Times Colonist

Faith-based hospitals backed over medically assisted death

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WINNIPEG — The Manitoba government says it will not force faith-based hospitals to provide medical assistance in dying.

Its comment comes in response to a controvers­y over the reversal of a decision by the St. Boniface Hospital’s board of directors on the issue.

As a faith-based institutio­n, St. Boniface, in Winnipeg, doesn’t as a rule provide medical assistance in dying, but the board voted in May to amend that policy to allow it to happen on site under “rare circumstan­ces.”

The Catholic Health Corporatio­n of Manitoba then ordered a review of the decision after adding 10 new directors to the board, and the amendment was overturned. It means the hospital will provide assessment­s for patients seeking doctor-assisted deaths, but will transfer patients to a different facility to go through with the procedure.

Health Minister Kelvin Goertzen said this week the government respects the decisions of medical profession­als and health care facilities to not provide medical assistance in dying.

“Those facilities that do not perform MAID are required to have protocols and procedures in place to transfer patients, in a manner that is safe and dignified, to an alternate facility,” Goertzen said.

“It’s important to note that not all services are available in all hospitals in Manitoba. For example, some facilities do not do surgeries or provide certain tests. However, as a result of the Supreme Court of Canada decision, every jurisdicti­on in Canada is required to make accommodat­ions to make sure the public has access to MAID.”

Goertzen said the provincial medical assistance in dying clinical team provides access to those services to any person who meets the requiremen­ts.

In Montreal, two incurably ill people are taking legal action to challenge the constituti­onality of the Canadian and Quebec laws on medical aid in dying, saying the eligibilit­y guidelines are too restrictiv­e.

Both suffer from degenerati­ve diseases, but are not eligible for medical aid in dying because their deaths are not reasonably foreseeabl­e and they are not at the end of their lives.

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