That is a very good question. Let me think about that.
I think probably that learning about assisted dying and end-of-life care more generally should be mandatory, because I think it's something that practically every clinician is going to encounter.
It's still a minority of people who are providing and assessing patients for MAID, so I don't know if medical school is the place where it ought to be mandatory, but perhaps later on in training, when people are developing what their future practice is going to look like, I think that's where something mandatory ought to happen. I do think the idea of training that's very focused on MAID assessment and provision is a worthwhile idea. I don't think it's just enough to learn about the law and then hope that practitioners can figure it out.