Thank you for the opportunity to be here today.
My name is Stefanie Green. I'm a physician with 25 years of clinical experience. In June 2016, I began working almost exclusively in medical assistance in dying. I'm currently an assessor of eligibility as well as a provider of MAID in B.C.
While I wear a number of MAID-related titles, I am primarily here today in my capacity as the president of the Canadian Association of MAiD Assessors and Providers, a national medical association that represents and supports the variety of professionals who have arguably grown into the foremost experts on assisted dying in this country.
I wish to impress upon this committee that as an organization, we do not work to advocate assisted dying. We are in fact the community of professionals who do the work to the highest of medical standards and always within the law of the country, whatever that law may be. We have the collective lived experience of how the practice of assisted dying has unfolded across this country, where the obstacles and successes have been found and how the system might be improved to the benefit of all involved. It is in this context that I now address you and hope to answer your questions.
In the limited time I have, I want to be sure to first emphasize what I think Bill C-7 has gotten right, and then speak to what I think needs clarification and suggest two simple but important practical changes.
I first want to support the proposed removal of the 10-day reflection period for those whose death is reasonably foreseeable. In four and a half years, there has been no evidence that this reflection period has safeguarded anyone from anything, but there is evidence to suggest that it has mandated substantial suffering, which I do not believe was the intention of the law. In my written brief, I have provided some of this convincing data, and in my comments now I simply bid good riddance to what has proven to be an essentially false safeguard.
Second, I want to strongly support the proposed amendment to allow the waiving of final consent in the specific situation outlined in Bill C-7. A 2019 survey of MAID providers suggested that 85% of providers have personally experienced the situation of walking into a room to facilitate an assisted death only to find the patient no longer able to provide final consent due to an unexpected loss of capacity. I can tell you from first-hand experience how horrible that situation is. Loved ones standardly beg for the clinician to proceed. It is an agonizing situation for all, and I am unable to appreciate who exactly is being protected in such a situation by not proceeding with the previously planned MAID death. I am absolutely clear on who is harmed. The proposed amendment is essential, overdue and will be welcomed by patients, their families and the professionals involved in this work.
I do find the proposed requirement of setting a specific date somewhat problematic from a practical point of view. In my written brief, I have suggested that a 90-day time frame be used instead of a specific date being set, and I have suggested some very simple altered wording for your consideration.
Third, I applaud the government for specifically using the term “expert” when seeking expertise in complex illnesses and patients whose deaths are not reasonably foreseeable. This is a recognition that one does not need to be a particular medical subspecialist to have expertise in illness. Very often, family physicians and nurse practitioners are, by the nature of their practices, experts in a wide array of illnesses. This is especially true of practitioners in rural communities. In fact, many types of health professionals can and do develop expertise in specific illnesses, and it is wise to recognize this wide range of possible expertise.
That said, there are two remaining issues that must be highlighted.
First, I need to point to what I believe is a small but tremendously important error in Bill C-7, one that suggests a misunderstanding of health care realities and carries significant ramification. I believe this error can be easily and consensually remedied.
The current wording of proposed section 3.1 suggests that a clinician with “expertise” in the illness must be one of the assessors of eligibility for MAID in patients whose death is not reasonably foreseeable. Requiring the input of an expert on the illness in such a situation is not an unreasonable requirement, but mandating that the expert complete an assessment of eligibility for MAID itself is wholly unrealistic. As consultants consistently write in their reports to me, they will comment on their area of expertise but respectfully decline to opine on a patient’s overall eligibility for MAID, as that is neither their area of expertise nor their interest.
In my written submission, I have suggested simple wording that maintains the requirement for expert input but allows—in fact, requires—that two experienced MAID assessors do the work of assessing the patient's eligibility for MAID. To do otherwise, as is currently written, would essentially obstruct access to MAID for those whose death is not reasonably foreseeable.
Finally, the term “reasonably foreseeable” has historically created confusion. Now that a consistent, clinical consensus has developed and we have a court-backed working interpretation, it would be helpful if the government were to reinforce that the determination of what constitutes a reasonably foreseeable death is indeed a clinical decision and that its meaning has not changed with the implementation of Bill C-7.
I'm happy to answer any questions on these or other issues, and I thank you for your serious consideration of my comments.