Thank you so much for the invitation to join you.
This has been what I would say was quite a journey—I'm sure you're on the same journey right now—to get our heads into some of these issues and to be able to come forward with a set of recommendations, which I believe you've had an opportunity to review in the report we have drafted, as well as the set of slides that were prepared.
What we'd like to do, though, is draw out a few highlights from that report and then turn it over to you to engage with us with your questions in the hope that we might be able to put some flesh on the bones of some of the questions you may have. We may not take the full 10 minutes, but we're really looking forward to the conversation that we might have.
In regard to when we started off on this work as the expert advisory group, I should note by way of a bit of background that 11 of the 13 provinces came together to create this expert advisory group. One of the key messages we received from them was that they were seeking to avoid a patchwork approach. Hence, one of the reasons why we created the expert advisory group was so that we could provide recommendations that would reflect the continuity of the Canadian context across the board.
In addition to that emphasis on avoiding a patchwork, we certainly heard from the stakeholders we met with, through written submissions and in-person consultations, about the importance of collaboration across jurisdictions, which includes federal, provincial and territorial, and also regulatory bodies, and we heard that there could be more alignment and clarity across those roles, but also a real effort to work together to clarify these issues. That was an important message that we heard along the way.
One of the things we also heard about consistently was the importance of having a strong legislative response, both at the provincial-territorial level and at the federal level. Particularly, in our case, in thinking about where we'd like to spend some of our time with you, there are some reflections on where there might be some clarity within the Criminal Code, which we heard about consistently from the provinces and territories as being particularly helpful for the work they need to do within their own jurisdictional settings.
Just to reinforce, the third piece that we also consistently heard about, and as you've also heard from the federal panel, is that physician-assisted death shouldn't be treated as some sort of parallel set of activities isolated from a comprehensive set of end-of-life services for Canadians. Hence, there was a strong message that we heard, and also reinforced in our own report, in regard to seeing physician-assisted death as part of an integrated end-of-life care strategy that would engage all levels of government, including the regulatory bodies, in a very effective way.
Thus, one of the encouraging things in looking at some of the federal findings, as well as our report, is that there is some nice consistency. I'm going to pass this over to Maureen, who will pick up on some of the pieces that we thought we'd highlight to you in relation to some possible clarifications within the Criminal Code.