Thank you, Madam Chair.
I am pleased to appear before you to represent the Expert Panel for MAID and Mental Illness, which was created under Bill C-7 and whose final report was tabled in Parliament on May 13, 2022.
I am a psychiatrist and regular researcher in philosophy and ethics of psychiatry at the Centre Hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal. In my clinical practice, I work in the area of consultation-liaison psychiatry, the subspecialty devoted to the psychiatric care of the medically ill. I have also been involved in cases of persons requesting MAID, primarily as a psychiatric consultant and sometimes as an assessor.
In these opening remarks, I will provide a brief overview of the reasoning behind the panel’s recommendations. I can elaborate upon this reasoning in more detail during the discussion period as needed.
Just a quick note about terms: although our mandate used the expression “mental illness”, we chose to use the term “mental disorder” since this is standard terminology in medicine. Hereafter, I will use the expression “mental disorder”.
Our mandate was to make recommendations for safeguards, protocols and guidance for MAID requests made by persons with mental disorders, not to debate whether such persons should be permitted to have access. Nevertheless, we took the concerns raised by those who are opposed to this practice very seriously. By these concerns, which are addressed in the report, I mean incurability of a medical condition, irreversibility of decline, capacity, suicidality and vulnerability.
As we undertook our work, our first observation was that people with mental disorders are requesting and accessing MAID now. This group includes a range of requesters, from people whose mental disorder is stable, to those whose psychiatric and physical problems are active and together motivate the request for MAID, all the way to those whose requests are largely motivated by their mental disorder but who happen to have another qualifying condition. These requesters may have long histories of suicidality. There may be questions about their decision-making capacity. They may also be in situations of structural vulnerability.
A second and related observation the panel made is that there are people requesting and accessing MAID now whose medical conditions are difficult to assess with respect to incurability and irreversibility in decline—for example, some requesters with chronic pain.
Based on these observations, the panel concluded that there is no single characteristical problem that attaches to all people with mental disorders and only people with mental disorders. “Mental disorders” is merely an imprecise proxy for these concerns. If the hope is that by excluding people with mental disorders as a sole underlying medical condition from accessing MAID we can avoid having to deal with these difficult issues, clinical experience with MAID shows us that this is not the case. We are already facing these problems in practice. That is why the panel's approach is to try to address these problems head-on.
When we looked carefully at the concerns raised about MAID for mental disorders, we found that they were clinical in nature, meaning that the difficulties arise when clinicians have to apply legal terms to MAID assessments—for example, interpreting the word “incurability” for a particular medical condition or assessing chronic suicidality.
What seems to be required to address these concerns is greater elaboration about the applicability of the eligibility criteria and the best approaches to adopt in assessing specific challenging issues in clinical practice. The panel has tried to provide this elaboration and specification in our recommendations.
This process of elaborating and specifying has also allowed the panel to clarify that, in order for a mental disorder to be a grievous and irremediable medical condition in the sense of the Criminal Code, it must be of long standing and the person must have had an extensive history of treatment and social supports. MAID is not intended for people in crisis or those who have not had access to health and social resources.
With that, I will stop. I would be very glad to continue on in discussion with you.