Good evening, everybody. It gives me great pleasure to come here. My intention is to be helpful and to really let you know the experience of a palliative care physician.
I am a palliative care physician. I see patients in their homes in Toronto, and I am here trying to represent the views of the Canadian Society of Palliative Care Physicians. I'm going to respect the fact that you've had a lot of information thrown at you and just focus on four priorities.
The number one priority is that, at the same time as we legislate hastened death, we need to increase palliative care. There are three reasons for that. Number one is that less than 3% of Canadians are likely to avail themselves of services to hasten their death, yet 100% of Canadians can benefit from palliative care. Number two is that we know that palliative care is underserviced, and we know that 65% of patients currently die in hospital, which is not what Canadians want. Number three is that this is more than a political issue; it's a personal issue. All of us sitting around this table have had loved ones die. Some of them have died not so badly, and some of them have died badly. If we really want to respect choice, there has to be an option and there has to be good palliative care.
One of the ways in which we think this need for palliative care could be met is through a national secretariat for palliative care. There are lots of organizations that have laid the groundwork for a national strategy in palliative care, such as the Canadian Cancer Society and the Canadian Medical Association. People have thought of lots of ways to navigate this area.
The whole reason for having this done nationally is that Canadians support fairness, and right now, there's a patchwork. What you get really depends on where you live.
This initiative needs to be carried out at a national or federal level in order to set standards, monitor standards, and collect data—which we don't have—and to advise on such things as how to shift care from acute-care hospitals, which currently have 95% of the budget, to the community, which currently has 5%. We need some guidance, and we need to think about it nationally. How do we provide public education to try to dispel some of the fear around death and dying?
The second priority is reducing the risk of premature death. As palliative care physicians, we've all seen patients ask for assistance in hastening death, and then change their mind and say something like, “I'm so glad I couldn't do this.” This is not to imply that everybody will do that, but we need to have safeguards in place, and one of them is a waiting time that is proportionate to the amount of time that this person may lose in their living.
For example, when a woman who's dying of breast cancer, with potentially four weeks of life left, makes this request, we should be able to respond much more quickly than in the case of a 21-year-old gentleman who's just had a spinal cord injury and cannot imagine his life in a wheelchair. We know that people can accommodate a new normal, and a rigid waiting time will not do that.
We also need to make sure that the people who are exploring this request are skilled. If this young man spoke to a physician who didn't know about options, this physician might conclude that the situation was hopeless and that of course he would need hastened death. We know, as palliative care physicians, that most requests are expressions of despair, some of which we can help with. With great humility, I know that we cannot help everybody.
We also need to make sure we have access to addiction counsellors, psychiatrists, and spiritual care professionals to make sure that this patient has truly been supported. In the brief, I have made some comments on graduated implementation, and I'd be happy to answer questions about that.
The third priority is having a national oversight organization so that we have a pan-Canadian way of ensuring that everybody has access to this service. This could be bigger than that, because right now we do not have a problem, as Dr. Blackmer pointed out, with finding willing providers, but we have a big problem with connecting patients to these providers, and it should not be on the shoulders of Canadian doctors to self-organize.
This national oversight could not only be collecting data, looking at trends, and setting Canadian standards; it could also be a repository of willing providers, information, and referral services. Not every health care provider who is asked for assistance is going to have the resources to give this good information.
In addition to supporting institutions and regions that don't have a lot of resources, this separate oversight would really make the distinction that physician-hastened death is not synonymous with palliative care. We're concerned about this point because we've had to work very hard to make palliative care a safe option for people. If, in their minds, assisting in dying—which is what I do every day as a palliative care physician—is the same as hastened death, then we are going to prevent access to palliative care for some patients.
Finally, as a priority, we need to create a sustainable system. We need to offer protections in the Criminal Code for all of our health care practitioners—everybody, not just physicians. We also need to consider legislating for protection of conscience, because you cannot build a sustainable system on moral distress. I think Dr. Blackmer talked to you about this point. We need to make sure that institutions that opt out do so in a way that doesn't overly burden other institutions. As Anne pointed out, those providers who actually provide this service need to be supported with psychological support and spiritual support to make sure they're not overburdened.
Part of the sustainable system, I would put to you again, is making sure that this is seen as distinct from palliative care. I hope I've offered some ways that might happen.
Thank you.