:
Welcome to all of our witnesses this evening, and to those joining us online.
My name is Yonah Martin, and I am the Senate's joint chair of this committee. I am joined by Shelby Kramp-Neuman, the House of Commons vice-chair of the committee.
Today, we continue our examination of the degree of preparedness attained for a safe and adequate application of medical assistance in dying where mental disorder is the sole underlying medical condition, in accordance with recommendation 13 of the committee's second report.
Before I introduce our witnesses, I want to advise our House colleagues that, potentially, there could be votes in the Senate in the second hour, so we'll be called away, at which point we will suspend the committee meeting. We don't know just yet what will happen, but it would be in the second hour.
For our first panel this evening, we have H. Archibald Kaiser, professor at the Schulich School of Law and department of psychiatry at Dalhousie University's faculty of medicine, as an individual, by video conference; Dr. Tarek Rajji, chair of the medical advisory committee at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health; Dr. Mauril Gaudreault, president of Collège des médecins du Québec; and Dr. André Luyet, psychiatrist, both by video conference.
Welcome to our witnesses for this first panel. You will each have five minutes for your opening remarks. We trust that you will be within the five minutes.
We will begin with Professor Kaiser, followed by Dr. Rajji and Dr. Gaudreault. I'm not sure if Dr. Luyet is sharing the five minutes, or whether it will just be Dr. Gaudreault.
We'll begin with Professor Kaiser. You have five minutes.
:
Good evening, and thank you for this opportunity of contributing to your reflections.
I'm opposed to this change in Canadian criminal law. I don't think Canada will ever be ready, from a public policy perspective, for MAID for persons with mental illness. Adoption would alienate and harm people with disabilities in Canada, contrary to our charter and to our international human rights law obligations, and it will diminish our well-earned UN reputation.
First, medical assistance in dying is a misnomer for persons with mental illness who die from other vulnerabilities: stigma, discrimination, social exclusion, impoverishment, violence by others and poor physical health.
Next, the intersectional realities of mental illness, intellectual disability and substance use disorders amplify my concerns. There are higher rates of dying by suicide not only for persons with mental illness but also for others experiencing health inequities, including indigenous peoples, trans people, trauma survivors and the increasing number of persons facing psychosocial and economic stressors.
As noted by CAMH, different suicide prevention strategies will be needed for different populations, but everyone deserves those efforts, not the legal normalization of dying by suicide.
The Supreme Court concluded in 1991 that people with mental illness have historically been the subjects of abuse, neglect and discrimination. In 2020, they said that stigmatizing attitudes persist, and they provide support for legislative solutions and justifications for social inequities and injustices.
This would be a vast extension of existing MAID justifications, which would enable departure from the regular criminal law, which must protect our most vulnerable. Those who participate in MAID in good faith are not individually culpable, but society will clearly be demonstrating, as the Law Reform Commission of Canada feared 40 years ago, its ignoble motives if it extends MAID.
This stretching of MAID is not a benefit advancing equality. It's quite the contrary. It aggravates discrimination, marginalization and inequality. As the Supreme Court cautioned in 2020, laws like this give discrimination “the force of law” because it “reinforces, perpetuates or exacerbates [a group's] disadvantage” and “violates the equality guarantee”.
The principles of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities are obligatory. Article 4 requires the abolition of “laws...that constitute discrimination”. Article 10 demands the “effective enjoyment” of the “inherent right to life”. Article 25 is “the right to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of health”, including the right to an adequate standard of living.
The extension of MAID to persons with mental illness would amount to a terrible setback under the CRPD. It is morally disconcerting and violative of democratic values that the protests of persons with disabilities have been dismissed, but it's also contrary to the CRPD, article 4, which requires us to “closely consult with and actively involve persons with disabilities” to, in article 29, “ensure that persons with disabilities can effectively and fully participate in political and public life”.
There is strident opposition, for example, by the Council of Canadians with Disabilities, which speaks for 170 NGOs. They say, “MPs...have stubbornly ignored the concerns expressed by the disability community.... This is a fight for our lives.”
Organizations like People First Canada, for which I am currently a provincial adviser, have repudiated this initiative as well. They say, “it makes it easier than ever to cancel us out.” It's “dangerous and discriminatory”. It “could be deadly to Canadians with disabilities”. As the president said forcefully, please vote to “kill the bill”, not us.
Canada has sullied its reputation with the United Nations. The Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities said, in 2019, Canada must “ensure that persons with disabilities do not request assisted dying” simply because there are no “community-based alternatives”.
In 2021, three UN special envoys were unusually worried that “a social assumption might follow (or be subtly reinforced) that it is better to be dead than to live with a disability”, that the extension would “result in a two-tiered system in which some would get suicide prevention and others suicide assistance, based on their disability status and specific vulnerabilities.”
