Obviously, no. It wouldn't be possible to do that in the present circumstances because a person's capacities must be in advanced decline for that person to be eligible for medical assistance in dying.
When you make a diagnosis, you usually ensure that the person has made a will and a mandate in case of incapacity. You ensure that the person has made all the necessary arrangements for the disposition of his or her person and property. However, you won't bring up medical assistance in dying in the same breath or during the same meeting.
There's a major debate within the medical profession on this particular point: should we propose medical assistance in dying, as one of a number of therapeutic options, to someone who's clearly eligible, or do we refrain from from doing so? There's no consensus. I think we should wait for the request for medical assistance in dying to come from the person rather than propose it as a therapeutic option. That position is can be criticized, but it's mine.