There are just a couple of comments I could make.
One is that I think we have seen this same sort of situation play out in the early days of MAID. I think practitioners at the time were very concerned about their ability and their capacity and, frankly, whether they would have the legal protections they needed if they proceeded with their practice of MAID. I think we are now, for sure, encountering more challenging cases, such as cases in which natural death is not reasonably foreseeable and, as you indicated, cases of mental illness.
The conversations we've had with practitioners have absolutely pointed to concerns that they have. There are certainly some practitioners who have indicated that they may not wish to practise MAID in cases other than those in which a natural death is reasonably foreseeable. What we are hearing more often, particularly in our interactions with providers who are associated with this organization I mentioned, CAMAP, is that they want to have the tools and they want the education and they want the interaction with their colleagues. This will assist them to make the kinds of very complex clinical judgments that have to be made about whether or not a person actually qualifies in terms of the characteristics you enumerated of a grievous and irremediable medical condition. They also need support to apply the safeguards, particularly those safeguards that have to do with the offer of available supports and services that might alleviate the suffering of a person.
What I think we're observing, and we expect this will continue, is that while the number of providers involved in MAID is increasing, in fact the increase in the number of cases is being dealt with by fewer people; that is, more MAID practitioners are doing more cases. What we're seeing is the evolution of a specialty. That's why support for this accreditation training program is so vital: It's because it is going to require a level of expertise to address all of these standard concerns, which everybody agrees are legitimate concerns about mental illness, for example, and incurability and irreversibility.
Other concerns are about how to assess competence and capacity, and what about suicidality? What about other vulnerable circumstances that play into the person's condition and therefore the assessment?
We're hearing...I don't know if I want to call it “concern”, but what we're hearing is the need for support. The MAID community has, in our view, really stepped up to work to try to address these issues. It's not to say there will not be some attrition among some providers who have concerns. I think that is natural and understandable.