Canada is at a crossroads. Either protect the rights of persons with disabilities, specifically with mental illness, or extend state-authorized death to make those with disabilities feel more silenced, devalued, betrayed and abandoned.
Thanks so much for this opportunity.
:
Thank you for this opportunity to present on behalf of the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, or CAMH.
CAMH is Canada's largest mental health teaching hospital and one of the world's leading research centres in its field. CAMH conducts groundbreaking research, provides expert training to health care professionals and scientists, develops innovative health promotion and prevention strategies, and advocates on public policy issues.
Most importantly, we provide evidence-informed and recovery-focused treatment and care to hundreds of patients every day with acute and chronic mental illnesses and substance use disorders.
Over the past several years, CAMH has made several submissions to government committees related to medical assistance in dying and mental illness. Our position has been, and remains, that we are concerned about the expansion of MAID to people whose sole underlying medical condition is mental illness at this time.
We want to be clear that this position is not based on the belief that suffering caused by mental illness is not comparable to suffering caused by physical illness. There is no doubt that mental illness can be grievous and cause people physical and psychological suffering. We are not here to debate that.
CAMH's concern is that the health care system is not ready for March 2024. The clinical guidelines, resources and processes are not in place to assess, determine eligibility for and support or deliver MAID when eligibility is confirmed to people whose sole underlying medical condition is mental illness. This includes differentiating between suicidal plans and the request for MAID. More time is needed.
The federal model practice standards are a good first step in highlighting the benchmarks that health professional regulators can expect from their members who choose to offer MAID, but it is not enough. Health professional regulators also rely on their members having access to the best available evidence through clinical practice guidelines.
Guidelines for MAID cases where mental illness is the sole underlying condition do not currently exist. That is why CAMH is hearing loud and clear from physicians, nurse practitioners and other clinicians that they need more clarity and directions on how to determine whether a person has an irremediable mental illness and is eligible for MAID, including how to separate a request for MAID from a suicidal attempt or plan.
To address this gap, CAMH experts have been working hard with partners for the past year to develop practice guidelines, based on the limited evidence available at this time, that will allow for standardized assessments and more reliable decisions regarding that determination of MAID cases where mental illness is the sole underlying condition.
Importantly, given the lack of evidence in the field at this time, CAMH and others have been clear that these guidelines must be consensus-based. This has not been an easy task. We have been working toward it, but have not been able to reach consensus on what information needs to be collected and how a determination of irremediableness should be made.
We're making progress, but more time and funding for interprofessional and interorganizational collaboration are needed. Getting to consensus within health care and community organizations, and nationally, will take longer. Given the life-or-death consequences of these decisions, we want to get it right, and we know the government does too.
It is also important for the government to understand that the health care system is not equipped to handle the increase in MAID requests that are expected to come in March 2024. In Ontario, there is already a lack of resources to handle MAID track two cases, and the existing infrastructure will not be able to support additional demand.
CAMH and our partner hospitals, through the Toronto Academic Health Science Network, have submitted a proposal to the provincial government to enhance the existing MAID coordination service and create a track two consultation table to address the increase in inquiries and applications for MAID where mental illness is the only underlying medical condition. We're awaiting a response.
Central to our proposal is the recognition that there are already a limited number of MAID assessors and providers who take care of track two cases. Those who have expertise in mental illness and conducting mental health assessments are even more limited. It is crucial that we have more time to build this community of practice.
Without time to ensure that the guidelines, resources and experts are in place, access to MAID for people whose sole underlying medical condition is mental illness would be limited and inconsistent, and may exacerbate existing inequities within the health care system. It may also lead to confusion, distress and frustration for patients, their families and health care providers.
Therefore, CAMH is urging further delay in extending MAID eligibility to people whose sole underlying condition is mental illness at this time, until the health care system is ready and health care providers have the resources they need to provide high-quality, standardized and equitable services.
Finally, it is important to re-emphasize what was mentioned at the beginning. Mental illness can be severe and cause suffering that can be comparable to physical illness, but the health care available for mental illness is not comparable to the health care available for physical illness. Mental health care has been significantly underfunded compared to physical health care.
There are also inconsistencies in treatment covered by different provincial health plans. This means that many people across Canada do not have ready access to the full range of evidence-informed treatments that can assist in their recovery.
For that reason, a delay in MAID expansion would also allow governments and health care experts to work together to determine the best way to integrate MAID into a broader mental health care system.
Thank you for your consideration.
