That, in fact, is exactly what the Institut wants to emphasize. If someone wants to put an end to their suffering when they become incapacitated and meets the conditions for receiving medical assistance in dying, the only way to arrange for that is with an advance request. Once the person is incapacitated, it's too late. They can no longer give their consent. It also becomes impossible to obtain a proxy consent.
The vast majority of people do not want to experience such a situation. People have often said that to me that at my lectures, particularly people with cognitive disorders. Such people have often seen members of their family suffer terribly and lose every ounce of their dignity. They don't want to live through it themselves. It's important to be able to make things easier for them in every possible way.
I know that it's a sensitive issue and that it is not necessarily easy, but conditions are often anything but ideal. I believe that it's definitely possible to take appropriate safeguards that could prevent people from suffering intolerably at the end of life, once they have become incapacitated.