There a couple of things there.
When someone has lived in the community and they've lived their life with a spinal cord injury.... I've talked to patients and some of my patients have applied for MAID. Some of them have qualified, but have put in on the back burner. They just want to leave it there, in case.
One fellow has lived with his spinal cord injury for over 50 years. He's quadriplegic. He wants it on the back burner, in case he decides at some point that this is too much. He's definitely able to make an autonomous and well-informed decision. He's lived with this for a lot of years. He knows it better than anybody.
Now, do I trust the people...? In my province, the lead physician in charge of MAID is excellent. I trust her to make.... I've talked to her about all of this and how people in the early days, before they've realized what it's like to live with their disability, can't make that informed choice, and she agrees with me. I'm glad that I have her in this province and that I can trust her to do that.
Does that answer your question?