:
Madam Chair, members of the committee, we appeared before you nearly a year ago today. Thank you for giving us another opportunity to express our views, this time in relation to mental disorders.
By way of reminder, the mission of the Collège des médecins du Québec, or CMQ, is to protect the public by providing quality medicine. Quality medicine to us means bringing relief to people who are suffering, regardless of their disorder or illness.
The CMQ is of the view that the medical parameters to circumscribe medical assistance in dying, or MAID, are clear. What is not clear are the legal parameters. The Criminal Code and Quebec's Act Respecting End-of-Life Care need to be aligned to ensure that the delivery of this care is consistent right across the country.
In the meantime, the situation is causing confusion among patients and doctors alike.
Further to an inclusive, non-discriminatory, view, one that is based on an individual's diagnosis and takes into account the person as a whole, mental illness is now a designated mental disorder in the International Classification of Diseases, the same as any other disease.
It is now well established in epidemiology that mental disorders are prevalent. In fact, it is estimated that one in five people will experience a mental disorder during their lifetime.
The CMQ is not claiming that MAID is an appropriate response for all individuals with mental disorders. For most, specific treatment options are available, scientifically sound options that offer a more promising outlook through biopsychosocial, recovery and rehabilitation therapies.
The CMQ does, however, believe that access to MAID should not be withheld from patients with mental disorders. That medical view is based on a number of factors. First, it is important to recognize that certain mental health problems can cause suffering just as intense as physical health problems. Second, it is not acceptable to discriminate against patients when it comes to MAID on the basis of their mental health. Everyone is entitled to universal access to care and that right must be upheld. Third it is important to not only protect vulnerable individuals, but also to support their potential and autonomy. Lastly, it is important to consider the mistaken association between a mental disorder and the capacity to consent.
However, stringent clear conditions are essential to avoid any lapses. We have set five such conditions.
First, the decision to grant MAID to someone with a mental disorder should not be viewed solely as an episode of care. Rather, the decision should be made following a fair and comprehensive assessment of the patient's situation.
Second, the patient must not exhibit suicidal ideation, as with major depressive disorders.
Third, the patient must experience intense and prolonged psychological suffering, as confirmed by severe symptoms and overall functional impairment, over a long period of time, leaving them with no hope that the weight of their situation will ease. This prevents them from being fulfilled and causes them to see their existence as devoid of meaning.
Fourth, the patient must have been receiving care and appropriate follow-up over an extensive period of time, have tried multiple available therapies that are recognized to be effective, and have received ongoing and proven psychosocial support.
Fifth, requests must undergo a multidisciplinary assessment, including by the physician or specialized nurse practitioner in the field of mental health who has treated the individual as well as by a consulting psychiatrist in the specific case of the MAID request.
Under these conditions, it would be possible, in the CMQ's view, to provide individuals suffering from a grievous and irreversible mental disorder with access to MAID.
It is important to prevent situations where individuals opt for MAID out of desperation, because they do not have access to proper care or do not consider the care available to be acceptable, such as an extended stay in a facility without the prospect of gaining more autonomy.
The CMQ believes that, regardless of the patient's illness, they still have the right to access all available medical care, in accordance with their condition, without discrimination.
We are confident that the conditions we have identified will ensure that MAID is adequately circumscribed, while guiding clinicians and educating patients and their loved ones.
We understand what an extremely sensitive issue this is. From a medical standpoint, however, the primary consideration is the person's suffering. We have a duty to alleviate that suffering, in accordance with the patient's wishes, when all other means have failed to do so.
Thank you.
:
Thank you for the question.
That's still the case in the way that there's no scientific evidence on it. We still cannot, at this time, determine at the individual level whether the person has an irremediable illness or not because of the trajectory of the illness. This is why I mentioned in the statement today that any criteria about the irremediable nature of the illness need to be based on consensus guidelines. That work needs to happen. Those discussions need to happen among the expert panel to determine, for condition A, what criteria would determine, based on consensus, that this illness is irremediable, so that doctor X and doctor Y reach the same conclusion.
Those criteria may be different for another condition. The criteria for irremediable—again, I would emphasize that this needs to be consensus-based—would be different for depression, maybe, than for schizophrenia or another illness.
:
Obviously, this question is best put to representatives of indigenous persons, so I have looked to them for the content of my answer.
In February 2021, for example, many distinguished indigenous signatories wrote to Parliament that the consultation here has not been adequate and “has not taken into account the existing health disparities and social inequalities we face compared to non-Indigenous people”. They said, “our population is vulnerable to discrimination and coercion...and should be protected against unsolicited counsel”.
Another witness before the Senate in February 2021 was Dr. Rod McCormick, himself an indigenous person, who said, “our people die of complex and higher rates of disease than the general population”. When they are “already overrepresented at every stage of our health system, it seems ironic to provide...another path to death”.
