Calgary Herald

Dispute at faith-based sites renews assisted dying discussion

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VANCOUVER Two incidents in British Columbia have renewed a debate about whether faith-based health institutio­ns that receive public funding should be allowed to opt out of offering medical assistance in dying.

Documents obtained through a freedom-of-informatio­n request by the advocacy group Dying With Dignity Canada show that Providence Health Care, a Catholic health care provider, apologized to Vancouver General Hospital for a mismanaged transfer of a frail patient seeking assisted death.

“I want to convey my sincere apology for the issues that arose in the transfer,” wrote David Unger, then-director of ethics services at Providence in an email on May 18, 2017. “This was a foreseeabl­e and preventabl­e issue for which I accept full responsibi­lity as the director of ethics.”

Emails written by Providence staff say the man was at risk of losing his capacity to consent to an assisted death if he was not transferre­d quickly from St. Paul’s Hospital. The man requested an assisted death on a Saturday, but necessary documentat­ion was not filled out until Wednesday, an email says.

When he arrived at Vancouver General, there was no bed available, and when a bed was found, it was not appropriat­e, an email says. It took another hour before an appropriat­e bed was found, it adds.

An apparent miscommuni­cation by St. Paul’s resulted in the delivery method for “a commonly used palliative care medication” not being ready when the patient reached Vancouver General, said Providence spokeswoma­n Elaine Yong, although she said she could not elaborate due to privacy concerns.

Christophe­r De Bono, vice-president of mission, ethics, spirituali­ty and Indigenous wellness at Providence, said 58 patients have asked to talk about assisted death and 17 have received transfers of care.

Since the incident last spring, the organizati­on has establishe­d a new assisted-death policy that provides clear guidelines for arranging a transfer. It has also created a new position called the “medical assistance in dying response lead” who assists staff when a patient makes a request, said De Bono.

Shanaaz Gokool, CEO of Dying With Dignity Canada, said it’s unacceptab­le in 2018 for institutio­ns to refuse to provide a “basic and essential” health care service.

“It creates a system of forced transfers for some of the most vulnerable people in our country and people who are often very physically compromise­d,” she said.

Gokool said while she supports the rights of individual doctors to make choices based on conscience, it’s not appropriat­e for entire institutio­ns to claim they are doing so, when there may be doctors within these facilities who support medically assisted death.

The B.C. Health Ministry said that under an agreement with the Denominati­onal Health Associatio­n, faith-based facilities are not required to provide services that are inconsiste­nt with their religious mission. There are no plans to terminate this agreement, it said in a statement.

In a separate case, Louis Brier Home and Hospital, a Jewish long-term care home, filed a complaint with the College of Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia against Dr. Ellen Wiebe for helping one of its residents die, in contravent­ion of the facility’s policy.

The complaint that Wiebe pro- vided to The Canadian Press says she failed to communicat­e with the man’s nursing staff, who didn’t know Wiebe had completed the procedure until “well after” it had been done.

Wiebe said she provided the patient with medical assistance in dying after assessing him and concluding he met the eligibilit­y criteria required by the law, and she did her best to honour his wishes and those of his family.

“It makes no sense that publicly funded facilities can have a few people that have certain views and then force their residents to abide by their ideas,” she said.

David Keselman, the home’s CEO, was not available for an interview on Tuesday.

Robert Breen, executive director of the Denominati­onal Health Associatio­n of B.C., said while patients have the right to ask for assistance in dying, they don’t have the right to force a doctor to go against their religious beliefs and perform it, he said.

It creates a system of forced transfers for some of the most vulnerable people in our country.

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