The Daily Courier

Government agrees mentally ill can access assisted death — in 2 years

Yet people who fear being diagnosed with dementia can’t make advance requests

- By JOAN BRYDEN

OTTAWA — The Trudeau government has agreed with the Senate that Canadians suffering solely from grievous and irremediab­le mental illnesses should be entitled to receive medical assistance in dying — but not for another two years.

The two-year interlude is six months longer than what was proposed by senators. It is one of a number of changes to Bill C-7 proposed by the government in response to amendments approved last week by the Senate.

The government has rejected another Senate amendment that would have allowed people who fear being diagnosed with dementia or other cognitive-impairing conditions to make advance requests for an assisted death.

It has also rejected one other amendment and modified two others in a motion that was debated Tuesday in the House of Commons.

Justice Minister David Lametti told the Commons he believes the response to the Senate amendments is “fair and realistic.”

The Bloc Quebecois announced it will support the minority Liberal government’s response, assuring it will pass.

Once approved by the Commons, the bill will go back to the Senate, where senators will have to decide whether to accept the verdict of the elected chamber or dig in their heels.

Bill C-7 would expand access to assisted dying to intolerabl­y suffering individual­s who are not approachin­g the natural end of their lives, bringing the law into compliance with a 2019 Quebec Superior Court ruling.

As originally drafted, the bill would have imposed a blanket ban on assisted dying for people suffering solely from mental illnesses.

A majority of senators argued that the exclusion was unconstitu­tional, violating the right to equal treatment under the law, regardless of physical or mental disability. They voted to impose an 18-month time limit on the exclusion, which the government now wants to extend to two years. Lametti told the Commons he still believes the exclusion is constituti­onal and he “does not believe we are entirely ready” to safely provide assisted dying for people with mental illnesses.

Neverthele­ss, he said the government has heard the concerns of Canadians who fear the exclusion may never be lifted and will, therefore, support a two-year sunset clause.

“We think 24 months is still an ambitious timeline to implement such an important change in Canada’s MAID (medical assistance in dying) policy, but it still provides a fixed timeline in the relatively near future,” Lametti said.

During the two-year interlude, the government is also proposing to have an expert panel conduct an independen­t review of the issue and, within one year, recommend the “protocols, guidance and safeguards” that should apply to requests for assisted dying from people with a mental illness.

Sen. Stan Kutcher, a psychiatri­st and member of the Independen­t Senators Group who proposed the 18-month sunset clause, said he can accept that an additional six months may be needed. He also welcomed the creation of an expert panel to develop safeguards.

The Canadian Mental Health Associatio­n, however, was “deeply disappoint­ed” by the government’s response.

“Until the health-care system adequately responds to the mental health needs of Canadians, assisted dying should not be an option — not now and not two years from now,” the associatio­n said in a statement.

If the two-year sunset clause is approved, the associatio­n said the government must commit to “a substantia­l increase” in funding for mental health care to help alleviate suffering. In rejecting advance requests, the government motion argues that the Senate amendment on that issue “goes beyond the scope of the bill” and requires “significan­t consultati­on and study,” including a “careful examinatio­n of safeguards.”

Sen. Pamela Wallin, a member of the Canadian Senators Group who proposed the advance request amendment, said its outright rejection by the government “only serves to perpetuate the catch-22 that punishes those with cognitive impairment or dementia and all those who simply want some choices knowing that a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s is inevitable.”

Lametti said he knows many Canadians will be disappoint­ed. But he said the issue of advance requests should be examined during the legally required five-year parliament­ary review of the assisted-dying law, which was supposed to have begun last June but has yet to materializ­e.

The government has agreed to a modified version of a Senate amendment to finally get that review underway within 30 days of Bill C-7 receiving royal assent.

It is proposing to create a joint CommonsSen­ate committee to review the assisted-dying regime, including issues related to mature minors, advance requests, mental illness, the state of palliative care in Canada and the protection of Canadians with disabiliti­es. The committee would be required to report back, with any recommende­d changes, within one year.

The government has also agreed to a modified version of another Senate amendment to require the collection of race-based data on who is requesting and receiving medical assistance in dying.

It is proposing to expand that to include data on people with disabiliti­es and to specify that the informatio­n be used to determine if there is “the presence of any inequality — including systemic inequality — or disadvanta­ge based on race, Indigenous identity, disability or other characteri­stics.”

That’s in response to the strenuous opposition to Bill C-7 from disability rights advocates who maintain the bill sends the message that life with a disability is a fate worse than death. They’ve also argued that Black, racialized and Indigenous people with disabiliti­es, already marginaliz­ed and facing systemic discrimina­tion in the health system, could be induced to end their lives prematurel­y due to poverty and a lack of support services.

Some critics have also raised concerns about unequal access to assisted dying for marginaliz­ed people, rural Canadians and Indigenous people in remote communitie­s.

The government’s response did not satisfy either the Conservati­ves, who largely opposed the original bill, or the New Democrats, who object in principle to the unelected Senate making substantiv­e changes to legislatio­n passed by the Commons.

NDP MP Charlie Angus criticized the “unelected and unaccounta­ble Senate” for expanding assisted dying to “people who are depressed.”

The government offered late Tuesday afternoon to extend the debate until midnight, but the Conservati­ves denied necessary unanimous consent — despite having called for additional time to thoroughly debate the government’s response to Senate amendments.

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