Why don't I speak first about the impact of a lack of palliative care on any patient? Then we can talk a bit more about how it might affect someone facing that issue.
Palliative care is care that's designed to protect the quality of life of the patient and their family. It's easy to forget, I think, how much our system is built around delivering services in hospitals that are typically about fighting a particular disease or treating a particular ailment.
That system, left to its own devices, can leave people in a place where their pain is not effectively managed; where their symptoms, from dehydration to nausea to dementia, can become a greater and greater drag on their quality of life and their ability to think clearly; and where their despair, their anxiety, and their fear in confronting their own mortality or confronting the pain of dealing with severe illness can have a profound effect on their outlook. Also, of course, there's the factor of whether they're able to receive care surrounded by loved ones and be in a community setting, versus sometimes being in an emergency room or in an intensive care unit, where they can be really removed from the people they need around them.
I think it's intuitive for all of us to see how much those factors can affect someone's well-being and their mindset. Also, there's evidence that it actually affects their medical outcomes. The people who receive effective palliative care, especially early palliative care, do better. I think we can all understand how having a positive and healthy outlook, and not dealing with depression and anxiety, can make it easier to combat a physical challenge.
I don't have research or expertise in terms of the connection between that and assisted dying, but I think of what was said in the consultation piece that was done by the panel. In fact, these are quotes from Dying with Dignity, “Nobody should have to choose an assisted death because the medical system has failed to give them other options”, and, “Canadians do not want assisted death to become the preferred option simply because other options, such as high-quality palliative care, are not accessible.”
I think we need to see that one of the unifying principles in all of this is that we would like as much as possible to help people overcome their suffering and meet their challenges through care and support. If anyone chooses death because those things aren't available, that would be a tragedy.