I think they're quite different.
Advance requests or directives for withholding treatment are about things that aren't going to be done to us. All of the examples listed earlier by Dr. Andrew were about things that you refuse to have happen to you. We've provided for that under provincial-territorial law on the basis that by refusing certain things, you do exercise control in the sense that you will allow your death to take its natural course.
In the case of providing advance requests, I would still submit that there is no consent to the termination of your life at a future point. There is a substitute decision-maker who has to decide that now is when we'll do the injection. You're not consenting; someone else is, and it is to have something done to you that is intended to cause your death. That is fundamentally different from advance directives for withholding or withdrawing life-sustaining treatment, at which time comfort care—palliative care—is provided to support you through the natural course of your death. Those who provide that comfort care and withhold those treatments do so guided by your advance directive and on the decision of a substitute decision-maker at the time—I'm sure many around the table here have been in these decisions—that now is the time to withhold that treatment so that their son, brother or father can pass.
They're fundamentally different. I think collapsing or blurring the line between them leads down a path that puts one of the most vulnerable minorities in this country at risk. What is a democracy, after it all? It protects the rights of minorities. The minority I'm talking about is people with dementia who cannot consent and do not have capacity to consent, or people with intellectual disabilities who do not have the capacity to consent to their death.
That's the group we're protecting here. It's not those who can make advance requests. The group that we're talking about here is the group who cannot consent. They don't have the capacity to consent to a proactive intervention on the part of a medical professional intended to cause their death.
In this democracy, are we protecting one of the most vulnerable minorities in our society? I think the proposals that are advocating adoption clearly do not meet the test of protecting the right to life of one of the most vulnerable minorities in our society.