Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
First of all, it's a pleasure to join you here at the justice committee. I have been following the debates in the House on this bill, as well as here at committee from a distance. I appreciate the opportunity to join the conversation.
I salute the work of all the members on this committee because having heard some of the testimony from people like Mr. Foley and others, it is very powerful testimony. I know not every member has been in a position, maybe because of their party, where they've been able to let on to have been moved by that testimony, but it can't help but have moved all of us to some extent as we see it. I just want to recognize, not the toll in the usual sense maybe but the emotional toll that these conversations are taking on all of us.
I was part of the debate, in a much greater sense, the first time this bill went through. I proposed a number of amendments myself at the justice committee.
My grandfather who was in a home passed away around the same time that this debate was going through the House, so all of us as well, as we contextualize what's happening, I know we are thinking about the things that may be happening or have happened in our own lives. That's particularly poignant, given all those who are suffering as a result of the isolation associated with the public health measures that need to be in place right now.
I recall specifically four years ago when this was being discussed, the importance of the question of advance consent. This amendment speaks to maybe trying to find a middle ground on the question of advance consent. The arguments of those in favour of advance consent—and these arguments were made at the time in the House—said that a person who perceives what their future would look like under certain circumstances and does not want that future, but also if that future takes place in a context where they're cognitively not able to rise to that legal standard of decision-making, there is some sense in which, if they're able to make the decision in advance, they should be able to.
That's the argument behind it, that somebody who experiences cognitive decline, as well as an increase in the pain they're feeling, shouldn't be prevented from making a decision that they would want to make if they were able to make that decision. In the absence of being able to have that decision take place in the moment, the idea of advance consent is that we would, in a sense, substitute the decision-making in advance. That is the logic, the ideal that is being aspired to.
Although the government decided not to proceed at the time, I think they were quite persuaded by some of the arguments made around the Audrey Parker case. This case was used to make the argument that if a person is not able to consent in advance about some future point, then they will make the choice to die before they would like to die.
What's striking about that case to me is that the law as it was written, Bill C-14, is supposed to only apply in a case where a person is in that moment experiencing serious and irremediable suffering. I always had a hard time in my mind squaring the circle of how it is that a person says, yes, they were experiencing serious and irremediable suffering in the moment and also wanted to be able to choose the moment to die, but they wanted it to be at such and such a point in the future, and not at this point.
I'm not taking away from the sincerity of a person who makes that decision in that moment. I'm just saying it was a hard thing for me to understand, but this was the direction of the argument.
On the other hand, those who were concerned about advance consent.... I was one of them. I made a few different arguments and I think those arguments still apply in the context of this amendment.
First of all, a person who makes a decision in the moment—who actions consent in the moment—is the only kind of consent we accept in law. I cannot consent in a way that binds my future self to some action. In the spirit of liberty and in the spirit of autonomy, we do see future selves as being distinct from present selves. There is a sense in which I am the same person I was five years ago, but there's also a sense in which I am a different person from the person I was five years ago. The person I was five years ago—let's say at the time the bill was first being debated—might have different thoughts about the issue, might have made different decisions and might have engaged the parliamentary process in a different way, and so forth.
The difference in the self I am now and the self I was then is that I have learned new things. I have also adapted to new circumstances. Things that I thought would be easy maybe turned out more difficult. Things that I thought would be difficult maybe turned out easier than I thought. The decisions I make today in the moment respond to the circumstances that I find myself in and the evolution or the changes that I may have gone through in between that point in the past and the point now.
We can all accept that as a general principle in the course of our lives, which is why we generally say in many different contexts that consent is consent in the moment. It's when you say yes to something in the moment. If you say yes to something and then a few minutes later you say, no, you don't actually want to proceed, then the present decision to say no overrules the previous yes. People change their minds. They absorb new information. They feel differently and they feel in ways that they didn't expect they would feel under certain circumstances.
What is true as a general principle is true in a particular way for those who have experienced some dramatic change in their life, like the onset of a disease or some kind of dramatic change in their health status. People don't really know how their life would be different if something that has been a big part of their life or something that they have taken for granted suddenly ceases to be there.
There's a lot of data around this. Part of what interested me about this whole question of advance consent versus present consent is that I did my master's dissertation on the idea that you could measure happiness. It is a really interesting field and important for how we benchmark our social goals and so forth.
One of the things about the happiness data is that people adapt to dramatically new circumstances in ways that they don't expect. That adaptation varies dramatically across different kinds of circumstances. A person might expect that if they were to get into an accident and have a disability and a change in their function, that person might, before that happened, expect that it would have a much greater impact on their quality of life. That's often the case, actually, for physical disability. At least, that is what the data suggests, that what they might expect as the loss of well-being that they would receive as a result of experiencing a physical disability is actually much less than the actual loss of well-being.
I'm certainly not an athlete, but suppose I was. I might think that if such and such a thing happened to me I wouldn't be able to do all these things that I liked doing and therefore my life would be so dramatically different it would be hardly bearable. Then at that future point, having been through a process of adaptation, having taken on new interests and having developed new hobbies, I may find myself thinking that, actually, I wish that accident or whatever it was hadn't happened to me, but my ability to adapt to the circumstances that I've been through is much greater than I thought it would be.
That's not the case in every case, and there is wide variation in terms of the way different things impact different people.
The point is that it's very hard to predict. If you ask me to make an advance directive, if I were to get this illness, if I were to have this particular kind of loss of functioning, and if I were to experience this change in my life, at what point and under what circumstances would I want medical assistance in dying? That current self projecting what the desires would be of that future self would be so imprecise to what my actual experiences were in the moment when I actually had those changes take place.
This is the core problem, at least with the idea of an advance directive. At the time, we were talking about this four years ago. There was advocacy for the idea of an advance directive, which is where a person could say—