Thank you very much, and thank you for the invitation to speak today.
I am an associate professor in the Lawrence S. Bloomberg faculty of nursing at the University of Toronto, and I hold a tier-two Canada research chair in pediatric palliative care. Prior to shifting my focus to research, I worked for 12 years as a staff nurse, mostly providing care to children with cancer but also to those with other types of life-threatening illnesses.
The overarching goal of my program of research is to examine and enhance the provision of palliative care for children living with a life-threatening illness and their families so that every child who might benefit receives optimal care.
Unfortunately, my research continues to show that many children do not have access to specialized pediatric palliative care, and there are some concerning inequities in who accesses this care. Much of this research was highlighted in the final report of the expert panel working group on MAID for mature minors through the Council of Canadian Academies. I was a member of the working group.
My comments will focus on the implications of my research for the care provided to mature minors and their potential eligibility for MAID.
Palliative care is seen as a fundamental human right. It focuses on minimizing suffering and maximizing quality of life. It is meant to be provided from the time a child is diagnosed with a life-threatening condition through to the end of their life.
Palliative care can be delivered in different ways, but my research has primarily focused on the care delivered by specialized pediatric palliative care teams, namely, interprofessional teams of health professionals, typically doctors, nurses, social workers, child life specialists, spiritual care providers and others who have expertise in both the care of children and in palliative care.
One of my first studies was to examine the teams who provided this specialized care and the children who received it. In 2002, there were only seven teams like this in Canada, and they provided care to only about one in every 20 children who might benefit. We repeated the study in 2012 and found there were 13 teams providing care to one in five children who might benefit.
As of 2022, there are 17 teams, but I don’t yet have the statistics on how many children have been receiving this care across the country in the last year. However, based on a couple of relatively recent studies we've done just focused on Ontario, about one in three children who died from a life-threatening condition received care from one of these teams. Clearly, there have been improvements over time, but the progress has been very slow over the last 20 years.
In Ontario, we've looked more closely at children who died from cancer and found that those living in the lowest-income areas and those living furthest away from a tertiary children’s hospital were least likely to receive specialist palliative care. Given the Canadian geography, it may not be surprising that those living further away were less likely to access care.
Couldn’t it just be provided by adult palliative care providers or general pediatricians? Absolutely. Many of the specialist teams work with these other providers to be able to provide care closer to home, acting as consultants so the child still gets the benefits of the specialist team.
We were able to compare the children who received at least some of their care through the specialized teams with those who received palliative care but without involvement of a specialist team and those who had no indication that they had received any type of palliative care. We found that those with the specialist care were dramatically less likely to have frequent visits to the hospital, to the intensive care unit and to the emergency department in the last 30 days of their lives, and they were much less likely to die in the hospital than those who got no palliative care. Unfortunately, the middle group, the ones who got some kind of palliative care outside of a specialist team, were no different in terms of hospital visits or dying in the hospital from those who got no palliative care.
Specialist teams make a difference in the support provided to children and families. As I said at the outset, these teams are experts in providing pain and symptom management, addressing psychosocial and existential concerns, supporting families and maximizing quality of life while minimizing suffering. However, not all Canadian children are able to access these services.
I cannot see how we could allow a mature minor to choose MAID unless all support options are fully explored by a specialized team of health professionals who do this work every day. My greatest fear would be that a 16- or 17-year-old who does not have access to this type of care would be left feeling that MAID is his or her only option.
Thank you.