Thank you very much, Madam Co-Chair.
Thank you to all of our witnesses.
I would like to start with the Schoutens. First of all, echoing my colleagues, I'd like to thank both of you for having the courage to appear before our committee and to share your personal experiences with your son Marcus.
What we're struggling with here is respecting a person's autonomy. There's a question I want to pose to you.
Under B.C. law—I'm also a resident of British Columbia—we have a provincial law, the Infants Act, which defines what mature minor consent is. Essentially, under provincial law, children can refuse health care if the health care provider assesses them and determines they have the necessary understanding to give that consent.
For example, if a child is living with a terminal illness and the health care provider has the understanding that they can give consent, that child can say, “I don't want you to resuscitate me; I want to refuse feeding and I want to refuse all kinds of life-saving measures should my body fail.”
Perhaps I could ask you for your perspective on that, because that is a way for a child under the age of 18 to essentially give consent, to say that they don't want to be resuscitated.
Can you maybe frame your answer? That's a child making a decision on their end-of-life care. How, in your mind, does that differentiate from a child using that same autonomy to say, “I want to choose the time and space of my passing and maybe I want to do it so that I can have my family members and friends come at a pre-determined time and I can then go out the way I want to”?