I have a very different viewpoint.
In my experience as a MAID provider, especially for people with disabilities and even advanced illnesses, such as multiple sclerosis, the entire treatment team had been obstructing patients' access to care, and actually inducing traumatic stress in those patients and their families with their personal views that patients should keep on trying when they have really reached the end of the line, after years or decades of illness.
My patients with disabilities who qualify for MAID under Bill C-14 have told me multiple times that they abandoned health care because their practitioners continued to force upon them the concepts of continuing to struggle when they were done.
We found that, initially, providers of health care, including family physicians and specialists, would abandon patient care. That stopped after provincial regulations from colleges made it clear that this was not okay. We now actually find that patients abandon their health care workers and vote with their feet, and actually compromise their disability care and their palliative care. As MAID providers, we then pick that up, and work on that from scratch before we even start to make progress.
There are other unintended outcomes when people who think they're doing the right thing to protect their patient actually take it too far, and there are always two sides to a coin.