Thank you so much for bringing this back. I really think it's important and appreciate this opportunity very much. I know it's an important discussion for lawmakers because it is a law that I know was passed with concerns and with a real preoccupation going forward for how it would take shape. Indeed, a couple of years in we certainly, in terms of a disability community, know of and are beginning to hear of cases of concern. I'm not going to cite them today because I'm not really prepared to do that, and again, I wanted to bring this forward.
I will say in response to what you're speaking of that the stigma, the devaluation, essentially the isolation, of women with disabilities, particularly senior women, makes them particularly vulnerable. I talked about suicide prevention and how important it is and how rarely we think of that instead of an end-of-life process, and that sort of thing. I think the palliative care issue is one, and I know Dr. Leitch is also here, who knows very well that we have some work to do in our medical system to really improve the care for seniors, particularly at the end of life. That's one of the key ways we can mitigate the risk of somebody being offered medical assistance in dying rather than either palliative care or, indeed, an opportunity to think of something rather than medical assistance in dying as their only option.
I think one of the things that we want to make sure that we do, and again I spoke to this, is the vulnerable persons standard. This is something that's been widely supported by the national disability community and Canadians with disabilities as something that we think would be an important to put in place. I have provided a link in my speaking notes and would invite the chair to share that link with more information for the committee on the vulnerable persons standard. I think the review is next year, 2020, and think that that it would be a good point to look at whether or not the vulnerable persons standard is something that we can actually put in place soon.
I can share, again, not a senior example, but an example of the vulnerability of women with disabilities. In this case I think it's even more compelling because the woman was 24. She was from Newfoundland, a young woman who presented at the hospital with her mother who was in medical distress at the time, but it had not been....
Sorry, I just want to refocus and tell the story properly. She came into the hospital with her mother; she's not a verbal person, so her mother was with her. The physician who received them leaned in to the mother and said, “There's something we can do to help here”, and implied to the mother that medical assistance in dying was something he could offer to her daughter. I'm happy to say that this mother's instinct and reaction was to tell him immediately that she wanted to see another physician, and was referred to another physician. An investigation ensued of this doctor. I want to say this about this young woman and make the point why the medical assistance in dying issue is so important. My point is that a year later she was placed in a supportive living environment, and that's where she is to this day and, of course, she's thriving now.
My past president was in an induced coma due to pneumonia, again an older woman with a disability, and when she came out of the coma—and some of you may have actually met Ms. Hutchison when she was our president—the first thing that happened was the nurse leaned in and began implying to her that she might want to consider medical assistance in dying.
What I'm trying to say is that it's not a perfect system and that it's very important we understand that one of the things we have to accept is that there are going to be risks and that our duty is to reduce those risks at this point, because the legislation is in place.
Thank you so much for letting me bring that forward. I appreciate it very much.