Yes, I have, and I've also had colleagues share similar experiences. I'll give you an example.
I was working for two years in a palliative care unit in my region, and in the palliative care unit, MAID is done. Patients are referred from other hospitals and other settings to the units to receive MAID. There were some occasions on which I saw patients I thought could benefit from palliative care, in that the treatment, the palliation, they received was suboptimal, and we could optimize it, but I was made to feel that I was obstructing access to it.
I think that does happen, and if you speak to colleagues, you will hear those examples.
That reminds me that I think a previous speaker said that most people who are requesting MAID are receiving palliative care. There are examples in which they arrive in palliative care units, and therefore on paper they are in a palliative care setting. However, they are not receiving palliative care; they are awaiting MAID.
I think we need to look at those numbers a bit more cautiously and closely.