Skip to main content
;

PDAM Committee Report

If you have any questions or comments regarding the accessibility of this publication, please contact us at accessible@parl.gc.ca.

PDF

MEDICAL ASSISTANCE IN DYING: A PATIENT-CENTRED APPROACH

INTRODUCTION

On 6 February 2015, in Carter v. Canada (Attorney General) (Carter, or the Carter decision),[1] the Supreme Court of Canada declared section 14 and section 241(b) of the Criminal Code[2] void

insofar as they prohibit physician-assisted death for a competent adult person who (1) clearly consents to the termination of life; and (2) has a grievous and irremediable medical condition (including an illness, disease or disability) that causes enduring suffering that is intolerable to the individual in the circumstances of his or her condition. “Irremediable”, it should be added, does not require the patient to undertake treatments that are not acceptable to the individual.[3]

The Court found that the prohibition infringed the claimants’ rights under section 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.[4] The Court noted that “[i]t is for Parliament and the provincial legislatures to respond, should they so choose, by enacting legislation consistent with the constitutional parameters set out in these reasons.”[5] While the issue of medical assistance in dying (MAID)[6] is complex and many observers are concerned about protecting vulnerable individuals from being induced to seek MAID, the Court also noted that the trial judge “concluded that a permissive regime with properly designed and administered safeguards was capable of protecting vulnerable people from abuse and error. While there are risks, to be sure, a carefully designed and managed system is capable of adequately addressing them.”[7]

The Court suspended its declaration of invalidity so that it would not come into effect for 12 months, and then, on 15 January 2016, granted a further four-month extension to that suspension. Quebec’s An Act respecting end-of-life care was exempted from the extension, and the Court also granted an exemption “to those who wish to exercise their rights so that they may apply to the superior court of their jurisdiction for relief in accordance with the criteria set out in para. 127 of our reasons in Carter.”[8]

On 11 December 2015, motions were passed in the House of Commons and the Senate to establish a special joint committee (Committee) whose purpose is:

to review the report of the External Panel on Options for a Legislative Response to Carter v. Canada and other recent relevant consultation activities and studies, to consult with Canadians, experts and stakeholders, and make recommendations on the framework of a federal response on physician-assisted dying that respects the Constitution, the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and the priorities of Canadians.

The motions also stated that “the Committee be directed to consult broadly, take into consideration consultations that have been undertaken on this issue, examine relevant research studies and literature and review models being used or developed in other jurisdictions.”[9]

Guided by Carter, the Committee held 16 meetings and heard from 61 witnesses (listed in Appendix A). It also received over 100 written submissions (listed in Appendix B). Witnesses highlighted the need to ensure that everyone who meets the eligibility criteria (which the Committee recommends below) has access to MAID, regardless of where they live as reflected in the Canada Health Act[10] criteria of accessibility and universality. To further ensure access to this constitutional right, the Committee has provided recommendations not directly addressed in Carter. As the Supreme Court of Canada wrote in the decision: “The scope of this declaration is intended to respond to the factual circumstances in this case. We make no pronouncement on other situations where physician-assisted dying may be sought.”[11] With respect to accessibility, the Committee also affirms that MAID should be able to be performed in any appropriate location, not only in hospitals, including in a person’s home. Our response to the Carter ruling must be focused on the needs and wishes of patients. The Committee was unanimous in recognizing the overarching need to have safeguards to protect the vulnerable.

Submissions were both thoughtful and thought-provoking, raising issues that were directly relevant to the Committee’s task of proposing a federal framework for MAID. The Committee heard overwhelming support for a collaborative approach among the federal government, the provinces and territories, and the provincial/territorial medical regulatory authorities to develop a framework relating to MAID. Witnesses wanted to avoid what some describe as a “patchwork approach” to the issue, in which the eligibility criteria and process for accessing MAID vary greatly from one province or territory to another. The recommendations that flow from our hearings relate to who should be eligible for MAID, and what sort of process should be put in place to ensure that only those individuals who are eligible for MAID can avail themselves of it.

The Committee emphasizes the need “to recognize the value of Aboriginal healing practices and use them in the treatment of Aboriginal patients in collaboration with Aboriginal healers and Elders where requested by Aboriginal patients” as recommended in the Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada.[12] In addition, there was an overwhelming consensus among witnesses that palliative care needs to be improved more generally, and that better supports need to be provided for individuals with disabilities, individuals with mental health issues, and individuals with dementia. We recognize that considerable work needs to be done to ensure that individuals do not seek MAID as a result of a lack of proper community and other supports. The Committee provides recommendations on this issue at the end of this report.

Below, the Committee also puts forward its findings and recommendations for a legislative framework that will include, but not be limited to, amending the Criminal Code. The recommendations relate to eligibility for MAID (which are substantive safeguards), procedural safeguards, and oversight. The substantive and procedural safeguards that the Committee recommends are listed below, and are described later in this report.

Substantive Safeguards:

  • A grievous and irremediable medical condition (including an illness, disease or disability) is required;
  • Enduring suffering that is intolerable to the individual in the circumstances of his or her condition is required;
  • Informed consent is required;
  • Capacity to make the decision is required at the time of either the advance or contemporaneous request; and
  • Eligible individuals must be insured persons eligible for publicly funded health care services in Canada.

Procedural Safeguards:

  • Two independent doctors must conclude that a person is eligible;
  • A request must be in writing and witnessed by two independent witnesses;
  • A waiting period is required based, in part, on the rapidity of progression and nature of the patient’s medical condition as determined by the patient’s attending physician;
  • Annual reports analyzing medical assistance in dying cases are to be tabled in Parliament; and
  • Support and services, including culturally and spiritually appropriate end-of-life care services for Indigenous patients, should be improved to ensure that requests are based on free choice, particularly for vulnerable people.

BACKGROUND

A. Division of Powers between Federal and Provincial Governments[13]

1. Criminal Law and Administration of Justice

Sections 91 and 92 of the Constitution Act, 1867 assign exclusive legislative authority over certain matters to either Parliament or to provincial legislatures. Section 91(27) of the Constitution Act, 1867[14] assigns exclusive jurisdiction over criminal law to the federal government, including criminal procedure. To establish that a law is a valid use of Parliament’s criminal law jurisdiction, there must be a prohibition, a penalty and a criminal law purpose (suppression of an evil). Such purposes that have been recognized by the courts include health, morality, public safety and security.

Of note, the administration of justice, including the conduct of most prosecutions, is a provincial power under section 92(14), as is the imposition of punishment for violating provincial laws (section 92(15)).

2. Health

While some health-related subjects are listed in sections 91 and 92 of the Constitution Act, 1867, there is no specific reference to “health” as a general matter. Health-related subjects and measures can be characterized as being within the jurisdiction of either Parliament or provincial legislatures depending on the purpose and effect of a particular measure. Parliament can and has exercised its jurisdiction over health matters under its criminal law power (section 91(27)); the federal spending power, which is inferred from its jurisdiction over public debt and property (section 91(1A)); and its general taxing power (section 91(3)).

Examples of the use of the federal criminal law power with respect to health matters include the Food and Drugs Act,[15] the Human Pathogens and Toxins Act[16] and the Assisted Human Reproduction Act (AHRA).[17] The test involved in determining whether legislation related to health based on the federal criminal law power is validly enacted is (1) whether the legislation contains a prohibition and a penalty; and (2) whether it is directed at a “legitimate public health evil” (or other criminal law purpose). In a 4-4-1 decision, parts of the AHRA were struck down by the Supreme Court of Canada in 2010 as being outside the power of Parliament.[18] In that case, the majority stated:

Although a reasoned apprehension of harm necessarily constitutes a criminal law purpose, health, ethics and morality do not automatically arouse such an apprehension in every case. For an activity to fall under the criminal law, it must be found that there is an evil to be suppressed or prevented and that the pith and substance of the provisions in issue is the suppression of that evil or the elimination of that reasoned risk of harm.
When Parliament exercises a power assigned to it, it can establish national standards. However, administrative efficiency alone cannot be relied on to justify legislative action by Parliament (Margarine Reference, at p. 52). The action must be taken within the limits of an assigned head. Recourse to the criminal law power cannot therefore be based solely on concerns for efficiency or consistency, as such concerns, viewed in isolation, do not fall under the criminal law. The three criteria of the criminal law must be met.[19]

With the exception of matters that fall under the aforementioned sections, health is for the most part an area of provincial jurisdiction. For example, the province has jurisdiction over most hospitals and health care services, the practice of medicine, the training of health professionals and the regulation of the medical profession, hospital and health insurance, and occupational health. Power over these areas is granted by sections 92(7) (hospitals), 92(13) (property and civil rights) and 92(16) (matters of a merely local or private nature) of the Constitution Act, 1867.