Finally, Dr. Richardson, who was before the Senate on February 3, 2021, said, “In an environment where both systemic and interpersonal racism exists, I don’t trust that Indigenous people will be safe.” She said, “a bill that does not actually take into account how social [inequalities] disproportionately affect Indigenous [persons] is highly problematic”.
The sum and substance of all of that is this: How much consultation could there be that would remove those deep, abiding, permanent concerns of indigenous Canadians with respect to the mental health care system in Canada in relation to the psychosocial stressors they face? I don't believe there could be adequate consultation, but I believe those are representative voices from indigenous persons.
:
Thank you very much, Madam Co-Chair.
I would also like to thank our witnesses for joining our committee and helping us.
Professor Kaiser, I would like to start with you, given that you hold a position that straddles both law and medicine.
I've been on this committee from the start. What I have been struggling with personally is, on one hand respecting the rights of individuals who have agency, capacity and the right to make decisions for their own body, and also with the larger concept of our duty to protect the most vulnerable.
You very clearly said that we are not ready. Can you offer any thoughts on the struggles that we as a committee have had on those two concepts?
Ultimately, do you think that one day we will ever approach a point where we have to respect people's agency or do you think the duty to protect the most vulnerable will always win out when it comes to mental disorders as a sole underlying medical condition?
:
The quick answer is that we have to disaggregate the concept of choice and autonomy for a person with a serious, long-term mental illness because of all of the psychosocial factors that infuse diagnosis and experience. If you think about persons with disabilities in general, their choices are driven by poverty, isolation, stigma, loneliness, feeling that they are a burden and so on, as well as potentially being coerced. There's also the suggestion, implicit or otherwise, which the UN is worried about, that they're better off dead than disabled.
When you ask about autonomy, you shouldn't be thinking about it in the same way you would if a person is unencumbered by all of those barriers to participation in society. I don't have a mental illness today, but if you stripped away all of the underpinnings that I enjoy that are protective, then I don't think I'd have the same level of autonomy. I don't think I could truly make the same kind of choice with respect to dying that others who have not been deprived of those fundamental rights could.
The commissioner on human rights in Canada said, “Medical assistance in dying cannot be a default to Canada's failure to fulfill its human rights obligations” because “systemic inequality results in inadequate access to services” and "In many instances people, with disabilities see ending their life as the only option”.
The commissioner on Canadian human rights said that.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Dr. Rajji, you keep telling us that you speak on behalf of CAMH. I have here their latest guidelines and considerations for operationalizing MAID. Just to be clear so that the committee knows, there is nothing in this document that says that more clarity is needed, which were your words. There is nothing in this document that urges further delay. There is nothing in this document that says that consensus guidelines must be consensus based. In fact, there is no phrase like the one you used that says “consensus-based criteria”. This does not appear in the CAMH document. I will share the document with everybody.
In fact, contrary to your personal statement on irremediability, the document reads that CAMH has to address this issue on a case-by-case basis. It reads:
CAMH believes that the determination of whether or not an individual patient is experiencing a grievous and irremediable mental illness that could qualify them for MAID must be based on best clinical judgment and a shared decision-making process with the person making the request and anyone else the person identifies... This determination should be guided by nationally developed practice standards...
Those have been completed. You may not agree with some of them personally, but they have been completed, and they've gone through due process.
The other issue here is that CAMH talks about the importance of every effort to distinguish “a request for MAID, based on an individual’s reasoned determination that life with a grievous and irremediable mental illness is not one they desire” from “suicidality as a symptom of a remediable mental illness”.
You said that could not be done, but that's not what the CAMH document says. I just want to be clear: Are you speaking on your behalf, or are you speaking on CAMH's behalf? I ask because your testimony is contradictory to everything that I read here in the CAMH document.
:
First of all, I deeply regret the fact that the Truchon case was never appealed in the court of appeal or in the Supreme Court of Canada. Failing that, the government should have had the courage to refer it to the Supreme Court of Canada, and I believe something more progressive would have emerged. I believe they would have denied this new extension.
If you look at it very simply under section 15 of the charter, this law does make a difference that's based upon disability, and it does cause suffering for persons with disabilities, whereas others who experience problems are not offered MAID. Second, it is a discriminatory distinction because it reinforces a grotesque stereotype that the lives of disabled people are not worth living, yet everyone else who experiences some form of obstacle to participation in society, which is not attributable to mental illness, is offered suicide prevention rather than suicide facilitation.
I think the answer would be obvious under our charter. This is a violation of section 15, the equality guarantee. I also think it's a violation of section 7, the principles of fundamental justice and the integrative principle of equality.
