Thank you for that.
Ms. Brittain, I'll turn to you. I appreciated the perspective you brought with your opening remarks. You really centred on a person's autonomy and their ability to make a choice that's their decision. Whether it's palliative sedation or do not resuscitate orders or declining further medical interventions, these are all, in a way, different forms of medically assisted death.
When we've been looking at the issue of protection for persons with disabilities, often we're struggling with that theme of a person's autonomy being constrained by the social conditions in which they find themselves—the dire poverty, the lack of economic supports, the lack of housing—and that theme of really focusing on a dignified life before someone can actually make a decision to get a dignified death.
I'll give you some leeway as well if you want to add anything that you want to see our committee report focus on when we table it in February of next year.