontario Research Chair in Bioethics, Philosophy, Queen's University, As an Individual

Dr. Udo Schuklenk

Thank you for your question.

My claim is based on how, over many years, ever since these jurisdictions started decriminalizing this, they have basically looked at all the individual cases that were ever reported in those countries and tried to find out what categories of patients were asking for this.

When we talk about vulnerable people, who typically would come to mind? We would think that it might be people who might have trouble accessing health care, for instance, or people who have trouble accessing palliative care because they can't afford it. There are any number of reasons. The reality is that in virtually of these jurisdictions, the vast majority of patients asking for medical aid in dying are in fact late-stage cancer patients. While there is a bit of a fluctuation, these figures are fairly stable. It's the overwhelming majority.

For instance, if there were a serious danger to people with mental illnesses who received medical aid in dying, you would expect that after this having occurred for many years, the numbers would explode at some point. If you are concerned about the abuse claim, you would see that in one year year there were maybe 10 people, then there were 20 people, and then suddenly there were hundreds and thousands, and this is how they get rid of people with mental illnesses. This of course is not what's happening. What is actually happening is that in all of these jurisdictions, including the Netherlands and Belgium, the overwhelming majority of these kinds of patients asking for medical aid in dying actually have their requests rejected. To me, that's a really strong indication that protections are in place precisely for these kinds of vulnerable patients, and I'm glad they exist.

Do not get me wrong. I appreciate completely your concern. I'm just saying that when you look at the evidence, beyond anecdotes there is nothing to support these claims, and yes, I'll stick to that.

9:20 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Anthony Housefather

Thank you very much.

We will now move to Mr. Fraser.

9:20 a.m.

Liberal

Colin Fraser Liberal West Nova, NS

I believe Mr. McKinnon is going to go first.

9:20 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Anthony Housefather

Mr. McKinnon.

9:20 a.m.

Liberal

Ron McKinnon Liberal Coquitlam—Port Coquitlam, BC

Thank you, Chair.

Thanks to all the panellists.

I have questions for everyone but I probably won't have time for everyone, so I'm going to start with Professor Arvay.

9:20 a.m.

As an Individual

Joseph Arvay

It's just “Mr.” Arvay.

9:25 a.m.

Liberal

Ron McKinnon Liberal Coquitlam—Port Coquitlam, BC

Okay.

Recommendation number one of the joint House and Senate committee is that the term “grievous and irremediable” not require a further legislative definition. I take it you would agree with that.