:
Colleagues, the meeting has resumed.
I'd like to welcome our witnesses for the second panel, beginning with Dr. Sonu Gaind, chief of the department of psychiatry at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, .
By video conference, we have Dr. Eleanor Gittens, from the Canadian Psychological Association; and Dr. Sam Mikail, psychologist.
Thank you all for joining us.
We're going to begin. You will each have five minutes, and we'll begin with Dr. Gaind.
The floor is yours, Dr. Gaind.
My name is Sonu Gaind. I'm a full professor, psychiatrist and governor at the University of Toronto, the chief of psychiatry at Sunnybrook, and a past president of the Canadian and Ontario Psychiatric Associations.
My expertise is in psycho-oncology. I work with cancer patients and their families. I am not a conscientious objector. I was the physician chair of my prior hospital's MAID team. My roles inform my expertise, but I'm presenting as an individual, not for any group.
Thank you for the chance to speak. My testimony is not easy to say, nor easy to hear, but it's necessary to be said. Those seeking expansion claim that not providing MAID for sole mental illness is discrimination, echoing claims by Senator Kutcher.
The opposite is true for three reasons. MAID is for irremediable medical conditions. These are ones we can predict won't improve. Worldwide evidence shows we cannot predict irremediability in cases of mental illness, meaning that the primary safeguard underpinning MAID is already being bypassed, with evidence showing such predictions are wrong over half the time.
Scientific evidence shows we cannot distinguish suicidality caused by mental illness from motivations leading to psychiatric MAID requests, with overlapping characteristics suggesting there may be no distinction to make.
Finally, those with mental illness have higher rates of psychosocial suffering. This all means that MAID assessors will be wrong over half the time when predicting irremediability, will wrongly believe they are filtering out suicidality and will instead provide death to marginalized, suicidal Canadians who could have improved. That is the ultimate discrimination.
Those setting policy have reassured us that we're ready to provide MAID for mental illness. I've reviewed our legislation, the Health Canada practice standard and the CAMAP training for MAID for mental illness. As someone who supports MAID in general, I assure you that we are not ready.
Regarding irremediability, Dr. Gupta acknowledged in her 2020 AMPQ report that “It is possible that a person who has recourse to MAID...could have regained the desire to live”, saying this should be an ethical decision each time. Her 2022 expert panel refused to recommend any additional legislative safeguards, despite Canada lacking legislative requirements for due care and no reasonable alternatives before MAID, unlike other countries.
Professor Downie claimed that irremediability is a legal term rather than a clinical concept. Try those mental gymnastics on your constituents. Convince them it was okay that their loved ones with mental illness got MAID, not because of a clinical assessment based in medicine or science, but because of the ethics of the particular assessor.
Regarding suicidality, Senator Kutcher and Dr. Green claim suicidal people won't get psychiatric euthanasia, and Dr. Gupta claims assessors can identify and separate suicidality in MAID requests because they have been doing it—
Saying something false repeatedly doesn't make it true, and evidence shows they can't make the distinctions they claim. The CAMAP curriculum dangerously doesn't teach assessors how to distinguish suicidality from psychiatric MAID requests, but convinces them that they can, leading to remarkable statements like Dr. Gubitz asking “whether the patient is suicidal or actually has a reason to wish to die, which is not the same thing.”
This highlights a key problem with psychiatric MAID assessments; namely, it's the hubris of the assessor thinking they can determine irremediability and distinguish suicidality from psychiatric MAID requests, when evidence shows they can do neither.
Remarkably, the CAMAP suicide module neglects mentioning known risks to marginalized populations. European data shows a gender gap of twice as many women as men getting psychiatric euthanasia, and of unresolved social suffering. Dr. Gupta stunningly dismissed this, saying this gender gap doesn't concern her since nobody really knows what it means. Signals of a gender gap are already emerging in Canada on track two.
An echo chamber has driven expansion with reassurances but no safeguards—it's reassurance theatre.
In recent weeks, I've worked with over 200 colleagues on debunking a slew of disinformation shaping our policies. You can see today's piece at impactethics.ca. Check the new Society of Canadian Psychiatry site, socpsych.org, for other links.
CPA chair Dr. Freeland reluctantly acknowledged she couldn't say all the readiness is there. The lead for CAMAP's curriculum, Dr. Li, wrote she has grave concerns about our preparedness. Dr. Gupta testified that one to two patients in her practice would qualify. I can't speak to the severity of illness she sees, but Scott Kim, a researcher at NIH, estimated we'd have well over 2,000 patients yearly getting psychiatric euthanasia.