However, drawing a clear line between federal and provincial jurisdiction can be difficult, as noted in Canada (Attorney General) v. PHS Community Services Society:

The provincial health power is broad and extensive. It extends to thousands of activities and to a host of different venues.… To complicate the matter, Parliament has power to legislate with respect to federal matters, notably criminal law, that touch on health. For instance, it has historic jurisdiction to prohibit medical treatments that are dangerous, or that it perceives as “socially undesirable” behaviour: R. v. Morgentaler, [1988] 1 S.C.R. 30; Morgentaler v. The Queen, [1976] 1 S.C.R. 616; R. v. Morgentaler, [1993] 3 S.C.R. 463. The federal role in the domain of health makes it impossible to precisely define what falls in or out of the proposed provincial “core.” Overlapping federal jurisdiction and the sheer size and diversity of provincial health power render daunting the task of drawing a bright line around a protected provincial core of health where federal legislation may not tread.[20]

In Carter, the Supreme Court concluded:

In our view, the appellants have not established that the prohibition on physician-assisted dying impairs the core of the provincial jurisdiction. Health is an area of concurrent jurisdiction; both Parliament and the provinces may validly legislate on the topic: RJR-MacDonald Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), [1995] 3 S.C.R. 199, at para. 32; Schneider v. The Queen, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 112, at p. 142. This suggests that aspects of physician-assisted dying may be the subject of valid legislation by both levels of government, depending on the circumstances and focus of the legislation. We are not satisfied on the record before us that the provincial power over health excludes the power of the federal Parliament to legislate on physician-assisted dying.[21]

The federal response to Carter and implementation of a framework surrounding MAID will need to take into account this complex division of powers and will require close cooperation with the provinces and territories. A number of witnesses expressed concern about a “patchwork” approach to MAID.[22] One option was outlined by constitutional scholar Peter Hogg:

[A]lthough it would be very nice if the provinces all came out with uniform legislation, you have to recognize that it may not happen. One thing you can do is recommend a provision in the federal law that in effect provides what I call an “equivalence provision”, which in effect would say that if the federal Minister of Health or the Governor in Council — you could use any framework — is satisfied that a province or a territory has enacted safeguards that are substantially equivalent to the federal safeguards, then the federal law would not apply in that province.
The advantage of doing that is that it would avoid overlapping legislation. Also, if you don't do something like that, issues of conflict between the federal and provincial law will be quite complicated, and they will be resolved by the rule of federal paramountcy. That would be a bad situation. I think it can be resolved by a so-called equivalence provision.
[I]f a province doesn't have a physician-assisted dying regime, then your legislation will be the only game in town. It will have to operate and it will have to include adequate safeguards against error or abuse.[23]

B. Quebec’s Legislation[24]

The Committee wishes to note Quebec’s extensive debate on the issue of MAID, which proved helpful in our deliberations.

The Quebec legislature struck the Select Committee on Dying with Dignity (Select Committee) on 4 December 2009. The Select Committee heard from 32 experts and more than 250 individuals and organizations and received 273 briefs during its work in 2010 and 2011. In March 2012, the Select Committee tabled its report, making 24 recommendations on palliative care, palliative sedation, advance medical directives, end-of-life care, and “medical aid in dying.”[25]

In response to the Select Committee’s report, the Quebec government appointed an expert panel to explore how to implement the recommended legislative changes. The panel released its report in January 2013. The report recommended that “medical aid in dying,” in certain circumstances, be understood as part of the continuum of care. When seen as an element of end-of-life care, “medical aid in dying” could fall under provincial jurisdiction over health care delivery.

On 12 June 2013, Bill 52, An Act respecting end-of-life care, was introduced in the Quebec National Assembly, and received Royal Assent on 5 June 2014. Most of the Act’s provisions came into force on 10 December 2015.

The law establishes rights with respect to end-of-life care, rules for those who provide end-of-life care, rules relating to continuous palliative sedation, powers of the Minister of Health and Social Services, rules relating to advance medical directives, and rules relating to “medical aid in dying.” The law outlines requirements in order to obtain “medical aid in dying,” requirements for physicians prior to administering “medical aid in dying” and various other elements in order to regulate the practice.

C. Federal External Panel on Options for a Legislative Response to Carter v. Canada

On 17 July 2015, the federal Minister of Justice and the federal Minister of Health announced the establishment of an external panel to consult Canadians regarding options to respond to the Carter decision. The panel was to consult with medical authorities and interveners in the Carter case specifically and, through an online public consultation, with Canadians more generally. The panel was to report on its findings and propose options for a legislative response. However, after the election of a new government, a letter to the panel from the new federal Minister of Justice and the new federal Minister of Health released publicly on 14 November 2015 extended the deadline for the panel’s report by one month to 15 December 2015 and modified the terms of the mandate, asking the panel to focus on summarizing the results and key findings of its consultations. It was no longer to provide legislative options.

As part of its work, in addition to consulting the groups mentioned in the paragraph above, the External Panel travelled to the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland and to the state of Oregon in the United States to learn about how assisted dying is regulated in those jurisdictions. The External Panel’s report was submitted to the government on 15 December 2015.

In its final report,[26] the External Panel summarized the evidence it received with respect to the following topics:

  • forms of assisted dying and terminology;
  • eligibility criteria;
  • the request for MAID;
  • assessing the request;
  • participation and compliance; and
  • system oversight.

D. Provincial–Territorial Expert Advisory Group

In mid-August 2015, a provincial–territorial expert advisory group on MAID was announced.[27] The Advisory Group’s work was to “complement the work of the federal panel” and “provide advice on the development of policies, practices and safeguards for provinces and territories to consider when physician-assisted dying is legal within their respective jurisdictions.”[28]

The Advisory Group’s final report, dated 30 November 2015 and posted publicly on 14 December 2015, contained 43 recommendations.[29] Key recommendations include:

  • “Provinces and territories, preferably in collaboration with the federal government, should develop and implement a pan-Canadian strategy for palliative and end-of-life care, including physician-assisted dying”;
  • establishing a program within the publicly funded system that will link patients with an appropriate provider;
  • amending the Criminal Code to allow MAID by regulated health professionals acting under the direction of a physician or a nurse practitioner, and to protect health professionals who participate in MAID;
  • amending the Criminal Code to ensure that eligibility for MAID is based on competence rather than age;
  • having medical regulatory authorities develop guidance/tools for physicians;
  • not requiring a mandatory waiting period between a request and provision of assistance in dying;
  • requiring “conscientiously objecting” health care providers “to inform patients of all end-of-life options”, including MAID, and requiring providers to give a referral or direct transfer of care or to contact a third party and transfer the patient’s records;
  • having provincial and territorial governments establish review committee systems to review compliance in all cases of MAID;
  • establishing a pan-Canadian commission on end-of-life care (preferably in collaboration with the federal government); and
  • providing public education about MAID and engaging the public so that it can inform future developments of related law, policies and practices.

TERMINOLOGY

Euthanasia is the “intentional termination of the life of a person, by another person, in order to relieve the first person’s suffering.” Voluntary euthanasia is euthanasia performed in accordance with the wishes of a competent person, expressed personally or by advance directive.[30]

Assisted suicide is the act of intentionally ending one’s life with the assistance of another person who provides the knowledge, means, or both, of doing so.

Generic terms such as “assisted dying” or “assisted death” are also used to describe both assisted suicide and voluntary euthanasia. “Physician-assisted death” and “physician-assisted dying” are generic terms used when a doctor is involved either directly or in supervising another person who is assisting a suicide.[31]

In the Carter decision, the Supreme Court of Canada used the terms “physician-assisted death” and “physician-assisted dying,” which were the terms used by the plaintiffs. According to the plaintiffs, these terms include “physician-assisted suicide” and “consensual physician-assisted death.” Quebec’s An Act respecting end-of-life care uses the term “medical aid in dying,” which is defined as “care consisting in the administration by a physician of medications or substances to an end-of-life-patient, at the patient’s request, in order to relieve their suffering by hastening death.”[32] This term includes voluntary euthanasia but not assisted suicide.

Many witnesses who appeared before the Committee discussed the language that should be used in relation to MAID. For example, Joanne Klineberg, Senior Counsel, Criminal Law Policy Section at the Department of Justice, noted:

Some stakeholders take the view that the expressions “physician-assisted suicide” and “euthanasia” are well defined and clear and must be used in order to avoid confusion and misunderstanding that arise from more general terms like “physician-assisted dying”. Others disagree with the use of the terms “physician-assisted suicide“ and “euthanasia”, believing that they are loaded and stigmatizing terms and that only something more general, like “physician-assisted dying“ should be used.[33]

In its report, the External Panel confirmed that some of the experts and organizations they consulted prefer the terms “physician-assisted suicide” and “euthanasia,” while others prefer “physician-assisted dying.”[34] The Committee heard that other organizations would rather use the term “physician-hastened death.”[35] The Committee prefers the term “medical assistance in dying” to “physician-assisted dying”, as it reflects the reality that health care teams, consisting of nurses, pharmacists, and other health care professionals, are also involved in the process of assisted dying. The Committee recommends that “medical assistance in dying” (MAID) be used in any future legislation on this topic, and it is also the term that the Committee will use throughout this report.

With respect to the terms “grievous and irremediable,” some witnesses suggested to the Committee that they should be defined in legislation,[36] while other witnesses felt that this was unnecessary.[37] Maureen Taylor, Co-Chair of the Provincial-Territorial Expert Advisory Group on Physician-Assisted Dying stated that “grievous” should be defined as “very severe” or “serious.”[38] The Canadian Medical Association had a similar definition (“serious or severe”), and stated that “irremediable” should be defined as “not able to be put right or cured.”[39] Jocelyn Downie, a professor at Dalhousie University, and David Baker, a lawyer practising at Bakerlaw, both of whom presented draft legislation on MAID to the Committee, had a number of terms defined in their respective bills, including “grievous and irremediable.”[40] The Ontario College of Physicians and Surgeons has defined “grievous” as “a legal term that applies to serious, non-trivial conditions that have a significant impact on the patient’s well-being,” and “irremediable” as “a broad term capturing both terminal and non-terminal conditions.”[41] The Alberta and Manitoba colleges of physicians and surgeons have also defined “grievous and irremediable” in their respective policies.[42]

The Committee agrees with the witnesses who said the terms “grievous and irremediable” do not need to be defined beyond what is set out in Carter, and notes that the Court stated that “irremediable … does not require the patient to undertake treatments that are not acceptable to the individual.”[43] We believe that these terms are sufficiently well understood to operate without further statutory definition and recommend:

RECOMMENDATION 1

That the terms relating to medical assistance in dying do not require further statutory definition.

ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA FOR MEDICAL ASSISTANCE IN DYING

A. Condition

The Supreme Court of Canada’s declaration in Carter allows MAID where there is “a grievous and irremediable medical condition (including an illness, disease or disability) that causes enduring suffering that is intolerable to the individual in the circumstances of his or her condition.”[44]

There was a strong consensus in the testimony and briefs that there should be no list of included conditions.[45]

1. Terminal Illness as a Requirement

Witnesses diverged in their interpretation of the Carter decision and its implications for future legislation. Some witnesses said that only individuals with a terminal diagnosis should be able to access MAID while others said that Carter clearly did not include such a requirement. Prof. Hogg argued that, while it was not impossible for Parliament to require that the condition be terminal, such a law would be more susceptible to constitutional challenge.[46]

Imam Sikander Hashmi, representing the Canadian Council of Imams, argued that MAID be limited to individuals “in an advanced state of irreversible decline” and Margaret Somerville, professor at McGill University, expressed the view that only individuals with less than four weeks to live should qualify.[47] In contrast, the External Panel stated that Carter did not require a terminal diagnosis.[48] Professor Downie stated:

[Terminal illness] was not included by the Supreme Court in Carter. It is too vague and indeterminate. It is arbitrary and it has no moral justification as a barrier to access.[49]

A brief from the Centre for Inquiry Canada said that limiting MAID to terminally ill individuals, “would not fully respect the Court’s decision and the value of individual autonomy that underpins it.”[50]

The Committee agrees with the External Panel and does not interpret Carter as limiting MAID to terminally ill individuals. Furthermore, limiting MAID in this way would result in Canadians with grievous and irremediable conditions faced with enduring and intolerable suffering having to continue suffering against their will. For these reasons, the Committee recommends:

RECOMMENDATION 2

That medical assistance in dying be available to individuals with terminal and non-terminal grievous and irremediable medical conditions that cause enduring suffering that is intolerable to the individual in the circumstances of his or her condition.

2. Mental Illness

Because the individuals that brought the case in Carter did not have mental health issues, the Court made no pronouncement with respect to MAID and psychiatric conditions. Jeanette Ettel, Senior Counsel, Human Rights Law Section at the Department of Justice, told the Committee that it was open to the Committee to consider whether to include psychiatric illnesses in the conditions that could result in a right to MAID.[51]

As was the experience of the External Panel, the Committee heard widely diverging views on how to address mental health in the context of MAID. Benoît Pelletier, member of the External Panel and an expert in constitutional law noted that the External Panel identified greater support from Canadians for MAID in the context of a physical illness but that, prima facie, the Carter criteria would also apply to psychiatric conditions.[52] Professor Downie and others supported this position:

[M]ental illness should not be an exclusion criterion. It was not excluded by the Supreme Court, and not all individuals with mental illness are incompetent. Physicians already routinely determine whether someone is competent, even when they have a mental illness. Furthermore, the suffering that can accompany mental illness can be as excruciating as any suffering that can accompany physical illness. Finally, I would argue that excluding individuals on the basis of mental illness would violate the charter.[53]

A number of witnesses and submissions expressed concern about mental illness in the context of MAID.[54] Dr. K. Sonu Gaind, President of the Canadian Psychiatric Association, outlined some of the challenges that will need to be addressed:

In terms of what is “irremediable”, careful consideration needs to be given about what this means in the context of mental illness. Irremediable, of course, cannot simply mean incurable. Many conditions in psychiatry and medicine are considered chronic and not curable, but things may be done to remediate or improve the situation.[55]

Dr. Tarek Rajji, Chief of Geriatric Psychiatry at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, told the Committee that:

[M]ental illness may be grievous to an individual, and symptoms can cause enduring psychological and sometimes physical suffering. However, suffering should not be equated with an irremediable nature, and the lack of inevitable and predictable death by natural history provides us with an opportunity to deliver recovery-based treatment.
[P]eople with mental illness may be vulnerable to the impact of the social determinants of health. They may live in poverty, have poor housing, and lack social support. These circumstances may exacerbate suffering and a person's perception that their illness is irremediable … within a clinical recovery-based environment, there is always the potential for mental illness to be remediable.[56]

In response, Professor Downie reminded the Committee of the following aspect of the Carter judgment:

“Irremediable”, it should be added, does not require the patient to undertake treatments that are not acceptable to the individual.[57]

The Committee recognizes that there will be unique challenges in applying the eligibility criteria for MAID where the patient has a mental illness, particularly where such an illness is the condition underlying the request. However, where a person is competent and fits the other criteria set out by law, the Committee does not see how that individual could be denied a recognized Charter right based on his or her mental health condition. Furthermore, we do not understand the Carter decision to exclude mental illnesses.

Any individual applying for MAID would need to satisfy all the criteria, including irremediability and capacity. As several witnesses reminded the Committee, health professionals will need to strike an appropriate balance between the rights of all Canadians to access this constitutionally protected right, and the protection of those vulnerable persons who might be coerced into requesting MAID. Cases involving mental illness may prove challenging to address for health care practitioners, but the Committee has faith in the expertise of Canadian health care professionals to develop and apply appropriate guidelines for such cases. The difficulty surrounding these situations is not a justification to discriminate against affected individuals by denying them access to MAID. The Committee expects that cases where the underlying condition is a mental health condition will be rare, as is the case in other jurisdictions that have legalized MAID.[58] A more detailed discussion of appropriate safeguards can be found below. The Committee therefore recommends:

RECOMMENDATION 3

That individuals not be excluded from eligibility for medical assistance in dying based on the fact that they have a psychiatric condition.

B. Suffering

The Supreme Court did not specify in Carter whether suffering is limited to physical suffering. Witnesses voiced different opinions, with some advocating for the inclusion of physical suffering only and others recommending that psychological suffering be included as well.[59] The Committee received at least one submission arguing that mental suffering is as severe as physical suffering and should not be excluded from MAID.[60] In addition, the Supreme Court referred to suffering “from the knowledge that they lack the ability to bring a peaceful end to their lives at a time and in a manner of their own choosing,” which would be psychological in nature.[61] The requirements that the suffering is enduring and intolerable to the person are safeguards to ensure that someone in temporary or minor pain does not make a rash decision to die. In addition, the suffering must relate to a grievous and irremediable condition. Where mental illness is an issue, Dr. Gaind noted that what is considered enduring and intolerable suffering may be affected by the mental illness itself.[62] The Committee has confidence that health care professionals will proceed cautiously in such cases, as in all cases, and ensure that all criteria are satisfied before accepting a request for MAID and recommends:

RECOMMENDATION 4

That physical or psychological suffering that is enduring and intolerable to the person in the circumstances of his or her condition should be recognized as a criterion to access medical assistance in dying.

C. Informed Consent

There appeared to be a general consensus in the testimony and briefs that the request for MAID must come from the patient in a voluntary manner and after he or she has received sufficient information to make an informed choice. The concern voiced most often during the hearings was about ensuring genuine consent to MAID. All witnesses and authors of briefs were concerned about the protection of vulnerable individuals, though the proposed solutions varied considerably. Prof. Pelletier explained:

As for vulnerability, it is, of course, a complex and subtle concept. Although the term “vulnerable populations” has been used to describe certain identifiable groups in society, the panel heard from many sources that vulnerability is not simply a characteristic of an individual or group, but rather is a state that any one of us could be in under certain circumstances. We heard that sometimes people are made vulnerable in particular contexts and situations when personal autonomy, status, wealth, and well-being are compromised in any significant way.
What this means in the context of physician-assisted dying is that all persons are potentially vulnerable. Being vulnerable does not disqualify a person who is suffering intolerably from seeking an assisted death, but it does put that person at risk of being induced to request a death that he or she does not desire. This is the risk that the Supreme Court called upon Parliament and provincial legislatures to address in a complex regulatory scheme.[63]

Jennifer Gibson, Co-Chair of the Provincial-Territorial Expert Advisory Group on Physician-Assisted Dying, suggested that almost all patients considering MAID would be vulnerable, with some facing particular vulnerabilities as a result of issues such as mental illness or social conditions. She suggested that, rather than vulnerability being a barrier to access, the process should take these vulnerabilities into account through safeguards and that training for health care professionals be offered.[64] Biomedical ethics Professor Carolyn Ells of McGill University and others felt that current standards and processes for establishing consent should be used.[65] Ms. Klineberg from the Department of Justice said that:

It was because the court had expressed confidence that Canadian physicians can assess both mental competence and the vulnerability of a person at the individual level that it felt the absolute prohibition was unconstitutional and you could provide physician-assisted dying to those who wanted it while protecting the vulnerable.[66]

Nonetheless, many witnesses called for further supports for individuals who may be vulnerable as a result of poverty and mental health issues, and identified the need for adequate palliative care and for patients to be provided information about these options in order to make MAID a genuine choice.[67] Some witnesses, such as the Coalition for HealthCARE and Conscience, felt that no safeguards would be sufficient to protect the vulnerable.[68] In contrast, Linda Jarrett, a member of the Disability Advisory Council of Dying with Dignity, told the Committee:

The members of our disability advisory council strongly feel that the law needs to strike a balance to protect vulnerable people from having an assisted death they don't really want and … to ensure access to assisted death for those who do have an enduring wish for it….
Our diseases and disabilities have robbed us of much, and I ask you, do not add to this burden by compromising our choices and our autonomy.[69]

The Committee understands the concerns with respect to both protecting vulnerable persons and respecting their autonomy, and is recommending a number of safeguards which are both described throughout this report and summarized in the introduction.

