I can only reflect on what happens in a situation with adults.
We often will do interviews with the person seeking a MAID assessment and their supporters—their loved ones or whomever. We will often find a way to have a conversation separately with the person, just to ensure that they're not being coerced one way or the other into making a decision.
More often than not, when people are thinking about this, they've been thinking about it for a long time. Oftentimes when they come, they come with somebody who has been there with them on that journey. They understand the illness. They understand that this is going to be a difficult conversation. They're there to be supportive. Rarely, we have circumstances where people are not supportive, so clearly, they picked the wrong person.
I could see the same thing happening with parents and children, except ramp that up tenfold in terms of the concern and, as you mentioned, the idea about thinking of this as a parent.
Once again, it gets down to the degree of comprehension and the degree of support from the team around this group of people to work through this process together, recognizing that the decision is not going to be made just like that. The decision is going to be a process rather than just this immediate...and we're done.