Thank you, Madam Chair.
I'd like to first move CPC-4.
I'll reflect back on Bill C-14, which was adopted five years ago. It required that individuals be given the opportunity to change their mind after a request was made. This is where death is reasonably foreseeable, but it doesn't mean it's imminent. It doesn't mean it's within weeks. In fact, as we've seen from some cases, it could be years.
In the limited testimony we've had, it became a theme that people can change their mind. We tossed around this idea of life or death. People have said, “This is a life-or-death situation” when often it isn't, but in this case we are literally dealing with life or death.
The majority Liberal government that introduced Bill C-14 put in place a requirement that there be:
...10 clear days between the day on which the request was signed by or on behalf of the person and the day on which the medical assistance in dying is provided or—
It means that if you've signed and said, “I would like to have medical assistance in death”, there would be 10 clear days. There was a reason why that was put in place by the Liberal government.
—if they and the other medical practitioner or nurse practitioner referred to in paragraph (e) are both of the opinion that the person’s death, or the loss of their capacity to provide informed consent, is imminent—any shorter period that the first medical practitioner or nurse practitioner considers appropriate in the circumstances....
When we've discussed this, I've heard other colleagues say, “Sometimes this was just making people wait for no reason.” Well, Bill C-14 provided for that scenario. The 10 days could be waived in circumstances where death is imminent. If someone is going to pass away in two days or a day, no, there does not have to be a 10-day reflection period. Remember we're dealing with cases where an individual may have years to live, and what we're saying is to take that 10-day reflection period. There's a reason it was put in place.
Now we have two tracks—death reasonably foreseeable and death not reasonably foreseeable—without a definition of “reasonably foreseeable”. If someone falls into the other track, there is a 90-day reflection period. If someone falls into death being reasonably foreseeable, under Bill C-14, there was a 10-day reflection period that could be waived. Bill C-7 strips that out. Some may say that it's unnecessary suffering and so on, but what they don't say is that the 10-day period could be waived.
I want to list a few organizations, and every one of us is familiar with these organizations: the Canadian Society of Palliative Care Physicians, the Council of Canadians with Disabilities, and Inclusion Canada. We heard testimony from Inclusion Canada's executive vice-president. The persons with disabilities communities are in favour of this being reinstated. Palliative care physicians, who are end-of-life physicians, are in favour of this being reinstated.
We're not asking for anything earth-shattering here. Some of the safeguards that were put in place by the previous government were just that. They were safeguards to protect the vulnerable. One of them was this 10-day reflection period. Bill C-7 takes it out. This amendment simply keeps it in, and it keeps in the possibility that the 10 days can be waived when death is imminent.
I thank you for your consideration of this amendment.