As noted by the Supreme Court of Canada in Carter:

The evidence supports … [the trial judge’s] finding that a properly administered regulatory regime is capable of protecting the vulnerable from abuse or error.[70]

The Court also noted that “[w]e should not lightly assume that the regulatory regime will function defectively, nor should we assume that other criminal sanctions against the taking of lives will prove impotent against abuse.”[71]

As is outlined in further detail below, the Committee endorses recommendations to provide more supports and services to reduce the vulnerabilities of those seeking MAID. At the same time, issues such as poverty and social isolation are general societal and systemic problems that will, unfortunately, not be resolved overnight. Safeguards and oversight are the best way to ensure informed consent and voluntariness while not refusing access to individuals who may be experiencing intolerable and enduring suffering. The process of evaluating a request for MAID must include consideration by the relevant health care provider(s) of any factors affecting consent, such as pressure from others, feelings of being a burden or lack of supports. Training will also be crucial to ensure that such factors are identified appropriately. The Committee fully agrees with the statement of Rhonda Wiebe, Co-Chair of the Ending of Life Ethics Committee of the Council of Canadians with Disabilities who said:

[T]here are many social, economic, and other environmental factors that increase the vulnerability of persons with disabilities, especially the newly disabled. Careful scrutiny must take place to ensure that there aren't other remedies, besides death, that will lessen the suffering and indignity of these people.[72]

At the same time, though there may be cases where vulnerable persons are affected by external factors to want to die, the criteria should not be overly restrictive, as the Hon. Steven Fletcher, former Member of Parliament reminded the Committee:

Having someone suffer, starving themselves to death, or being in pain or in terrible suffering, down the hall or down the street at the seniors residence or in a hospital or at home, having them live in pain and terror — it doesn't make my life better as a Canadian with a disability. It just makes me sad.[73]

Cases must be assessed on an individual basis to ensure the appropriate balance between protection of the vulnerable and respect for autonomy. The Committee believes that the safeguards and oversight measures outlined below, as well as other measures that the provinces and regulators of health care professionals will develop, will ensure that individuals who do not really want to die are identified, that the vulnerable are protected and that individuals who satisfy the criteria and with a genuine and enduring desire to die are provided with MAID to end their suffering. The Canadian Medical Association’s recommendations are reassuring on this point, as one of the foundational principles they include is that:

All the requirements for informed consent must clearly be met, including the requirement that the patient be capable of making that decision, with particular attention to the context of potential vulnerabilities and sensitivities in end-of-life circumstances. Consent is seen as an evolving process requiring physicians to communicate with the patient in an ongoing manner. [bold added][74]

In addition, the Committee notes that section 241(a) of the Criminal Code, which addresses counselling to commit suicide, remains in place should a patient be faced with pressure from family or others to request MAID.

The Committee strongly believes that to protect vulnerable individuals, only individuals who are able to provide informed consent to MAID should have access to it. The Committee therefore recommends:

RECOMMENDATION 5

That the capacity of a person requesting medical assistance in dying to provide informed consent should be assessed using existing medical practices, emphasizing the need to pay particular attention to vulnerabilities in end-of-life circumstances.

D. Age

The Carter decision dealt with plaintiffs who were adults, so no decision was made with regard to minors’ eligibility for MAID. However, as Prof. Pelletier made clear, Parliament can choose to allow minors to access MAID.[75] In response to a comment stating that it was up to the Committee to determine what the age of consent would be in relation to a specific offence, Prof. Hogg replied:

Yes, I think that's right. The Supreme Court, in its order, spoke of a “competent adult person”. I don't think it would be open to you, for example, to have 16 as an age of consent for this purpose, because that would not be a competent adult person. Between 18 and 21, I would think you would have some leeway within the word “adult“ to decide that.[76]

Certain witnesses, such as the Nova Scotia College of Physicians and Surgeons, chose not to take a position on this issue, simply asking for greater clarity to be provided.[77] Some witnesses who appeared before the Committee and the External Panel recommended that legislation define an age below which MAID would not be available (generally 18 but one submission suggested as old as 25).[78] Other witnesses wanted all individuals who are competent to make the decision to be eligible for MAID.[79] One witness also flagged the need to consider the suffering of children who are not competent, though did not go so far as to suggest including them in any MAID regime.[80] To date, Belgium and the Netherlands are the only two jurisdictions that allow minors access to MAID.[81]

Stakeholders who prefer competency-based criteria, such as the Provincial/‌ Territorial Expert Advisory Group and the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association, argue that the trend is toward increased recognition of the competence of minors in health care decision making and that age limits are arbitrary.[82] Prof. Pelletier stated that suffering is suffering, regardless of age and that there is a risk that the provisions may be challenged on the basis of section 15 of the Charter (equality rights) if minors are excluded.[83]

The Canadian Paediatric Society advocated against including minors, regardless of competence, in any MAID regime. The organization made this argument for a number of reasons, including the lack of evidence before the court in Carter regarding minors; the fact that an age limit is not arbitrary: and the lack of social consensus with respect to MAID for minors. The organization also rejected the idea that a constitutional challenge by excluded minors would clearly be successful. It suggested addressing whether to allow minors to access MAID at a later date, after there has been time to gather data, as was the case in Belgium which legalized minors’ access to MAID in 2014, 12 years after adults were granted access.[84]

In contrast, Dr. Derryck Smith, Chair of the Physicians Advisory Council of Dying with Dignity Canada who was head of psychiatry at Vancouver’s Children’s Hospital for 30 years, argued for a competence-based approach, saying:

I have worked with many teenagers over the years and I have worked with a number who have been facing death, and I think they would be competent in the legal sense to consent to physician-assisted dying as they would be legally competent to agree to other kinds of medical care.
…Why would we want teenagers to suffer, but we're prepared to relieve adults of suffering?[85]

Other witnesses such as Margaret Birrell, President of the Alliance of People with Disabilities Who Are Supportive of Legal Assisted Dying Society, and Dr. John Soles, President of the Society of Rural Physicians of Canada, were open to minors possibly having access, but felt that this should not be allowed at the present time.[86] Dr. Hartley Stern, Executive Director and CEO of the Canadian Medical Protective Association, said that if “mature minors” are to be entitled to MAID, clarification is needed as to how their competency will be assessed.[87] Quebec’s An Act respecting end-of-life care restricts “medical aid in dying” to “a person of full age.”[88]

The Committee understands the concerns of many witnesses regarding the capacity of minors to understand the implications of such a serious decision. However, it is important to remember, as noted in the External Panel’s report, that the Supreme Court has stated that minors have a right “to a degree of decision-making autonomy that is reflective of their evolving intelligence and understanding.”[89] Allowing competent minors access to MAID would not be eliminating the requirement for competence. Given existing practices with respect to mature minors in health care[90] and the obvious fact that minors can suffer as much as any adult, the Committee feels that it is difficult to justify an outright ban on access to MAID for minors. As with issues of mental health, by instituting appropriate safeguards, health care practitioners can be relied upon to identify appropriate cases for MAID and to refuse MAID to minors that do not satisfy the criteria.

The Committee acknowledges that a competent mature minor who has a grievous and irremediable medical condition should not be forced to endure intolerable suffering. Moreover, there are serious questions whether a restriction of the right to MAID only to competent adults would be consistent with the Charter. However, the Committee realizes that witnesses and briefs received were of differing opinions on the subject of extending the right to MAID to mature minors, and that these differences reflect a divergence of opinion among the Canadian public. After reflecting on the issue, the Committee recommends the following:

RECOMMENDATION 6

That the Government of Canada implement a two-stage legislative process, with the first stage applying immediately to competent adult persons 18 years or older, to be followed by a second stage applying to competent mature minors, coming into force at a date no later than three years after the first stage has come into force; and

That the Government of Canada immediately commit to facilitating a study of the moral, medical and legal issues surrounding the concept of “mature minor” and appropriate competence standards that could be properly considered and applied to those under the age of 18, and that this study include broad-based consultations with health specialists, provincial and territorial child and youth advocates, medical practitioners, academics, researchers, mature minors, families, and ethicists before the coming into force of the second stage.

E. Advance Request

The Carter decision dealt with plaintiffs who would remain competent while they faced significant physical decline. It did not address whether an individual who is not competent at the time of death could identify the circumstances in which he or she would choose MAID in advance. With respect to advance requests for MAID, witnesses and briefs outlined diverging opinions, from recommending not to allow such requests, to allowing them only after an individual is diagnosed, to allowing advance requests to be written prior to any illness. There was general agreement however that, if requests are to be allowed in advance, the individual must be competent at the time the advance request is drafted.

An advance request could be considered in three different situations:

  • where a person’s request has been accepted but the individual loses competence before MAID takes place;
  • where a person has been diagnosed with a grievous and irremediable condition but is not yet experiencing enduring and intolerable suffering; and
  • prior to diagnosis.

Professor Downie recommended that advance requests be permitted in the first two cases, but not the third. She argued that advance requests prevent the suffering of someone who has been approved for MAID but then loses competence and must continue to suffer. It also prevents individuals from ending their lives earlier than they would otherwise in order to avoid losing competence before the suffering becomes intolerable, something which was a major factor in the Carter case.[91] Finally, an advance request allows the process to be undertaken before the suffering is enduring and intolerable. Otherwise, the person would have to continue to endure the suffering during the processing of the request and any waiting period.[92] Linda Jarrett and the Hon. Steven Fletcher, both living with disabilities, also told the Committee they believed advance requests should be respected.[93] Other witnesses also voiced support for advance requests.[94] Wanda Morris, outgoing CEO of Dying with Dignity Canada, argued in a similar vein to Professor Downie:

In their decision, the Supreme Court justices wrote that to force someone to choose between undergoing a premature, perhaps violent, death and enduring prolonged suffering is a cruel choice. We submit that unless the committee recommends that informed consent be allowed by advance consent, the injustice will continue.
Nowhere does this play out more than around the issue of dementia.…
I think that what we do will actually be life-affirming if we are able to provide a clear advance consent mechanism.[95]

Ms. Morris explained that objective, verifiable criteria must be included in any such request to assist a health care team in assessing whether the criteria outlined in the advance request have been satisfied. As examples, she listed being bedridden, being unable to feed, wash or shave oneself or being unable to speak for 30 days or more. The same safeguards for a contemporaneous request must be in place for an advanced request to confirm informed consent and capacity.[96]

Jean-Pierre Ménard, representing the Barreau du Québec, noted that the panel of legal experts appointed by Quebec’s government, of which he was a member, recommended allowing advance requests but that the legislation adopted in Quebec does not permit them for MAID. He explained that there were a number of questions that were raised about how to assess competence at the time an advance request is made: whether the individual would fully understand the decisions being made; how to know whether the individual had changed his or her mind; and whether a third party could act against the interests of the patient. He concluded that there was much debate, with valid arguments on both sides, and that a decision was made in Quebec to prioritize protection of the vulnerable.[97]

