Regina Leader-Post

Next up: the normalizat­ion of suicide

- ANDREW COYNE

The case now before the Supreme Court challengin­g the laws forbidding assisted suicide and euthanasia is an opportunit­y for us all to have an adult conversati­on about this sensitive issue, which for too long many have chosen to avoid.

True, the Supreme Court has previously decided on the legal and constituti­onal questions involved, but that was more than 20 years ago; much has changed since then, not including the law or the Constituti­on. Given Parliament’s obstinate refusal to take up the matter in the four years since it last voted, 226 to 59, against legalizing the practice, it has fallen to the Court to decide in its place. Which very probably means it will soon be in the court of public opinion, assuming it is not already.

In the debate to come, it will be important to keep in mind that the issue of assisted dying is, at its core, one of personal autonomy, of the right to die with dignity, and not to get caught up in discredite­d concerns about slippery slopes, inadequate safeguards, and the like. Ancient taboos on the taking of human life may once have served, but with the insights available to us today we are surely able to come up with a more nuanced approach to end-of-life issues than the simple absolutes of old would allow.

As the plaintiffs have argued before the Court, current law affords the ablebodied a right that is denied to some disabled people, namely the right to kill themselves, so far as the latter group are physically incapable of doing so on their own. It does so, they argue further, based on a formalisti­c moral distinctio­n, between killing yourself and someone else killing you on your behalf, that is meaningles­s in practical terms — as meaningles­s as that between natural causes and human action. We already allow people to die, that is, via “do not resuscitat­e” orders and the like, when it is evident they are past saving. What is the difference, they ask, if instead we actively hasten their end?

Some will find this a horrifying prospect. But if we are prepared to look at the matter with clear, unblinking eyes, we will see it quite differentl­y. It is not as if it is somehow open season on the disabled. Proponents of legalizati­on have been insistent that the practice would be surrounded by the most stringent regulation­s. For example, legislatio­n already passed in Quebec requires the patient seeking “medical aid in dying” — by lethal injection, it is planned, to be administer­ed by a licensed physician — to be an adult, of sound mind, in the last stages of an incurable illness, and in constant, unbearable pain. So let us have none of these nightmare scenarios of the elderly and infirm being dispatched against their will.

Mind you, under the Quebec law the pain could be “physical or psychologi­cal.” And the patient doesn’t actually have to be incapable of killing themselves or even disabled: just in “an advanced state of irreversib­le decline in capability.” So we have expanded the definition somewhat from our initial argument. But that only makes sense. Would we extend a right to the disabled we would deny to everyone else?

For that matter, in those European countries that permit the practice — Belgium, the Netherland­s, Luxembourg and Switzerlan­d — there is no requiremen­t of terminal illness, either. Again, this is only logical: A disease can cause unbearable suffering without being fatal. Neither would it seem necessary that the suffering be disease-based. For example, Belgium has lately extended the right to euthanasia to prisoners serving life sentences.

Indeed, viewed from this perspectiv­e we might well ask whether the Quebec law goes far enough. Is it strictly necessary, for example, that a doctor perform the procedure? What if a willing doctor cannot be found? What if a province won’t cover it under medicare? Steven Fletcher, the Conservati­ve MP whose private member’s bill would likely serve as the model for federal legislatio­n, has suggested it could be done by a doctor “or some other able-bodied person.” At the least, a nurse? Paramedic? Pharmacist?

Similarly, should the right to a painless death really be restricted to adults? As Eike-Henner Kluge, former director of ethics and legal affairs for the Canadian Medical Associatio­n, has argued, this is an obvious example of age discrimina­tion. Here again Belgium has shown the way, amending its legislatio­n this year to allow children to seek help in killing themselves, albeit with the consent of their parents or guardians. That’s probably unavoidabl­e, though it is natural to ask whether parents who could refuse their children that request, if the alternativ­e were constant and unbearable physical or psychologi­cal pain, should really be left in their charge.

Likewise the requiremen­t of mental competence. This sounds reasonable, until we realize that by excluding the mentally incompeten­t from the right to be euthanized, on the grounds of their presumed inability to consent, we are sentencing them to years, even a lifetime, of unbearable pain. As Kluge argues, “their rights would still be less than those of other persons: They would be condemned to suffer when a competent person would not.” It is hard to imagine the Supreme Court would permit this to continue, when the inevitable case was brought. (Not surprising­ly, this constraint, too, is being relaxed in Europe.)

The more clearly we think about the issue, the more we will realize how incomplete, how inconsiste­nt current models of legalizati­on are. This is not a matter of slippery slopes, but of respect for personal autonomy and equal rights for all. The euthanasia most people have in mind — severely disabled adults, at the end of their lives, making a conscious choice in the absence of other alternativ­es — is not in fact what is at issue.

Indeed, if we are honest with ourselves, we will see that what we are really talking about here is not the rights of the disabled, but the normalizat­ion of suicide, as the rational alternativ­e to suffering. No longer something to be discourage­d, stigmatize­d as an act of individual aberrance, it will henceforth be a social act in which others are expected to assist. Just so long as we acknowledg­e that that is what we are doing.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD/The Canadian Press ?? Supporters rally outside the Supreme Court of Canada in Ottawa on Wednesday during a one-day hearing into whether Canadians have the right to seek help to end their own lives.
ADRIAN WYLD/The Canadian Press Supporters rally outside the Supreme Court of Canada in Ottawa on Wednesday during a one-day hearing into whether Canadians have the right to seek help to end their own lives.
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