Good evening. Thank you for giving me the opportunity to make this presentation.
I am going to read the main points in my brief.
Some Canadian and Quebec organizations are suggesting that medical assistance in dying for people with major neurocognitive impairments could relieve their suffering. It is also assumed that dementia can be seen as horrible defect, and that this is how a majority of Canadians and Quebeckers would see it. People who are afraid of suffering cognitive impairments will go so far as to wish for their own death. In this short brief, we will show the reasons why it is not ethical to permit the administration of medical assistance in dying, or MAID, for people suffering from dementia, by way of advance medical directives, or AMD.
My argument is threefold: it is practical, it is emotional, and it is supported by the principle of autonomy, put in context.
I will address the practical side first. In terms of health care in Canada, there is a serious shortage of geriatricians. Although some family doctors assess dementias and their consequences, it seems that an expert eye is needed for determining the level of suffering experienced by a person with advanced dementia. It is very difficult to predict the evolution of a cognitive illness with certainty. There are few reliable criteria for assessing pain, mood disorders and existential suffering. Often, when there is no reliable tool in a clinic, an expert opinion is sought. In the case of advanced dementia, there are few experts in the field: geriatricians, geriatric psychiatrists and physicians who work in LTCHs or nursing homes. There are very few of these specialists in Canada.
As well, in the Netherlands, the only country that allows euthanasia by advance request, a majority of those expert physicians do not follow advance medical directives, because the directives are often not clear or are even inconsistent with the reality of care. In practice, therefore, MAID by AMD is not applicable in Canada because of the shortage of specialists who are able to assess people with dementia who will want access to MAID. As well, when access to euthanasia by advance medical directives is allowed, as in the Netherlands, the directives are only very rarely applicable.
In addition, in Quebec, a group of researchers has pointed out that the Quebeckers participating in their study did not really understand what MAID and advance medical directives are. That is not the strongest ethical argument, since the number of geriatricians, geriatric psychiatrists and physicians in long-term care homes could be increased. It would obviously be a major challenge, but it is not impossible in absolute terms. With more research in gerontology, we could establish reliable scales for assessing physical, psychological and existential suffering for patients with advanced dementia. This research still has to be adequately funded.
Finally, if patients were guided by their physician to fill out their AMD, they could write directives that are meaningful in terms of their clinical situation, or nearly so. It is therefore important to analyze other emotional and ethical arguments against MAID for patients with dementia.
I will now talk about the fear of decline. Dementia causes losses of functional autonomy. That means that it causes difficulties in performing household and day‑to‑day tasks. Of course, we understand that people are afraid of dementia because of the mass deaths in LTCHs and nursing homes because of the COVID‑19 pandemic. But that fear is only partially justified. There has been a lack of care and we still need to improve geriatric services. We can train and hire more caregivers in Canada. As well, valuing the work done by family caregivers and adding resources of every nature will be essential.
Apart from the strong desire to improve geriatric care in Canada, other actions are needed in order to reduce the fear of “decline” associated with cognitive losses. We also have to combat the prevailing ageism. That term refers to discrimination against older people through malevolent attitudes, disrespectful behaviour and hurtful words. The medical profession and the prevailing culture are imbued with ageism in the West, and this leads to poor practices. In our opinion, one of them is MAID for patients with advanced dementia. Often, a senior who is in a situation of vulnerability because of cognitive impairment is not considered to be a full member of society because they are not working and are not profitable to society. That is the economic liberal view of human beings, which defines the value of an individual by their capacity to work, and it is wrong. It leads to discrimination and even hatred of persons with dementia. Decline is assumed, because the individual has disabilities, a mental illness, and cognitive impairments associated with dementia. As Canadians, we will have to stand up for vulnerable seniors.
In my professional experience, we sometimes even have to persuade seniors that they still have value in spite of their cognitive deficit or psychiatric illness. Seniors can internalize that hatred of themselves. What I mean by “internalize” is a well-known concept for other forms of discrimination. A person who frequently hears disrespectful remarks aimed at themself will ultimately believe that their supposed defects or problems are real. The same is true for ageism. Even though the person should defend themself, they come to accept and even believe the negative prejudice aimed at them, and to request MAID. However, we have to recognize their individual value, which is not limited to their age, their productivity or the fact that they have no disability.
The human individual has intrinsic value: that is the dignity, the real dignity, the dignity that we can never lose, as the philosopher Immanuel Kant meant it.