Jay Cameron from the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms expressed concerns that advance requests could result in abuse if a patient becomes incompetent and that it would not be possible to verify if the request was made under duress. He also argued that it is too difficult to know how one will feel once in a changed state, such as when one is experiencing the symptoms of dementia.[98] Michael Bach, Executive Vice-President of the Canadian Association for Community Living, argued that the requirement for the suffering of the patient to be intolerable “in the circumstances of his or her condition” bars the use of advance requests.[99] Similarly, Prof. Trudo Lemmens from the Faculty of Law and Dalla Lana School of Public Health at the University of Toronto expressed concern in written submissions after his appearance before the Committee. He felt that someone with dementia who is still enjoying life could end up dying by MAID because he or she met the criteria related to suffering, such as not recognizing family members, that was included in his or her advance request for MAID.[100]

Dr. Jeff Blackmer, Vice-President, Medical Professionalism at the Canadian Medical Association noted that the organization had not consulted its membership on the issue of advance requests because the issue was not addressed in Carter. However, he did say that implementing advance directives is “incredibly complex and difficult, because it’s very hard to capture all of the nuances and the specifics of a very complicated medical condition and intervention.”[101] Dr. Douglas Grant, Registrar and CEO of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Nova Scotia, without taking a position on whether advance requests should be permitted, also noted that “a myriad of new issues” would need to be addressed if such requests were permitted.[102]

The Committee understands these challenges but is deeply concerned that by excluding individuals who want access to MAID but have lost competence, such individuals will be left to suffer or end their lives prematurely. This situation was exactly what the Carter decision sought to avoid. Allowing advance requests also provides comfort to individuals, reducing their psychological suffering, knowing that their lives will not end in a way that is against their wishes.[103] Limiting the option of advance directives to individuals who already have a diagnosis makes it easier to ascertain that there was informed consent. At that point, the person knows more about what he or she may expect in the future to provide relevant direction in the request. The same safeguards to ensure competence and consent must be in place for advance requests, and consideration could be given to additional safeguards. Thought should be given to encouraging and possibly requiring health care practitioners to communicate regularly with their patients while they are still competent to ensure that their advance requests continue to reflect their wishes. The concerns of Dr. Blackmer, Dr. Grant and others will need to be examined as the system is put in place to minimize the risk of abuse and error, but the Committee is confident that this can and must be done to ensure the autonomy of Canadians and the protection of the vulnerable. The Committee therefore recommends:

RECOMMENDATION 7

That the permission to use advance requests for medical assistance in dying be allowed any time after one is diagnosed with a condition that is reasonably likely to cause loss of competence or after a diagnosis of a grievous or irremediable condition but before the suffering becomes intolerable. An advance request may not, however, be made, prior to being diagnosed with such a condition. The advance request is subject to the same procedural safeguards as those in place for contemporaneous requests.

F. Residency Requirement

Few witnesses discussed the issue of residency as an eligibility requirement for MAID, either before the External Panel or this committee. Prof. Ells argued for eligibility based on eligibility for publicly funded health care services in the province or territory where the request is made. MAID should occur in the context of a patient-physician relationship and the Committee does not want Canada to become a destination for people seeking MAID. For this reason, the Committee recommends:

RECOMMENDATION 8

That medical assistance in dying be available only to insured persons eligible for publicly funded health care services in Canada.

THE PROCESS INVOLVED IN REQUESTING MEDICAL ASSISTANCE IN DYING

The majority of witnesses noted that the process for applying for MAID should have built-in safeguards to identify vulnerable individuals and ensure that an individual meets the eligibility criteria. Witnesses agreed that the request has to come from the person seeking MAID; the request cannot be made by a substitute decision maker. The Committee also agrees and wishes to recognize that witness testimony was invaluable for the Committee’s deliberations and consideration of appropriate safeguards.

There was general agreement that there should be a process appropriately documenting a person’s request for MAID, that when possible, the request should be made in writing (with alternatives if a person cannot write) and witnessed by someone who has no possible conflict of interest. The person should also be given the opportunity to rescind his or her request. The Committee agrees with these suggestions as well.

The Committee believes that where possible the request should be made in writing, and that it should be witnessed by two people who have no conflict of interest. The Committee therefore recommends:

RECOMMENDATION 9

That the Government of Canada work with the provinces and territories and their medical regulatory bodies to ensure that, where possible, a request for medical assistance in dying is made in writing and is witnessed by two people who have no conflict of interest.

A. Conscientious Objection to Participating in Medical Assistance in Dying

The External Panel’s report noted that “the medical profession is divided over the issue of MAID.”[104] Many witnesses who appeared before the Committee, and briefs/ letters that were submitted to the Committee, discussed the extent to which health care practitioners should be able to refuse to participate in MAID for reasons of conscience.[105] No one was of the opinion that a health care practitioner should be obliged to perform MAID. As the Supreme Court of Canada stated in Carter, “[i]n our view, nothing in the declaration of invalidity which we propose to issue would compel physicians to provide assistance in dying.”[106]

It was argued by some witnesses that strong protections for health care practitioners who refuse to participate for reasons of conscience need to be put in place, including the possibility that such protection be established in legislation.[107] Other witnesses were concerned about the effect a practitioner’s refusal to participate in MAID would have both on the individual who was seeking an assisted death and on the availability of MAID more broadly. As Vyda Ng from the Canadian Unitarian Council told the Committee, “[i]t’s very much in keeping with Canadian values to put the needs and wishes of Canadians ahead of the values of individual doctors and institutions, and to respect each person’s dignity at the most traumatic period of their lives.”[108] Some witnesses and submissions to the Committee recommended that a practitioner who conscientiously objects to MAID should be required to provide an effective referral or transfer of care for their patient,[109] while some felt that referring the individual to a third-party organization should be sufficient.[110] Joanne Klineberg from the Department of Justice noted that provinces and territories “have legislation and policies in relation to the rights of physicians to refuse to partake in certain types of medical practices, so it is definitely something that the provinces and territories already are responsible for.”[111] In Quebec, a physician must notify a designated individual if he or she refuses to participate in MAID so that a willing physician may be identified.[112]

The Committee notes that the Supreme Court of Canada in Carter stated that the Charter rights of patients and physicians will need to be reconciled.[113] The Committee believes that having health care professionals who conscientiously object to MAID provide an effective referral for a patient who seeks MAID is an appropriate balancing of the rights of patients and the conscience rights of physicians. The Committee therefore recommends:

RECOMMENDATION 10

That the Government of Canada work with the provinces and territories and their medical regulatory bodies to establish a process that respects a health care practitioner’s freedom of conscience while at the same time respecting the needs of a patient who seeks medical assistance in dying. At a minimum, the objecting practitioner must provide an effective referral for the patient.

Witnesses and briefs also addressed whether a health care facility should be permitted to refuse to either provide MAID or to allow MAID to be provided on its premises. One witness told the Committee that in Quebec, hospices (which the witness stated are largely privately funded) sought and received an exemption from having to provide MAID.[114] A number of witnesses argued, and the Committee also believes, that if a health care facility is publicly funded, it must provide MAID.[115] The difficulty in transferring a patient from one facility to another was highlighted.[116]

The Committee recommends therefore:

RECOMMENDATION 11

That the Government of Canada work with the provinces and territories to ensure that all publicly funded health care institutions provide medical assistance in dying.

B. Assessments

A number of witnesses maintained that a person who seeks MAID should be assessed by at least two physicians to verify that he or she meets the eligibility criteria.[117] The External Panel Report explained that “[e]very jurisdiction that has enacted legislation permitting assisted dying requires that a second physician (often called a ‘consulting physician’) confirm the attending physician’s approval of a request.”[118] Other witnesses felt that to always require two assessments was unnecessary and could act as a barrier to access; and that in the scope of normal medical practice, a physician or other health care provider would seek out a second opinion as needed.[119] In situations where MAID was being sought primarily due to grievous and irremediable suffering caused by a psychiatric disorder, a consultation with a psychiatrist was recommended by some witnesses. Other witnesses argued that a vulnerability assessment should occur.[120] Carmela Hutchison, President of DisAbled Women’s Network of Canada, told the Committee that “[w]omen with disabilities need to have had a consultation with peer support groups before being eligible for physician-assisted death.”[121]

The Committee strongly believes that having two physicians who are independent of one another carry out two assessments to ensure that the MAID eligibility criteria are met will protect people who may be vulnerable. Considering the need to ensure that the MAID eligibility criteria are met, the Committee recommends therefore:

RECOMMENDATION 12

That the Government of Canada work with the provinces and territories, and their medical regulatory bodies to establish that a request for medical assistance in dying can be carried out only if two physicians who are independent of one another have determined that the person meets the eligibility criteria for medical assistance in dying.

C. Who Should Provide Medical Assistance in Dying?

Defining which health care professionals can perform MAID is an essential part of the discussion, as those involved will require an exemption from the Criminal Code provisions that currently prohibit MAID (sections 14 and 241(b)). Under Quebec’s An Act Respecting End-of-Life Care, only physicians may provide what is referred to in the law as “medical aid in dying.” While for the most part it was agreed that physicians were well-placed to perform MAID, a number of witnesses advocated for nurse practitioners to be able to perform MAID, particularly in regions that have limited access to physicians. It was also recommended that registered nurses and physician assistants, working under the direction of a physician or a nurse practitioner, be able to provide MAID.[122] In such cases, telemedicine could be used to carry out any physician or specialist consultations. The Committee shares these concerns regarding access.

Some witnesses suggested the need for a defined and regulated medical sub-specialty for those physicians who can practice MAID.[123] The Committee is concerned that such a system would affect access.

Regardless of who performs MAID, the Committee recognizes the need for training, particularly with respect to identifying vulnerabilities, as was highlighted by a number of witnesses.[124]

Taking into account the limited access that people living in rural and remote regions of Canada may have to a physician, to ensure access to MAID across Canada, the Committee recommends:

RECOMMENDATION 13

That physicians, nurse practitioners and registered nurses working under the direction of a physician to provide medical assistance in dying be exempted from sections 14 and section 241(b) of the Criminal Code.

Pharmacists and other health care practitioners who provide services relating to medical assistance in dying, should also be exempted from sections 14 and section 241(b) of the Criminal Code.

