Thank you, Madam Chair.
My family medical practice cares for marginalized patients, including those living in poverty; refugees; men out of prison who are facing charges; the LGBTQ+ community; indigenous persons; and those struggling with mental health, addictions, chronic pain and disabilities.
I have experienced childhood racism, bullying and sexual abuse, so I understand that the choice to die can easily be influenced by injustices that life has dealt us.
At prior committees I raised concerns that inequalities and circumstances, such as poverty, trauma, lack of timely access to medical care [Technical difficulty—Editor] can lead to MAID being raised as a treatment option to such a victim of discrimination.
I warned that many injuries and illnesses are accompanied by transient suicidality that ends with adaptation and support, but which on average takes two years. Then the overwhelming majority of persons after those two years rate their quality of life as the same as age-matched healthy individuals. Offering MAID in a period of known increased suicidality would lead to the premature deaths of those who would have recovered.
Now Bill C-7 is the law.
A man had a small stroke affecting his balance and swallowing. The patient was depressed and isolated due to a COVID-19 outbreak on his ward. The stroke neurologist anticipated the man would be able to eat normally and regain most of his balance. He declined all therapy, and psychiatry diagnosed him with an adjustment disorder, but they felt he would improve. However, he requested MAID. Neither of his MAID assessors had any experience in stroke rehabilitation and recovery.
In this acute phase while struggling with his mood and isolation with no therapy to gauge his final level of function, he received MAID. He had no terminal illness, but due to the fact that he was adapting to a slightly thickened diet and so was temporarily slightly undernourished, they considered him “track one” eligible, and he received MAID the following week. No safeguards were technically broken, and yet he died when acutely down, isolated and had not experienced living with maximal recovery from his stroke.
Mr. Ernest McNeill was a 71-year-old widower admitted to hospital for falls. During his admission, he contracted C. difficile, an infectious diarrheal illness. He was openly humiliated by staff for the smell of his room. He developed a new shortness of breath that was not comprehensively assessed. Without the patient requesting it, a hospital team member raised and recommended MAID to him.
The team said he had COPD, and it held a terminal prognosis. The MAID procedure was booked by the hospital team before he even had a second assessment, and within 48 hours of his first assessment he was dead. Post-mortem tests confirmed no significant COPD, and his family doctor also said he didn't have end-stage COPD, but no one had contacted her for collateral history.
MAID was raised with this patient. There is no safeguard in Bill C-7 that forbids raising MAID, and the related amendment was voted down by the Senate. CAMAP has a document called “Bringing Up Medical Assistance in Dying”, and Susan MacDonald mentioned at this committee that MAID should be raised as part of the informed consent process. Was MAID raised because his admission was longer than expected as a result of his being a victim of ageism? Did he choose MAID because his acute care team made him feel horrible? His family believes so.
The “In Plain Sight” report by B.C. and the tragic story of Joyce Echaquan demand that we take these considerations seriously.
Finally, after a CTV W5 story showed a gentleman's MAID provision, the immediate Monday afterwards, a patient let me know that the story was super appealing and that MAID would be good for her. My patient is in her early mid-life, has a recent spinal cord injury and hasn't had time to adjust, receive peer support or proper symptom control, nor reach maximal recovery, but she does now quality for track two MAID within 90 days. The legislation is built in a way that allows for her death before she has had a chance to experience maximal recovery. This case also shows how the government must consider current suicide research showing that messaging promoting suicide may lead to more people choosing it.
The MAID regime appears to be allowing a right to die with government assistance for certain groups. Inadequate safeguards suggest that this has been packaged and thinly veiled as a medical procedure. If this is not the case, I ask the government to reconsider its MAID regime.
Thank you.