The federal Liberals face a choice early in 2024.
They can allow a sunset clause to take effect so that eligibility for medical assistance in dying expands to adults whose only reason for seeking it is a mental disorder.
Or they can do what they did in 2023 and postpone it further, even indefinitely.
Justice Minister Arif Virani says the government is weighing its options as the March deadline looms.
The first step, he says, will be to see what members of Parliament and senators recommend after committee hearings that probed the issue this past fall.
To find answers, The Canadian Press spoke with many of the medical and legal experts who participated in that process.
Here are five questions that strike at the heart of the debate.
Is Canada ready?
Assessors and providers of medical assistance in dying, as well as medical regulators, say they are ready for eligibility to be widened.
"Our hope is that government will not be influenced by the concern that the regulators will not be ready," says Gus Grant, the CEO and registrar of Nova Scotia's College of Physicians and Surgeons.
Since medical assistance in dying became legal in 2016, many voices have sounded the alarm about whether the medical profession was ready to handle changes.
"Those voices proved to be wrong at each occasion," Grant, who is also a past president of the Federation of Medical Regulatory Authorities of Canada, said in an interview.
"The medical regulators and the involved health-care professionals were ready."
The argument that the system can't handle change usually comes from those who would rather not see the program expand at all, Grant and others said. It also ignores the reality that some patients with mental illness can already access assisted dying if they have other medical conditions.
"It's a bit like Lucy and Charlie Brown and the football, right?" said Jocelyn Downie, a professor at Halifax's Dalhousie University
"You put the football down, 'OK, we're gonna get this ready, boom.' And then the next time, the football gets pulled out from under you."
Sonu Gaind, chief of the Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre's psychiatry department and a University of Toronto professor, is among those asking the government to pause its expansion plans and "re-evaluate how we got here."
There are questions that are "nowhere" close to being addressed, he said, such as how practitioners can assess factors such as poverty and whether someone suffering with a mental disorder can get better or not.
"Does it mean if you've had decades of suffering from an illness, and you've tried things, and nothing has helped? Is that what it means?" he said.
"Or does it mean that you're suffering now, and you live in a rural community, Indigenous population, and you can't get access to care, and society is not willing to provide you access to care?"
Does consensus matter?
Conservative MP Ed Fast cited a lack of expert consensus on whether the expansion should go ahead when he asked the House of Commons to change the Criminal Code to say a mental disorder is not listed as a "grievous and irremediable medical condition" under the assisted dying regime.
Fast's private member's bill ultimately failed, but MPs and senators who sat on the special joint committee saw the divide for themselves.
"There's too much controversy," said Jitender Sareen, a physician at the University of Manitoba's psychiatry department.
Many psychiatrists are opposed to assisted dying for people who only have a mental illness, he said, and organizations such as the Canadian Mental Health Association and the Canadian Association of Suicide Prevention have raised concerns about it.
The hearings revealed the "significant amount of concern among psychiatrists," said Sareen, who suggested the government should instead focus on better access to mental health care.
Stefanie Green, one of the first doctors to provide medical assistance in dying after it was legalized, said in an email that the public, clinicians and academics have a right to disagree with the expansion, but that does not mean Canada shouldn't go ahead.
She told the committee that other medical practices are available despite a lack of consensus, such hormone replacement therapy for women experiencing menopause and supervised injection sites for drug users.
Provinces are also split.
While New Brunswick says it's working to ensure it is ready and a spokesperson for Ontario's Health Ministry cited no concerns, Quebec passed a law in June excluding adults from accessing a medically assisted death solely for a mental disorder.
A Saskatchewan government spokesman said it, too, is concerned with the planned expansion and "cannot commit" to implementing it "without carefully considering the risk that this may pose to people suffering from mental illness."
Has the issue been studied enough?
In 2021, Parliament passed an updated version of its medical assistance in dying law that expanded eligibility to people who only have a mental illness, and included a two-year sunset clause before it would take effect.
The government struck an expert panel to probe whether more safeguards were needed and to make recommendations around assessments.
The panel's final report in May 2022 recommended the government develop practice standards but suggested no more legislative changes. The report didn't wade into the question of whether or not the expansion should happen at all, and its seven-month time frame inhibited wide consultation.
Gaind and others warn that the scope was too narrow, and there has been too little scrutiny on how this part of the law came to be.
