Toronto Star

Quebecers fight for assisted death

Residents argue doctors’ denial of request for medical assistance goes against ruling from 2015

- PIERRE SAINT-ARNAUD

Two Quebecers suffering from incurable degenerati­ve diseases are arguing that laws governing medical assistance in dying are unconstitu­tional and that legislator­s exceeded their powers by setting overly strict criteria.

The case brought by Nicole Gladu and Jean Truchon against the government­s of Quebec and Canada entered its final phase Monday with the beginning of closing arguments before Quebec Superior Court Justice Christine Baudouin.

Under federal law, a person’s natural death must be “reasonably foreseeabl­e” before they can receive medical assistance in dying.

The Quebec law similarly says people must “be at the end of life.” Because Gladu and Truchon did not meet the criteria, doctors turned down their requests.

They are asking the court to allow doctors to provide them with medical assistance in dying and to invalidate the articles of the federal and provincial laws that blocked their requests.

They argue the 2015 Supreme Court of Canada decision that decriminal­ized medical assistance in dying establishe­d suffering, not imminent death, as the most important considerat­ion.

“I want to continue, as much as possible, to control my destiny,” Gladu said outside the courtroom.

She said it is not a question of wanting to die.

“I want to stop the suffering. So, the death is not the object of my approach, the death is a means. But it’s not the objective,” she told reporters. “For me living like I am actually, it’s an existence, much more than a life.”

Jean-Pierre Menard, the lawyer re- presenting Gladu and Truchon, said lawmakers went beyond what was spelled out in the Supreme Court’s 2015 Carter decision.

“Carter allowed medical assistance in dying based on suffering throughout life: no matter at what point in life it occurs, when it is intolerabl­e, you have the right to medical assistance in dying, as long as certain other conditions are met,” Menard said.

“The federal government decided that it would only be terminal illnesses that generated the right to medical assistance in dying.”

He told the judge the federal legislatio­n on medical assistance in dying represents “the first time the federal government has enacted a law that shrinks rights issued by the Supreme Court.”

Lawyers for the provincial and federal government­s have said the criterion that someone be at the end of life or that death be reasonably foreseeabl­e is necessary to protect vulnerable people, such as those who are suicidal or have psychiatri­c problems.

Gladu said there are already other safeguards to protect the vulnerable, such as the requiremen­ts that someone be capable of giving consent, be informed and not be subject to external pressure.

Gladu, who suffers from post-polio syndrome, said she is hoping for a quick resolution of her case before her condition worsens.

If it is not resolved by the end of 2019, she said she will go to Switzerlan­d where she is eligible to receive medical assistance in dying.

“I am lucky to have the means that allow me to do that,” she said

Arguments are scheduled to continue until Feb. 28.

“I want to continue, as much as possible, to control my destiny.”

NICOLE GLADU PLAINTIFF IN CASE

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