Ottawa Citizen

Available assisted death data lacks details

GAPS IN STATISTICS

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO• About 200 Canadians have received help killing themselves since legislatio­n authorizin­g medically assisted suicide came into force in June, new figures obtained by The Canadian Press show, but those numbers do not paint the whole picture.

To date, 87 people have taken advantage of the law in Ontario, while the total in British Columbia is 66, the provinces’ coroner’s offices reported Thursday. Alberta has tracked at least 23 deaths, Manitoba has had 12, while Saskatchew­an has had fewer than five cases. Figures from elsewhere were not immediatel­y available.

But if an outline is beginning to emerge of demand across Canada for help in dying, a dearth of even basic informatio­n still exists.

For example, there are little data on how many people have requested help but have been refused, the medical conditions prompting such requests, those who have made requests but changed their minds, and the number of people who have died before the request could be granted.

Even statistics on gender, age and where the deaths have occurred are elusive.

Shanaaz Gokool, chief executive of Dying with Dignity Canada, said it’s impossible to discern clearly what’s happening across the country, or how the legislatio­n is being applied.

“It’s very difficult to assess what is going on,” Gokool said. “No one’s doing this in a very systematic way. The numbers don’t tell us enough.”

In Manitoba, more than 60 people have requested assisted death, a spokeswoma­n for the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority said. Most were turned down, although it was not clear why. The latest Alberta figures show 23 people have been refused for reasons including a mental-health diagnosis or death “not reasonably foreseeabl­e.”

Kerry Williamson, with Alberta Health Services, said the most cited health conditions were cancer, multiple sclerosis, and amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis, with the average age being 67.

In June, the federal government brought in a law allowing assisted suicide for those suffering from an incurable condition and for those facing a “reasonably foreseeabl­e” natural death, a definition critics have argued is open to too much interpreta­tion.

Andrew MacKendric­k, a spokesman for Health Minister Jane Philpott, said Thursday the legislatio­n does call for a national monitoring system — but it only has to be in place by next June.

“That gives the minister of health a period of time to set that system up so we can actively monitor it and understand it better,” MacKendric­k said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada