With respect to the question of threat, I don't know. I don't know what's going to happen. I can't promise you that there isn't going to be some impact on some of the other groups because that remains to be seen. That is not what we have learned from the countries that permit this practice, so to the extent that we can base ourselves on that, it seems like it's not very likely.
Actually, it's a credit to communities that have raised these worries. The disability community in particular, I think, has sensitized everyone in this debate to be mindful of the threats to well-being and to quality of life, and that MAID assessors and providers need to remember that, be sensitized to that and to take that into consideration.
Actually, they need to keep going in their efforts to sensitize us to their lived reality. I think that work has actually been invaluable. You will notice in the development of the CAMAP curriculum that this actually has led to the incorporation of people with lived experience, people with disabilities, etc., so that MAID assessors and providers are going to learn from their experiences. That would be my answer to that.
With respect to your second point, it's generous of you to ask for my opinion on that. The thing that has troubled me throughout the debate as I've been following it along is the strands of illogic or incoherence that we can allow MAID for mental disorders when the person has a comorbid physical condition, like somehow that erases their vulnerability or erases their history of suicidality. Now they have a physical condition, so it's okay and they can have access, but if that same person doesn't have the medical condition, they must never have access under any circumstances. There's an inherent illogic there that I have never understood. When somebody has a condition where it's really difficult to predict what's going to happen, they can have access as long as it's not a mental disorder. This illogic is concerning to me, and I would encourage you to find a solution to this illogic. I think there are different ways of doing that.
It worries me because it suggests that as a society we don't believe that people with mental disorders can really ever be capable of making their own decisions for themselves. I think we've really fought hard against that for a long time, so I am surprised.
I absolutely understand the arguments about lack of resources. To me, it's not a choice that we have MAID or we have better resources. We need to have better resources—period—but that's not a reason not to have MAID.