Thank you, Madam Chair.
I think some of the most important testimony we heard, in the very limited testimony time that was allotted at this committee.... We had only four days. One of those days was the ministers responsible, so really we had only three days of testimony. One of the most important takeaways from the testimony I heard, among the physicians, psychiatrists and MAID practitioners we heard from, came from those representing the persons with disability community.
Mr. Manly mentioned that this particular amendment is supported by Inclusion Canada. Inclusion Canada is an organization that represents the interest of persons living with disabilities, but the persons living with disabilities community—provincial organizations, local organizations and national organizations—are virtually universally opposed to Bill C-7. Realizing that the numbers are against them, they want to at least make the appeal for safeguards.
There was a report prepared by advisers to the vulnerable persons standard. These are doctors and physicians working in the Canadian health care system. It's titled “Failing People with Disabilities who Experience Systemic Suffering: Gaps in the Monitoring System for Medical Assistance in Dying”. I would certainly recommend it to all committee members.
They make the following case:
The existing monitoring reporting system is the result of a federal-provincial negotiation. At the time it was first...developed in 2018, comprehensive proposals for a more robust system were put on the table by a broad cross-section of experts and disability organizations. However, these were rejected by the federal government....
They go on to list a number of cases where they've identified gaps in the monitoring and reporting system:
Several cases of people with disabilities who requested and received MAiD raise very serious concerns that the eligibility criteria for access are not being adhered to in all cases. Nor is the process for obtaining informed consent and guarding against “external pressure,” as the legislation requires, always being managed in a way to fully explore alternative courses of action. In some cases, it appears that multiple pleas for access to needed supports have gone unaddressed, eventually leading the person to give up and apply for and accept MAiD in apparent defeat.
They mention the case of Archie Rolland, who was transferred against his will from a residence that provided highly specialized care to a geriatric long-term care facility in Lachine, Quebec: “Without staff adequately trained to communicate with him and provide essential care, he spent the remaining days of his life documenting the suffering that this caused and advocating for humane and capable care.”
How inspiring it is that some individuals who are dealing with a really low point in their life—we all saw the testimony of Roger Foley—who, in spite of the challenges they're facing, take the opportunity to try to advocate on behalf of people who may walk down the road that they're travelling. I find it inspiring that they do that.
One of the things being said by these groups, these persons with disabilities organizations and Inclusion Canada, is that there need to be more robust safeguards. They support this amendment.
With that, Madam Chair, I'd like to indicate my support as well for this amendment, PV-3.