The Guardian (Charlottetown)

No changes planned to assisted-death law

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Ottawa remains confident in its assisted dying legislatio­n, and doesn’t plan changes despite a Halifax woman’s deathbed plea, federal Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould said Friday.

She said the government feels strongly the two-year-old legislatio­n strikes the appropriat­e balance between the protection of people’s autonomy and safeguards for vulnerable people.

“We’re not considerin­g changing something in the legislatio­n,” she told reporters.

“We’re confident in the legislatio­n that we brought forward, that it finds the right balance in terms of being able to access medical assistance in dying, protecting the autonomy of individual­s to make the appropriat­e decisions for themselves as well as protecting vulnerable individual­s.”

Audrey Parker, a terminally ill Halifax woman, ended her life Thursday with medical assistance, after issuing an impassione­d deathbed plea urging lawmakers to change the legislatio­n.

Diagnosed with Stage 4 breast cancer in 2016, the 57-year-old woman had been approved for an assisted death but said the restrictiv­e nature of the law forced her to end her life sooner than she would have liked.

Parker stressed the law had to be changed because anyone approved for a medically assisted death must be conscious and mentally sound at the moment they grant their final consent for

a lethal injection.

The issue will be among those considered in a report being drafted by a panel of experts, which is due by the end of the year but is not expected to make recommenda­tions.

“We’re looking forward to receiving

those reports back on mature minors, on advance directives, and on mental illness alone as an indicator for medical assistance in dying, and we’ll review those reports when we get them,” said Wilson-Raybould.

She said her heart went out to Parker and her family.

Parker was given a lethal injection and “died peacefully” in her Halifax apartment, surrounded by close friends and family.

“I wanted to make it to Christmas and New Year’s Eve, my favourite time of the year, but I lost that opportunit­y because of a poorly thought-out federal law,” she wrote in a Facebook post hours before her death.

She asked people to send emails or texts to their member of Parliament to encourage them to amend the law to help people in her category, which she described as “assessed and approved.”

Meanwhile, Dying With Dignity Canada says it has launched a campaign in Parker’s honour to “restore the rights” of people who have been assessed and approved for an assisted death.

It says she “changed the national conversati­on” about medically assisted deaths in Canada.

Shanaaz Gokool, CEO of Dying with Dignity Canada, says other Canadians are ending their lives earlier than they would like, or they are refusing adequate pain care to conform with the law.

Gokool says the law places an unacceptab­le burden on dying people who have been approved for a medically assisted death.

“Our lawmakers have a duty to act to ensure that no one else has to face the same cruel choice that Audrey did at the end of her life,” Gokool said in a statement.

“Unless they act now, many more Canadians will be forced to die earlier than they would like to as a result of this unjust, inhumane rule.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Audrey Parker, diagnosed with stage-four breast cancer which had metastasiz­ed to her bones and has a tumour on her brain, talks about life and death at her home in Halifax on Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2018. A non-profit group that advocates for the rights of dying Canadians says a Nova Scotia woman has “changed the national conversati­on” about medically assisted deaths in Canada.
CP PHOTO Audrey Parker, diagnosed with stage-four breast cancer which had metastasiz­ed to her bones and has a tumour on her brain, talks about life and death at her home in Halifax on Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2018. A non-profit group that advocates for the rights of dying Canadians says a Nova Scotia woman has “changed the national conversati­on” about medically assisted deaths in Canada.

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