This expansion is not so much a slippery slope as a runaway train, like the Lac-Mégantic disaster. The government has plenty of signs we should not be proceeding. You can choose to go ahead, but you can't pretend you weren't warned.
We are not ready. You'll have to decide whether you stick with an arbitrary deadline or you responsibly stop this train.
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair and members of the special committee, for your invitation to the Canadian Psychological Association to appear before you this evening.
My name is Dr. Eleanor Gittens, and I am the sitting president of the CPA. I'm a professor and program coordinator in the addictions treatment and prevention program at Georgian College. I'm joined by Dr. Sam Mikail, who is a CPA past president and an adjunct clinical faculty member at the University of Waterloo.
The CPA is the national association for the practice, science and education of psychology. There are approximately 19,000 registered psychologists in Canada.
The CPA recognizes the significant work of the special joint committee on such a sensitive and delicate matter as medical assistance in dying. In considering the pending application of MAID where mental disorder is the sole underlying medical condition, the CPA made a series of recommendations in response to the report of the expert panel on MAID and mental disorders, released in May 2022. This was in advance of the special joint committee's June 2022 interim report. These recommendations have been shared with the ministers of Mental Health and Addictions, Health and Justice, as well as the committee.
The CPA also created the Task Force on End-of-Life and produced two reports. The first was in 2018. It discussed various issues related to MAID, such as decisional capacity, advance directives and the role of psychologists. The other was in 2020. It outlined practice guidelines for psychologists involved in end-of-life decisions.
In the interest of time, we will not cover all the recommendations in our reports, but we would like to highlight the following.
First, the expert panel's report currently recommends that an independent assessor should be involved with MAID where a mental disorder is the sole underlying medical condition. It names psychiatrists as the experts. We fully agree these cases will require an assessment independent of the treating team or provider. However, we strongly recommend that psychologists be named as additional expert assessors in these cases. Psychologists are the country's largest group of regulated mental health care providers able to assess, diagnose and treat mental disorders. We can offer expertise relevant to MAID decisions while expanding the qualified assessor pool. Psychologists' expertise in the administration and interpretation of objective measurements has established validity, reliability and embedded indices aimed at identifying inconsistent responding, feigned responding, symptom exaggeration and suicidal ideation or intent. This is vital to the assessment of individuals requesting MAID where a mental disorder is the sole underlying medical condition.
Second, in the development of the newly established curriculum for MAID assessors, the CPA has not been given an opportunity to review or provide input. Given psychologists' expertise in the development, administration and interpretation of psychometric measures for the purpose of complex assessments, we see this as a significant oversight. When it comes to a decision regarding end of life, and when that decision may be impacted by even the slightest possibility of compromised decision-making due to impaired cognitive functioning, the highest standard of care must be taken in conducting objective assessments, in order to guide the final determination of eligibility. Psychologists, as specialists in the assessment and diagnosis of cognitive functioning, are uniquely positioned to ensure this standard of care.
Given this training, and because they also have extensive training in research methods, psychologists should be equally involved in MAID research questions on end-of-life care when a mental disorder is the sole underlying medical condition. Here we refer to recommendation 19, which states, “The federal government should fund both targeted and investigator-initiated periodic research on questions relating to the practice of MAiD”.
Third, we would also like to address the expert panel's recommendation 2: “MAiD assessors should establish incurability with reference to treatment attempts made up to that point, outcomes of those treatments, and severity and duration of illness, disease or disability.”
This recommendation—
:
I'd be happy to, and I will reiterate that I think it's wholly inadequate. I'll be stronger in saying that.
I think we could have gotten a better use out of our $3.3 million that went for that. However, pejorative comments aside, it's something where, when I look at that, I am looking to see if this helps the assessors in any either evidenced or reasonable way to tease apart things like irremediability. As I said, it's not a question of whether a situation is irremediable; it's whether we can predict it to be. That's the whole point. We're making predictions in advance of giving someone death when they're not dying. There is nothing in there that helps us predict irremediability.
The other one is suicidality. This one, actually, I have to say literally shocked me. I am looking at it right now, but the module on suicidality consists of 10 pages of which five slides have content and a four and a half minute audio clip.
There is nothing in there about, for example, the 2:1 female-to-male ratio of psychiatric euthanasia in the places that get it. There is nothing in there about suicidal risk of marginalized populations. They simply make comments like this: "Managing suicidality is something most clinicians learned at some point in their training.... The general principles of managing suicidality apply in the MAiD context as well, whether the person is making a request under track one or two." I don't even know what that means. It doesn't provide guidance. But it does dangerously tell people that they think they can separate suicidality from a psychiatric MAID request, and no evidence supports that.