The Canadian Nurses Protective Society also recommended amending section 241(a) of the Criminal Code to protect nurses and other health care professionals who “engage in discussions with patients about end-of-life options and wishes.”[125]

The majority of testimony focused on physicians. However, it should be understood, as per the recommendation above, that the Committee supports nurse practitioners, as well as registered nurses working under the direction of a physician, providing MAID as well.

D. Waiting or Reflection Period

There was a great deal of variation in submissions with respect to the concept of a mandatory waiting or “reflection period between the time of the request and the provision of MAID.”[126] Some witnesses felt that a fixed waiting period is required, while others felt that the waiting period should be flexible, based in part on a person’s prognosis.[127] In particular, it was felt that a waiting period should be required in cases of traumatic injury where a person might still be adjusting to a new condition. Professor Downie claimed that in such situations, a waiting period would not be helpful anyway, as an individual would likely not have the capacity to provide an informed consent, and would therefore not meet the eligibility criteria.[128] The External Panel Report noted that “most groups were of the view that a certain degree of flexibility in the waiting period is necessary.”[129] The Committee notes that the waiting periods indicated in various provincial college of physician and surgeon guidelines vary.

The Committee agrees that any waiting period must be flexible, and firmly believes that attending physicians are best placed to determine what an appropriate period of reflection would be, taking into account the patient’s medical condition and any circumstances that may be unique to that patient. For that reason, the Committee recommends:

RECOMMENDATION 14

That the Government of Canada work with the provinces and territories, and their medical regulatory bodies to ensure that any period of reflection for medical assistance in dying that is contained in legislation or guidelines is flexible, and based, in part, on the rapidity of progression and nature of the patient’s medical condition as determined by the patient’s attending physician.

E. Prior Review of Medical Assistance in Dying Requests

Some witnesses recommended that to ensure that eligibility criteria are met, the MAID request should be reviewed by some type of panel or a judge.[130] Other witnesses opposed the idea of any prior review of a request for MAID for a number of reasons, including that such prior review “is not a safeguard, it is a barrier.”[131] The Hon. Steven Fletcher stated that if there is a panel to approve requests, “you might as well have kept the law the way it is, because the end result is the same. People would not be able to access physician-assisted death, they’ll take the actions on their own, and they will suffer in the interim.”[132] The External Panel Report listed three prior review options that were put forward by stakeholders they consulted: prior judicial authorization, prior authorization by administrative tribunal, and a MAID panel.[133]

The Committee agrees that requiring a review by either a panel or a judge would create an unnecessary barrier to individuals requesting MAID. The Committee recommends therefore:

RECOMMENDATION 15

That the Government of Canada work with the provinces and territories, and their medical regulatory bodies to ensure that the process to regulate medical assistance in dying does not include a prior review and approval process.

F. Ancillary Considerations

The Committee wishes to highlight the need to ensure that health care professionals who are acting in good faith are protected from civil liability, as well as the need to ensure that the estates of individuals whose immediate cause of death was MAID are protected. The Committee feels strongly that MAID should not affect life insurance. These issues need to be considered by the provinces and territories as they move towards establishing MAID frameworks within their jurisdictions.

Some witnesses noted that Indigenous organizations and communities had not been involved in discussions relating to MAID, and that such conversations would need to take place as the legislative process unfolds, taking into account the need to be respectful of cultural differences and sensitivities to MAID that may be present in communities afflicted with high rates of suicide.[134]

The Canadian Pharmacists’ Association highlighted the need to ensure that the drugs recommended for use in MAID are available in Canada, and not subject to a manufacturer back order.[135] The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Nova Scotia also cautioned that “there needs to be a robust system for the return of unused medication, and the college would welcome that this system be mandated through legislation.”[136]

OVERSIGHT OF THE MEDICAL ASSISTANCE IN DYING PROCESS: REPORTING REQUIREMENTS AND DATA COLLECTION

Oversight as it was referred to by witnesses can include reviewing specific cases of MAID, as well as reviewing the MAID framework more broadly. Many witnesses stated that oversight of MAID was critical, and many expressed the opinion that this oversight should occur at the federal level. Oversight was seen as desirable for a number of reasons, including that “it would safeguard good processes,”[137] and that it would provide “a pan-Canadian way of ensuring that everybody has access to this service.”[138] Joanne Klineberg from the Department of Justice explained to the Committee that representations to the External Panel suggested “that monitoring at a national level would be especially important because otherwise you could have 13 different bodies monitoring and it may become especially cumbersome.”[139] Prof. Pelletier from the External Panel stated that:

[t]he idea of oversight is quite reassuring for the population. The population likes to know that there might be a body or different bodies collecting data and analyzing how physician-assisted dying is provided all across Canada, and maybe doing some study on the impact that it has on human rights in general.[140]

Professor Downie suggested to the Committee that two levels of oversight would be needed: a retrospective case review and oversight of the regulatory framework itself.[141] Jay Cameron recommended that “federal legislation should mandate a parliamentary review board every three to five years to review the physician-assisted suicides that have occurred, and make recommendations for legislative amendments.”[142]

The Committee recognizes the importance of having an oversight mechanism that will compile data and analyze medical assistance in dying cases to monitor the operation of the medical assistance in dying framework and to identify any potential areas that require refinement. For that reason, the Committee recommends:

RECOMMENDATION 16

That Health Canada lead a cooperative process with the provinces and territories creating and analyzing national reports on medical assistance in dying cases, and that such reports be compiled on an annual basis and tabled in Parliament. Such reports must ensure respect for the privacy of affected individuals.

RECOMMENDATION 17

That a mandatory statutory review of the applicable federal legislation be conducted by the appropriate committee(s) of the House of Commons and of the Senate every four years after the coming into force of the applicable federal legislation.

IMPROVED SUPPORTS AND SERVICES

The Committee agrees with the witnesses and written submissions that highlighted the need for improved supports and services to accompany implementation of MAID, particularly for individuals with disabilities, mental health conditions and/or socioeconomic challenges.[143]

A. Support for Indigenous Peoples and Communities

Both Professor Carrie Bourassa, Indigenous Health Studies, First Nations University of Canada and Dr. Alika Lafontaine, President of the Indigenous Physicians Association of Canada, emphasized the need to ensure that work in Indigenous communities is culturally appropriate and recognizes the systemic issues and power imbalances between patients and health care workers as well.[144] Keeping these remarks in mind, the Committee recommends:

RECOMMENDATION 18

That the Government of Canada work with the provinces and territories, and their medical regulatory bodies to ensure that culturally and spiritually appropriate end-of-life care services, including palliative care, are available to Indigenous patients.

B. Palliative Care

Though statistics on access to palliative care are incomplete and out-of-date according to witnesses, it is fair to say that many Canadians do not have access to high quality palliative care when they need it. All witnesses who addressed the issue agreed that Canada could and needs to do more in this area, as does the Committee. The Committee was pleased to hear from Abby Hoffman, Assistant Deputy Minister, Strategic Policy, Department of Health, that planned investments in home care services will include support for palliative care, but the Committee feels that more can be done.[145] For this reason, the Committee makes the following recommendations:

RECOMMENDATION 19

That Health Canada re-establish a Secretariat on Palliative and End-of-Life Care; and that Health Canada work with the provinces and territories and civil society to develop a flexible, integrated model of palliative care by implementing a pan-Canadian palliative and end-of-life strategy with dedicated funding, and developing a public awareness campaign on the topic.

C. Mental Health

As noted above, teasing out the impact of mental health issues on requests for MAID will be a challenging aspect of implementation for health care practitioners. Additional services and supports may be needed to assess whether individuals with psychiatric conditions satisfy the requirements for MAID. For this reason, the Committee recommends:

RECOMMENDATION 20

That the Government of Canada support the pan-Canadian mental health strategy, Changing Directions, Changing Lives, developed by the Mental Health Commission of Canada and work with the provinces, territories and civil society to ensure that appropriate mental health supports and services are in place for individuals requesting medical assistance in dying.

D. Dementia

Witnesses also outlined the difficulties experienced by individuals with various forms of dementia and their families, the care required and the low quality of life experienced by many in the later stages of such conditions. The Alzheimer Society called for a national dementia strategy to address the needs of our growing population faced with these conditions.[146] The Committee agrees and recommends:

RECOMMENDATION 21

That Health Canada and the Public Health Agency of Canada work with the provinces, territories and civil society organizations to develop a pan-Canadian strategy to improve the quality of care and services received by individuals living with dementia, as well as their families.


[1]             For more information on Carter v. Canada (Attorney General), please see Martha Butler and Marlisa Tiedemann, Carter v. Canada: The Supreme Court of Canada's Decision on Assisted Dying, Library of Parliament, Background Paper No. 2015-47-E, October 2015.

[2]             Criminal Code, R.S.C., 1985, c. C-46.

[3]             Carter v. Canada (Attorney General), 2015 SCC 5, para. 127.

[4]             Constitution Act, 1982. Section 7 states that: “Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice.”

[5]             Carter, 2015, para. 126.

[6]             The Committee is adopting the term “medical assistance in dying” instead of “physician-assisted dying,” as it reflects the reality that health care teams, and not only physicians, will be involved in the process. This report will continue to use the term “physician-assisted dying” in any quotes from witnesses or external material reviewed by the Committee if that is the term that has been used.

                For an explanation of other terms relating to medical assistance in dying, please see the section “Terminology” in this report.

[7]             Ibid., para. 105.

[8]             Carter v. Canada (Attorney General), 2016 SCC 4, para. 7.

[9]             House of Commons, Journals, No. 7, 1st Session, 42nd Parliament, 11 December 2015, p. 50; Senate, Journals, No. 6, 1st Session, 42nd Parliament, 11 December 2015, p. 56.

[10]           Canada Health Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. C-6.

[11]           Carter 2015, para. 127.

[12]           Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, Honouring the Truth, Reconciling for the Future, Summary of the Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, 2015.

[13]           This section is based on Martha Butler and Marlisa Tiedemann, The Federal Role in Health and Health Care, Library of Parliament, In Brief No. 2011-91-E, September 2013.

                For more detailed information about the division of powers, see Peter W. Hogg Constitutional Law of Canada, Fifth Edition Supplemented, Volumes 1 and 2, Thomson Carswell, Toronto, 2007.

