Boozhoo, aaniin, good morning, bonjour.
I would like to thank the joint chairs, vice-chairs, members, honourable senators and members of Parliament for the invitation to appear before you.
My name is Dr. Cornelia “Nel” Wieman. I'm originally from Little Grand Rapids First Nation in Treaty 5 territory, Manitoba, part of the Anishinabe nation. I now live, work and play in the traditional, unceded, ancestral and continually occupied territories of the Coast Salish people, including the Musqueam, the Squamish and the Tsleil-Waututh nations.
I'm the first indigenous woman in Canada to train as a psychiatrist, and I have over 20 years of experience in clinical practice in a variety of settings, including rural, on reserve, urban and in tertiary care emergency psychiatry departments. It would be difficult to quantify how many psychiatric assessments I have conducted over more than two decades, though I would estimate, at a minimum, several thousand.
I most recently completed a six-year term as the president of the Indigenous Physicians Association of Canada and currently serve as the deputy chief medical officer at the First Nations Health Authority in British Columbia. However, I'm not speaking to you today in either of those leadership capacities. I am providing my testimony as an individual, as a psychiatrist and as a member of the expert panel on MAID and mental illness that tabled our final report in May of this year.
I will highlight a few key messages in these opening remarks and then look forward to further discussion in the Q and A period to follow. Section 1.5 of the final report of the expert panel says:
Indigenous peoples in Canada have unique perspectives on death which need to be considered in the context of the emergence of MAiD including MAiD MD-SUMC. However, engagement with Indigenous peoples in Canada concerning MAiD has yet to occur.
Hearing from additional witnesses, including myself, cannot be considered to be a fulsome consultation with first nations, Métis or Inuit. Perspectives on MAID are on a spectrum. I have heard of medically assisted deaths occurring in first nations communities that are grounded in ceremony, where the whole community is aware of what is happening and the dying person is drummed into the next world. On the other end of the spectrum are those who are still acutely distressed by their individual experiences of historical, intergenerational and contemporary traumas. Their view of MAID is that it essentially amounts to genocide.
This becomes even more complicated when we consider MAID in the MD-SUMC category. There is the potential for the spread of misinformation, as we have seen during the COVID pandemic, to the extent that some people believe indigenous youth who are suicidal will be able to access MAID. We all know that would not be allowed to happen, but these are reasons why broader engagement is necessary.
Last, I will note the fatigue of first nations communities associated with engagement and consultation, speaking from my experience in British Columbia. There has been so much going on over the past several years that communities have had to contend with that asking for further consultation at this time on a highly charged topic such as MAID in general, and MAID MD-SUMC specifically, is daunting. First nations communities are more likely to want to discuss the youth suicide crisis than MAID MD-SUMC, and yet they must be consulted.
This committee has no doubt heard from other witnesses or is aware of some of the challenges that many indigenous people face in terms of the social determinants of health placing them in situations of vulnerability. Having a mental illness, living in inadequate or unstable housing, being underemployed or unemployed, and experiencing food insecurity can all contribute to physical and mental suffering, and assessments for MAID MD-SUMC will have to grapple with trying to tease out this type of suffering from that related to an incurable, irreversible mental disorder. How can the suffering be alleviated, especially in rural and remote settings where health and social services programs and resources are already scarce and inadequate?
Some of these issues are summarized in a statement from the expert panel's final report:
As a result of the creation of laws that provide access to MAiD, concerns have been raised by Indigenous leaders and communities that it is easier for people in their communities to access a way to die than to access the resources they need to live well.
In the interim report of the special joint committee from June 2022, I note some discussion on the issue of access to health services, in reference to all Canadians, including indigenous people in Canada, having equitable access both to MAID assessments if requested and to the health care services and programs they may need to prevent irremediable suffering. However, we must expand our understanding of “access” to mean not just having a health care professional team or services available to provide care in a reasonable amount of time. Medical care and attention can be impeded by people choosing not to access services because of, in this instance, anti-indigenous racism and discriminatory treatment. Indigenous people choose not to access health services out of a fear of how they will be treated. It will be imperative that cultural safety is assured in clinical care related to MAID and MAID MD-SUMC. This would include having access to both western medical and traditional healing and supports.
I thank you again for the opportunity to participate in the session today. I look forward to our discussion and encourage you to continue to seek out the perspectives of first nations, Métis and Inuit peoples and organizations in the work of this committee.
Thank you. Meegwetch.