:
I've heard that echoed by many people, actually, and it is simply not true.
Our suicide assessments that we're trained to provide through residency are not about distinguishing suicidality from whether somebody wants to die through MAID. It's a completely different thing.
The CAMAP guidance focuses very heavily on whether it's impulsive or not, completely bypassing and missing the fact that many suicides are actually planned out, well thought out over a period of time. There is nothing in there that helps us tease those apart.
Furthermore, the evidence from the European countries shows overlapping characteristics between those who actually attempt suicide—most of whom do not try again and do not take their lives by suicide, and they benefit from suicide prevention—and the people who seek and get psychiatric euthanasia.
The obvious concern is: Are we converting transient suicidality, which may be fixed for a relatively long period of time, but still abates with suicide prevention, into a 100% lethality through MAID? That's why the 2:1 ratio of women to men who get psychiatric euthanasia should terrify any psychiatrist, because that 2:1 ratio is exactly the same as the 2:1 ratio of women to men who attempt suicide when mentally ill, as I said, most of whom do not die by suicide and do not try again.
We think that reflects gender-based marginalization. How can we be ignoring that, as a country, and just say that we're ready to march ahead in March 2024?
:
I think the issue of readiness involves looking at several components.
The first is legislation. Is it in place? Yes, it is.
Second, are regulations in place? I would argue that regulations are incomplete because they have not been looked at by the broader mental health community. They have been looked at, as was indicated earlier, by the Federation of Medical Regulatory Authorities. That's a narrow group, I think, that's involved in mental health care, so there's more work to be done there.
A third element in terms of determining readiness is having some indication of what the demand will be, and we have no idea of that. Obviously, we need to measure demand against available resources in terms of individuals who are prepared to do these assessments, and we don't know that ratio.
I think we have a lot of gaps in terms of making that determination.
:
Yes, I understood that. It is quite a distinct situation. That is why mental disorders fall under a distinct category. It's much easier when a person has stage 4 cancer or a terminal illness. That's understandable.
It seems to me that, in its report, the expert panel laid out a certain number of conditions precisely because of that difficulty. For example, the mental disorder has to have chronicity. In the course of that chronic condition, the person may experience suicidal ideation. To my knowledge, suicidal ideation is reversible. Be that as it may, ultimately, there are a small number of patients who, after years of trying every possible treatment meant to improve their condition, continue to believe that their life has no meaning in their final moments. I'm not sure whether you heard his remarks earlier, but the president of the Collège des médecins du Québec spoke about cases where patients consistently saw no meaning in their lives.
Do you not think that the expert panel's report lays out parameters that, at the very least, offer hope of the possibility of providing MAID to individuals with mental disorders in a safe and sustainable way, versus discriminating against them simply because they fall under a category of patients who are difficult to care for from a medical standpoint?
:
There are a few things. One is, keep in mind that I know of no other thing we do in medicine that requires a carve-out from the Criminal Code to avoid prosecution for homicide. What we're talking about is helping people die when they're not dying—that's the bottom line of what we're talking about.
In terms of the potentially required safeguards, to answer your question, when they're not in legislation, the consequences are, let's put it this way, that there's a lot of leeway given to assessors. This is not just coming from me; this is coming from people working in the field. Dr. Li, who was the lead for the CAMAP guidelines, has specifically said that the current law permits too much latitude based on practitioners' personal values. Currently, it is a legal fiction that determinations of the eligibility of MAID are based on objective clinical judgment. In fact, I regularly witness practitioners' values influencing the interpretation of the current MAID eligibility criteria and safeguards.
If you recall when Dr. Gupta testified here—I found this quite remarkable—she seemed to use as a measure of things going all right, and thus that we shouldn't worry, the fact that no assessor has been prosecuted. That's not the sort of threshold I go by. If people aren't aware of this, CAMAP guidelines—this is not in the mental illness piece, but in a prior thing from 2022, which they called “The Interpretation and Role of 'Reasonably Foreseeable'”—quite literally go through a process of providing guidance for assessors to convert track two MAID requests to track one and for proceeding with track-two MAID, thereby bypassing all track-two safeguards, including the 90-day period, even if assessors don't agree the patient should be on track one.
We've heard from Dr. Grant, who is the chair of FMRAC, that they are ready. I also have received some correspondence from people who have some responsibility for MAID-readiness in their own provinces.
Dr. Hayden Rubensohn of Alberta said, “Alberta and other Canadian jurisdictions are ready for the sunset clause banning MAiD where a Mental Disorder is the Sole Underlying Medical Condition....to lapse.”
Dr. Selene Etches of Nova Scotia said, “Despite the challenges that” the legalization...etc., “we feel well prepared in Nova Scotia.”