[14]           Constitution Act, 1867, 30 & 31 Victoria, c. 3 (U.K.).

[15]           Food and Drugs Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-27.

[16]           Human Pathogens and Toxins Act, S.C. 2009, c. 24.

[17]           Assisted Human Reproduction Act, S.C. 2004, c. 2.

[18]           Reference re Assisted Human Reproduction Act, 2010 SCC 61.

[19]           Ibid., paras. 243–244.

[20]           Canada (Attorney General) v. PHS Community Services Society, 2011 SCC 44, para. 68.

[21]           Carter v. Canada (Attorney General), 2015 SCC 5, para. 53.

[22]           See, for example, Parliament, 1st Session, 42nd Parliament, Special Joint Committee on Physician-Assisted Dying (PDAM), Evidence, 27 January 2016, 1705 (Dr. Jeff Blackmer, Canadian Medical Association); PDAM, Evidence, 26 January 2016, 1830 (Jennifer Gibson, Co-Chair, Provincial-Territorial Expert Advisory Group on Physician-Assisted Dying).

[23]           PDAM, Evidence, 25 January 2016, 1150 & 1225 (Peter Hogg, Scholar in Residence, Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP, As an Individual).

[24]           This section is based in part on forthcoming revisions to Julia Nicol and Marlisa Tiedemann, Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide in Canada, Library of Parliament.

[25]           “Medical aid in dying” is the term used in the Quebec law.

[26]           External Panel on Options for a Legislative Response to Carter v. Canada, Consultations on Physician-Assisted Dying - Summary of Results and Key Findings, 15 December 2015.

[27]           All provinces and territories participated in the advisory group except for Quebec, which had passed its own legislation, and British Columbia, which was an observer to the process.

[28]           Government of Ontario, “Provinces, Territories Establish Expert Advisory Group On Physician-Assisted Dying,” News release, 14 August 2015.

[29]           Provincial–Territorial Expert Advisory Group on Physician-Assisted Dying, Final Report, 30 November 2015 [Provincial-Territorial Report].

[30]           Carter v. Canada (Attorney General), 2012 BCSC 886, para. 38.

[31]           Ibid., para. 39.

[32]           Civil Code of Quebec, An Act respecting end-of-life care, c. S-32.0001, s. 3(6).

[33]           PDAM, Evidence, 18 January 2016, 1405 (Joanne Klineberg, Department of Justice).

[34]           External Panel Report.

[35]           PDAM, Evidence, 27 January 2016, 1720 (Dr. Monica Branigan, Canadian Society of Palliative Care Physicians); A Network of BC Physicians, Submission to the Special Joint Committee on Physician-Assisted Dying.

[36]           See for example, PDAM, Evidence, 4 February 2016, 1925 (Michael Bach, Canadian Association for Community Living); A Network of BC Physicians; Daniel Santoro and Dr. Althea Burrell, Submission to Special Joint Committee on Physician-Assisted Dying, received 27 January 2016.

[37]           See for example PDAM, Evidence, 1 February 2016, 1100 (Grace Pastine, Litigation Director, British Columbia Civil Liberties Association); PDAM, Evidence, 2 February 2016, 1920 (Dr. Douglas Grant, Nova Scotia College of Physicians and Surgeons); PDAM, Evidence, 4 February 2016.

[38]           PDAM, Evidence, 26 January 2016, 1835 (Maureen Taylor, Co-Chair of the Provincial-Territorial Expert Advisory Group on Physician-Assisted Dying).

[39]           PDAM, Evidence, 27 January 2016, 1730 (Dr. Cindy Forbes, President, Canadian Medical Association).

[40]           PDAM, Evidence, 28 January 2016, 1845 (Jocelyn Downie, As an Individual); Submission to the Committee, Presentation to Special Joint Committee on Physician Assisted Dying (David Baker, Trudo Lemmens, Gilbert Sharpe), 28 January 2016.

[41]           College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario, Interim Guidance on Physician-Assisted Death, January 2016.

[42]           College of Physicians and Surgeons of Alberta, Advice to the Profession: Physician-Assisted Death; College of Physicians and Surgeons of Manitoba, Standards of Practice for Physician-Assisted Death.

[43]           Carter, 2015, para. 147.

[44]           Ibid.

[45]           See, for example, PDAM, Evidence, 3 February 2016, 1700 (Vyda Ng, Executive Director, Canadian Unitarian Council); Dying with Dignity Canada, 7 Legislative Principles for a Patient-Centred Approach to Physician-Assisted Dying, submission to the Committee.

[46]           PDAM, Evidence, 25 January 2016, 1255 (Hogg).

[47]           PDAM, Evidence, 3 February 2016, 1825 (Imam Sikander Hashmi, Spokesperson, Canadian Council of Imams); PDAM, Evidence, 4 February 2016, 1705 (Margaret Somerville, Professor, McGill University, as an Individual). Also see, for example, PDAM, Evidence, 4 February 2016, 1925 (Bach); and Canadian Society of Palliative Care Physicians, Submission to Special Joint Committee on Physician-Assisted Dying, submission to the Committee dated 27 January 2016, pp. 3-4.

[48]           External Panel on Options for a Legislative Response to Carter v. Canada, Consultations on Physician Assisted Dying Summary of Results and Key Findings: Final Report, 15 December 2015, p. 57. Also see, for example, PDAM, Evidence, 25 January 2016, 1240 (Jean-Pierre Ménard, Lawyer, Barreau du Québec).

[49]           PDAM, Evidence, 28 January 2016, 1845 (Downie).

[50]           Centre for Inquiry Canada, written submission to the Committee, 1 February 2016, p. 4.

[51]           PDAM, Evidence, 18 January 2016, 1530 (Jeanette Ettel, Senior Counsel, Human Rights Law Section, Department of Justice).

[52]           PDAM, Evidence, 26 January 2016, 1750 (Benoît Pelletier, Member, External Panel on Options for a Legislative Response to Carter v. Canada).

[53]           PDAM, Evidence, 28 January 2016, 1850 (Downie). See also, for example, Centre for Inquiry, p. 4 and PDAM, Evidence, 26 January 2016, 1900 (Taylor).

[54]           See, for example, Living with Dignity, Recommendations for the Special Joint Committee on Physician-Assisted Dying, p. 3, written submission to the Committee; Derek B.M. Ross & Johnathan R. Sikkema, Christian Legal Fellowship, Submission of the Christian Legal Fellowship to the Special Joint Committee on Physician-Assisted Dying, 1 February 2016, p. 4.

[55]           PDAM, Evidence, 27 January 2016, 1935 (Dr. K. Sonu Gaind, President, Canadian Psychiatric Association).

[56]           PDAM, Evidence, 3 February 2016, 1805 (Dr. Tarek Rajji, Chief, Geriatric Psychiatry, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health).

[57]           Carter, 2015, para. 127.

[58]           Regarding Belgium, for example: neuropsychiatric disorders were 1.2% of cases in 2004/05, 2.8 % (or 58 cases) in 2010/11 and 3.7 % (or 67 cases) in 2013/14 according to Trudo Lemmens, Why Canada Should Avoid A Belgian-Style Regulatory Regime for Physician Assisted Dying, Memorandum for the Special Joint Committee on Physician-Assisted Dying, written submission to the Committee, p. 6.

[59]           See, for example, PDAM, Evidence, 4 February 2016, 1705 (Somerville), regarding limiting MAID to physical suffering; and PDAM, Evidence, 1 February 2016, 1155 (Wanda Morris, Dying With Dignity), regarding psychological suffering.

[60]           Marcia Hogan, Brief to the Joint Committee on Physician Assisted Dying, submission to the Committee, p. 2.

[61]           Carter, 2015, para. 14.

[62]           PDAM, Evidence, 27 January 2016, 1935 (Gaind).

[63]           PDAM, Evidence, 26 January 2016, 1740 (Pelletier).

[64]           PDAM, Evidence, 26 January 2016, 1915 (Gibson).

[65]           PDAM, Evidence, 2 February 2016, 1745 (Carolyn Ells, Associate Professor, Medicine, Biomedical Ethics Unit, McGill University, As an Individual). See also, for example, PDAM, Evidence, 1 February 2016, 1105 (Josh Paterson, Executive Director, British Columbia Civil Liberties Association).

[66]           PDAM, Evidence, 18 January 2016, 1530 (Klineberg).

[67]           See, for example, PDAM, Evidence, 28 January 2016, 1940 (David Baker, Bakerlaw, As an Individual); PDAM, Evidence, 28 January 2016, 1750 (Dean Richert, Co-Chair, Ending of Life Ethics Committee, Council of Canadians with Disabilities); PDAM, Evidence, 2 February 2016, 1815 (Sharon Baxter, Executive Director, Canadian Hospice Palliative Care Association).

[68]           PDAM, Evidence, 3 February 2016,1705 (Cardinal Thomas Collins, Archbishop, Archdiocese of Toronto, Coalition for HealthCARE and Conscience).

[69]           PDAM, Evidence, 28 January 2016, 1740 (Linda Jarrett, Member’ Disability Advisory Council, Dying with Dignity Canada).

[70]           Carter, 2015, para. 3.

[71]           Ibid, para. 120.

[72]           PDAM, Evidence, 28 January 2016, 1755 (Rhonda Wiebe, Co-Chair of the Ending of Life Ethics Committee of the Council of Canadians with Disabilities).

[73]           Ibid., 1800 (Hon. Steven Fletcher, as an Individual).

[74]           Canadian Medical Association, Principles-based Recommendations for a Canadian Approach to Assisted Dying, written submission to the Committee, p. 3.

[75]           PDAM, Evidence, 26 January 2016, 1805 (Pelletier).

[76]           PDAM, Evidence, 25 January 2016, 1240 (Hogg).

[77]           PDAM, Evidence, 2 February 2016, 1940 (Grant).

