Mr. Speaker, I thank the hon. member for Brampton West both for her speech today and for work as a health professional. Listening to her, I wonder what her patients must be thinking of her as she speaks now in the House on their behalf.
I have had many conversations with constituents who are facing the need to have this legislation improved. In December, I spoke to a person who had a best friend who was trying to access medical assistance in dying, and he also had a brother who was trying to access medical assistance in dying. The reasons that led them both to that were ultimately the pain they were feeling and the loss of independence and dignity, and not foreseeable death.
The voices that really resonate at the end of the day are the people who are trying to access services or family members who know their situation. It is important that we give priority to the voices of the people whose rights are being denied under the current legislation.
Could the hon. member comment on how important it is that we protect the freedoms of the people we are serving who are trying to access this type of service?