Dr. Lilian Thorpe of Saskatchewan said, “I believe that we can make the expansion to include MAID MD-SUMC safe and appropriate. I believe we are ready.”
It's interesting because those people who are actually responsible for doing this work say that they have readiness.
Can you help this committee understand? Are there bodies in Canada that accredit medical training programs?
The data collection right now to pick out marginalization.... This is what we're talking about. The idea that many people still get it for cancer and other things, that's true; but we're expanding it to allow other people to get it for all sorts of other reasons. If we ignore that the marginalized can seek it for reasons different from those of the privileged, that's a problem.
We're not collecting the data properly—or at least it's not being reported—except we have seen some increases in striking things. The largest area of increase, I believe, was the “other” category. That went up to 15%—and that's 15% of 13,000 deaths, I'll remind you. It is now the third most reported category. In that, there is a gender gap' its 17% women to 12.8% men.
The “other” category also includes frailty. You see a similar gender gap, with more women getting MAID for multiple comorbidities, such as arthritis and hearing loss, with 12% versus about 8.3% for males. In all of this, about one-third of people get it citing that they feel they are a burden on their family. There is even more of a gender gap if you then break it down to the non-reasonably foreseeable death, track two, numbers. There, the gender gaps go to up to 60% higher for females than for males.
:
I do, and actually I started to allude to that in the prior answer as well. There are some gender differentials—the gender gap—that are emerging in some areas of MAID, including track two and the other areas that I spoke about.
Obviously, on the headline numbers being 4.1% of all Canadian deaths, I have to say that the way Health Canada has reported on that surprises me. It seems rather blasé. They say that it's a steady rate of increase of 30% every year. That wasn't the math when I went to school, so whether that's something that maybe should raise eyebrows.... No other country in the world has had that sort of increase in their first six or seven years of implementing MAID policies. I don't know what it means, but it is significant.
The other thing, which is concerning to me, is we honestly don't know how many people truly were track one. I read the CAMAP guidelines. They essentially say:
A person may meet the “reasonably foreseeable” criterion if they have demonstrated a clear and serious intent to take steps to make their natural death happen soon or to cause their death to be predictable. Examples might include stated declarations to refuse antibiotic treatment of current or future serious infection...or to voluntarily cease eating and drinking.
I had heard anecdotally of some people being converted, so to speak, from track two to track one. In their guidelines, they actually say you can do that, so I don't even know how many truly were track two versus track one. If you also look at the refusals, the rejection numbers of MAID, you see it's remarkably low. There are troubling signs in the numbers.
:
Dr. Gaind, I'll ask you a question that I asked one of the witnesses in the first hour's panel.
I've been on this committee from the beginning. What I've struggled with is recognizing the fact that individuals have rights, have agency, have capacity. Those are constitutionally protected rights. However, also, as a society, we have a duty to protect the most vulnerable. I'm indirectly alluding to the constitutional arguments about this: the fact that, yes, we do have rights and freedoms but that those rights and freedoms can be subject to a section 1 analysis, which can place reasonable limits on them.
My question to you as a physician, a psychiatrist with your years of experience on this specific subject, is this: How have you personally approached trying to reconcile the rights of individuals with their agency, their capacity, their ability, to make decisions for their own body versus our collective rights to defend the most vulnerable?
:
That's an excellent question; it gets to the heart of a lot of this.
I can tell you that, at the beginning, I used to end my talks with a precariously balanced kind of picture that suggested that we're going to find one bright balance point, a solid line where things are right on this side and incorrect on that side. I no longer do that because I don't think that we can find a balance point. It's the issue of overinclusion or underinclusion. To me, the question becomes this: Which mistakes do we want to make? I think that offering and providing death under false pretenses is a pretty big mistake.
The other point I'll make is that when we expand to sole mental illness, are offering death under the false pretense of saying, “Your medical condition won't improve”—and more than half of the time we would be wrong in that—and think we can separate suicidality.... These are also people who are more marginalized through psychosocial suffering, which we also know fuels MAID requests as you get further and further away from reasonably foreseeable death. People shift to try to escape a life of suffering, and that's challenging.
:
I'm assuming I have recognition.
The Vice-Chair (Mrs. Shelby Kramp-Neuman): You do.
Mr. Michael Cooper: In short, my understanding, for the public record, is that there have been more than 900 submissions. None of those will be used as part of the body of evidence, because they will not be translated on time. I think it underscores a simple point: We're not ready.
The second question I have, based upon something that was part of the public record, is in respect of a motion the committee adopted when we last met compelling CAMAP to provide module 7 relating to mental illness immediately—immediately means immediately.