[78]           See, for example, PDAM, Evidence, 4 February 2016, 1640 (Carmela Hutchison, President of DisAbled Women’s Network of Canada) (DAWN); PDAM, Evidence, 4 February 2016, 1920 (Bach). Regarding the suggestion of age 25, see Colette Squires, Physician Assisted Dying Public Consultation, January 30, 2016 in Langley, B.C., submission to the Committee, p. 4.

[79]           Provincial-Territorial Report, Recommendation 17. Also see, for example, PDAM, Evidence, 2 February 2016, 1735 (Dr. Derryck Smith, Chair of Physicians Advisory Council, Dying with Dignity Canada).

[80]           PDAM, Evidence, 2 February 2016, 1735 (Smith).

[81]           PDAM, Evidence, 18 January 2016, 1415 (Klineberg).

[82]           PDAM, Evidence, 26 January 2016, 1835 (Gibson); PDAM, Evidence, 1 February 2016, 1100 (Pastine).

[83]           PDAM, Evidence, 26 January 2016, 1810 (Pelletier).

[84]           PDAM, Evidence, 3 February 2016 (Mary Shariff, Associate Professor of Law and Associate Dean Academic, University of Manitoba, Canadian Paediatric Society).

[85]           PDAM, Evidence, 2 February 2016, 1815 (Smith).

[86]           PDAM, Evidence, 4 February 2016, 1730 (Margaret Birrell, President, Alliance of People with Disabilities Who Are Supportive of Legal Assisted Dying Society); 4 February 2016, 1900 (Dr. John Soles, President, Society of Rural Physicians of Canada).

[87]           PDAM, Evidence, 4 February 2016, 1915 (Dr. Hartley Stern, Executive Director and CEO, The Canadian Medical Protective Association).

[88]           An Act respecting end-of-life care, section 5.

[89]           A.C. v. Manitoba (Director of Child and Family Services), 2009 SCC 30, para. 69.

[90]           In A.C. v. Manitoba (Director of Child and Family Services), 2009 SCC 30, the Supreme Court of Canada discusses the ability of minors to consent to medical treatment in the context of protective legislation that allows a court to authorize treatment for a child when it deems it to be in the child’s best interest. At para. 46, Justice Abella (for the majority) states:

                The latitude accorded to adults at common law to decide their own medical treatment had historically narrowed dramatically when applied to children. However the common law has more recently abandoned the assumption that all minors lack decisional capacity and replaced it with a general recognition that children are entitled to a degree of decision-making autonomy that is reflective of their evolving intelligence and understanding. This is known as the common law “mature minor” doctrine. As the Manitoba Law Reform Commission noted, this doctrine is “a well-known, well-accepted and workable principle which … raise[s] few difficulties on a day-to-day basis” (Minors’ Consent to Health Care (1995), Report #91, at p. 33). The doctrine addresses the concern that young people should not automatically be deprived of the right to make decisions affecting their medical treatment. It provides instead that the right to make those decisions varies in accordance with the young person’s level of maturity, with the degree to which maturity is scrutinized intensifying in accordance with the severity of the potential consequences of the treatment or of its refusal.

[91]           Carter, 2015, para. 57-58.

[92]           PDAM, Evidence, 28 January 2016, 1850 (Downie).

[93]           PDAM, Evidence, 28 January 2016, 1735 (Jarrett); 1805 (Fletcher).

[94]           See, for example, PDAM, Evidence, 1 February 2016, 1105 (Paterson); PDAM, Evidence, 4 February 2016, 1655 (Angus Gunn, Counsel, Alliance of People with Disabilities Who Are Supportive of Legal Assisted Dying Society); Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs, Brief for the Special Joint Committee on Physician-Assisted Dying, submission to the Committee, p. 4-5.

[95]           PDAM, Evidence, 1 February 2016, 1120 (Morris).

[96]           Ibid., 1155.

[97]           PDAM, Evidence, 25 January 2016, 1255 (Ménard).

[98]           PDAM, Evidence, 1 February 2016, 1205 (Jay Cameron, Barrister and Solicitor, Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms).

[99]           PDAM, Evidence, 4 February 2016, 1925 (Bach). See also, for example, PDAM, Evidence, 4 February 2016, 1930 (Gerald Chipeur, Lawyer, As an Individual).

[100]         Trudo Lemmens, Response to Comments Made During the Committee Hearings of January 28, 2016, 2 February 2016, submission to the Committee.

[101]         PDAM, Evidence, 27 January 2016, 1750 (Blackmer).

[102]         PDAM, Evidence, 2 February 2016, 1925 (Grant). See also, for example, PDAM, Evidence, 3 February 2016, 1850 (Rajji).

[103]         Provincial-Territorial Report, p. 31.

[104]         External Panel Report, p. 98.

[105]         The issue of freedom of conscience of pharmacists was raised by the Canadian Pharmacists Association (CPhA), PDAM, Evidence, 27 January 2016 (Phil Emberley, Canadian Pharmacists Association).

[106]         Carter, 2015, para. 132.

[107]         See for example, PDAM, Evidence, 27 January 2016, 1725 (Branigan); PDAM, Evidence, 3 February 2016, 1905 (Hashmi); 1705 (Collins); Letter to Minister Wilson-Raybould and Minister Philpott, Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops, 20 January 2016.

[108]         PDAM, Evidence, 3 February 2016, 1705 (Ng).

[109]         See for example, PDAM, Evidence, 26 January 2016, 1900 (Gibson); PDAM, Evidence, 1 February 2016, 1125 (Morris); Rhonda Morison, Submission to the Committee, 30 January 2016.

[110]         PDAM, Evidence, 1 February 2016, 1105 (Paterson); submission to the Committee, Vivre dans la Dignité, 2016; Ellen Agger, submission to the Committee, 1 February 2016.

[111]         PDAM, Evidence, 18 January 2016, 1535 (Klineberg).

[112]         An Act Respecting End-of-Life Care, RSQ c S-32.0001, section 31.

[113]         Carter, 2015, para. 132.

[114]         PDAM, Evidence, 2 February 2016, 1845 (Baxter).

[115]         See for example, PDAM, Evidence, 3 February 2016, 1700 (Ng); British Columbia Humanist Association, Allow assisted dying for all who choose it: A brief for the Special Joint Committee on Physician-Assisted Dying, 25 January 2016; Lori Goodwin, submission to the Committee, 30 January 2016.

[116]         PDAM, Evidence, 2 February 2016, 1850 (Baxter).

[117]         PDAM, Evidence, 27 January 2016, 1745 (Forbes); 1750 (Birrell); 1900 (Soles) 1 February 2016, 1245 (Dr. Francine Lemire, College of Family Physicians of Canada).

[118]         External Panel Report, p. 79.

[119]         See for example, PDAM, Evidence, 28 January 2016, 1920 (Downie).

[120]         PDAM, Evidence, 4 February 2016, 1950 (Bach); PDAM, Evidence, 28 January 2016, 1750 (Richert). David Baker and Gilbert Sharpe also note in their draft bill that a patient deemed to be vulnerable should have counselling.

[121]         PDAM, Evidence, 4 February 2016, 1640 (Hutchison).

[122]         See for example PDAM, Evidence, 1 February 2016, 1100 (Paterson); PDAM, Evidence, 2 February 2016, 1745 (Ells); PDAM, Evidence, 3 February 2016, 1755 (Ng); Provincial-Territorial Report.

[123]         PDAM, Evidence, 4 February 2016, 1705 (Somerville); Constant H. Leung, submission to the Committee: Physician Hastened Death: Seeking Substantive Safeguards and Effective Access for All Canadians, 1 February 2016.

[124]         See for example PDAM, Evidence, 25 January 2016, 1110 (Abby Hoffman, Assistant Deputy Minister, Strategic Policy, Department of Health); PDAM, Evidence, 26 January 2016, 1915 (Gibson); PDAM, Evidence, 27 January 2016, 1725 (Branigan).

[125]         Submission, Re Canadian Nurses Protective Society Submission on Physician-Assisted Death.

[126]         See for example, PDAM, Evidence, 28 January 2016, 1835 (Fletcher).

[127]         See for example, PDAM, Evidence, 27 January 2016, 1735 (Blackmer); 1720 (Branigan).

[128]         PDAM, Evidence, 28 January 2016, 1910 (Downie).

[129]         External Panel Report, p. 90.

[130]         PDAM, Evidence, 4 February 2016, 1700 (Somerville); PDAM, Evidence, 4 February 2016, 1935 (Chipeur); Baker et al (2016).

[131]         See for example, PDAM, Evidence, 1 February 2016, 1120 (Morris); PDAM, Evidence, 1 February 2016, 1240 (Lemire).

[132]         PDAM, Evidence, 28 January 2016, 1810 (Fletcher).

[133]         External Panel Report, pp. 93-95.

[134]         PDAM, Evidence, 2 February 2016, 1915 (Dr. Alika Lafontaine, Indigenous Physicians Association of Canada); PDAM, Evidence, 1 February 2016, 1635 (Carrie Bourassa, First Nations University of Canada, as an individual).

[135]         PDAM, Evidence, 27 January 2016, 1950 (Carlo Berardi, Canadian Pharmacists Association).

[136]         PDAM, Evidence, 2 February 2016, 1930 (Grant).

[137]         PDAM, Evidence, 3 February 2016, 1705 (Ng).

[138]         PDAM, Evidence, 27 January 2016, 1710 (Branigan).

[139]         PDAM, Evidence, 18 January 2016, 1445 (Klineberg).

[140]         PDAM, Evidence, 26 January 2016, 1810 (Pelletier).

[141]         PDAM, Evidence, 28 January 2016, 1850 (Downie).

[142]         PDAM, Evidence, 1 February 2016, 1115 (Cameron).

[143]         See, for example, 28 January 2016, 1830 (Richert); 1855 (Lemmens).

[144]         PDAM, Evidence, 1 February 2016, 1715 (Bourassa); PDAM, Evidence, 2 February 2016, 1910 (Lafontaine).

[145]         PDAM, Evidence, 25 January 2016, 1105 (Hoffman).

[146]         PDAM, Evidence, 1 February 2016, 1230 (Mimi Lowi-Young, CEO, Alzheimer Society of Canada).