The 2021 bill was prompted by a 2019 Quebec Superior Court decision that found it was unconstitutional to require that an individual's death needed to be reasonably foreseeable to be eligible for assisted dying.
The bill didn't initially expand eligibility to those who only have a mental disorder. The Senate added that provision in an amendment that the government decided to approve.
Early this year, Parliament passed legislation to add just one more year to the sunset clause, so that the provision would take effect in March 2024, with Liberals saying more time was needed to get the system ready.
Trudo Lemmens, a University of Toronto professor in health policy and law, said he believes the government is moving too rapidly and ought to undertake a more careful study. He added the recent committee hearings were too short and at times overly combative.
"I understand that they felt obliged to be to be fast because the (March) date is coming up so quickly."
What happens if there is another delay?
In a recent interview with The Canadian Press, Virani expressed openness to adding more time to the sunset clause delaying the expansion in eligibility.
But in the meantime, those who say it is time to proceed say people are in severe pain as they wait to see what happens.
Mona Gupta, a psychiatrist at the Université de Montréal who chaired the government's expert panel, said she is concerned about the message the conversation has sent to people with mental disorders, their families and all of society "about the status of people with mental disorders, about the way in which their rights can be considered to be optional."
Downie made the point that another pause could mean that the expansion never happens. Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has vowed to scrap it if he forms the next government, and a federal election must take place no later than fall 2025.
If eligibility is further delayed or banned outright, she said the government would likely be taken to court.
"The very individuals who are ... enduring an intolerable suffering, they have to go to court and force the government to do what the (Charter of Rights and Freedoms) demands of it," Downie said.
Could a ban be challenged?
When they amended the updated assisted dying legislation, senators said they believed excluding people with mental disorders from eligibility amounted to discrimination under the Charter.
Critics say no court or law is currently forcing the government's hand on this issue.
Lemmens, along with a host of other law professors across the country, issued an open letter early this year saying it is "reckless" to suggest that a constitutional right to assisted dying for such patients would be recognized by the courts.
"In fact, there is for that reason on the contrary a strong argument to be made that the Charter requires adequate and equal protection against premature death of all persons with disabilities," the letter read.
Lemmens said he hopes the committee acknowledges in its report, which the Liberals say will inform their next steps, that there are constitutional law experts who assert "there is no clear constitutional obligation" for a further expansion into mental illness.
Still, others warn that future court challenges are inevitable.
Shelley Birenbaum of the Canadian Bar Association said people with mental illnesses are entitled to the same "autonomy and self-determination" when it comes to their health as those suffering from a physical illness.
"A total exclusion … for all persons suffering from mental illness as a sole underlying condition is likely to be constitutionally challenged as violating the equality, security and liberty guarantees in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms," said the Toronto lawyer, who chaired the association's end-of-life working group.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Dec. 27, 2023.
Comments
I'm against this expansion. If you're dying and in terrible pain, I totally get the medical assistance in dying thing, both because not choosing to stick around for a while, suffering and unable to accomplish anything, seems like a pretty valid choice, and because if you're dying from a physical ailment it's going to be hard for you to manage that choice without some help. It was a needed reform.
Mental illness is a different kettle of fish. First, you're NOT dying, so quite simply we're proposing to kill people who otherwise would have lived, and half the advocates don't seem to think there's anything problematic about this. And your suicidal feelings on average are probably not permanent. People's mental states change. And suicide is one of those things you can't change your mind about after. No take-backsies once you're dead. And frankly, medical professionals do not understand mental illness nearly as well as they claim they do, and their historical record of decisions about how to treat the medically ill has been pretty terrible. In addition, mentally ill people getting treatment are in a position where they're very vulnerable to persuasion from the people treating them. I don't want medical professionals or social workers having the option to decide the easiest way to reduce their back-breaking caseload is to persuade some depressed people to kill themselves.
The secondary reason I'm against this is, why exactly do people with only mental illness need medical assistance? They're not physically disabled, and we're not talking about people so mentally incompetent that they can't meaningfully consent . . . right? We're not, right? We better not be. Anyway, so these are people who are physically and mentally pretty much competent. So . . . why do they need help from a doctor? Why should the decision be partly on a doctor's conscience? If they really, really want to kill themselves and can't be persuaded against the idea, then can't they just . . . do it? Just commit old fashioned suicide without medical assistance? And if they're not resolute enough to do that, maybe it's a sign they should be staying alive.
"Mental illness is a different kettle of fish. First, you're NOT dying, so quite simply we're proposing to kill people who otherwise would have lived."
No, we're proposing to allow people to choose to die earlier than they otherwise would have, and to do so without having to resort to suicide. The opposition to this is based on the assumption that people must be kept alive as long as possible, regardless of their quality of life or their desire for a quicker exit. That assumption is causing untold misery for thousands of people in Canada today.
There's something no one seems to be saying, at least in so many words, and out loud. The whole thing has been focussed on "rights" and "assistance in dying." When someone does not have a fatal or untreatable illness, is not already on an inevitable path toward imminent death, it's not assistance in dying, but assistance in committing suicide. Suicidality is considered to be a mental health issue in Canada, and has generated a lot of public noise about insufficient access to mental health services.
In Toronto, a young woman with the assistance of social workers, legal helpers and the "health" care system, died by suicide with "medical assistance." She had a physical illness that required some pretty basic accommodations in her living situation, that the landlord refused to provide. The social workers were apparently unable to procure substitute living accommodations for her, apparently in part because she wasn't on the access to housing priority list: she was already "housed." It seems no one considered that the moment she became rehoused, her own apartment would become available.
It seemed no one considered finding help for her to get better control of the indoor air in her apartment.
It seems that the people purporting to "help" her were pretty shortsighted, and so locked in to their usual solutions, that they concluded there was no help for the poor woman to be had.
Unfortunately, despite all the research and individuals who share her medical diagnosis are often considered to be "mental health" patients, although the research that led to that sorry state has been roundly, soundly, and repeatedly thoroughly debunked, though not before many sufferers were pushed to a point that the "treatment" (not the illness) was fatal.
This, to me, is just a faster route to turning a treatable illness that is also a disability for which accommodations MUST be made (covered in Human Rights decisions back in I believe it was 2005 and 2009, at the Ontario Human Rights Commission and the Canadian Human Rights Commission.
Still, there is little treatment to be had, and little to no access to the medical tests that could help to zero in on treatments. Kind of like what happens with Canadians suffering with Lyme Disease that is not one of the strains/variants that Canada's approved testing is able to confirm. We simply don't test for the others, and state instead that the patient is not suffering from Lyme Disease. The treatments that work for the condition are often also denied. And then the condition is misdiagnosed, and all treatment is supportive and palliative -- and affordable only if one's spouse has a very nice income thank you.
These situations are both failures of the medical professions and of government, and shortsightedness of those who would prefer tidy and final solutions to messy problems of government failures and incompetent workers
One of the *huge* problems with psychiatry is that although its practitioners are trained physicians, they seem not to consider physical causes of mental/emotional/psychiatric problems, at least a number of which result directly from poor nutritional status (know any poor people who are really well nourished???), and who don't in their lives have a safe place to be -- safe in terms of being safe from harm and safe from threat of harm.
Same thing happened during Covid: patients were not evaluated for nutrient deficiencies, and supplemented. Ultimately, it's as though doctors don't consider nutrient status to be relevant to health, despite all the longstanding research to the contrary.
I also wonder about the expertise of and considerations made by the panel adjudicating "access" to an executioner. The word's not nice, but that's what it is.
And frankly, cancer patients at end of life are routinely over-medicated with opiates -- the job being done by nurses who will badger relatives who don't see things their way, or who will earnestly assure them that "the body" only absorbs the amount of morphine necessary to relieve pain, and the rest is excreted. Really? How poorly educated they must be, or how stupid they must count on others to be.
Poverty shouldn't be "treated" as a terminal condition.
Suicide, assisted or not, is nowhere near the realm of acceptable solutions for having a landlord who refuses to provide essesntial accommodations, for having a doctor who made a mistake, for systems that fail to enforce real rights or access to rights, systems so underfunded so billionnaires can pay no taxes, become trillionnaires and act like feudal kings.
It's worth asking, probably, how we get to a place where there is no shortage of luxury housing, and no access to basic shelter.
And in the meantime, killing the people who have been so harmed by the failures of our "systems" that they can see no way forward, is NOT A SOLUTION. I won't name an annihilatory dictators past or otherwise -- or ostensibly so-called democratic leaders who engage in such practices.
One has to wonder about educational practises that have delivered us such impoverished, siloed and purely linear thinking.
Anyone have a quick answer to what constitutes the legal test for being "of sound mind"?
Does delusion bred of ignorance count? Do the deciders need to prove the soundness of their own minds?