The Peterborough Examiner

Brain-dead woman’s family challenges court ruling

- PAOLA LORIGGIO

TORONTO — An Ontario judge erred in ruling the Charter of Rights and Freedoms does not apply to a Toronto-area woman because she has been declared brain dead, the woman’s family argues in challengin­g a decision that would have taken her off life support.

Taquisha McKitty was 27 when doctors declared her “dead by neurologic­al criteria” in September of last year following a drug overdose that left her unconsciou­s on a Brampton, Ont., sidewalk.

McKitty’s family turned to the courts to prevent doctors from taking her off life support, saying her Christian faith defines death as the cessation of heartbeat, not of brain function.

Citing charter protection­s, they argued doctors should make accommodat­ions for religious beliefs in making a determinat­ion of death, and obtained an injunction to keep her on a respirator while the case was before the courts.

An Ontario Superior Court judge ruled against them over the summer, saying the charter does not apply to McKitty because the document only protects “persons” and McKitty, because she is clinically brain dead, is not legally a “person.”

The judge also said in her ruling that death could not, in Ontario, be subject to a person’s wishes or beliefs because that could lead to “an unacceptab­le level of medical, legal and societal uncertaint­y” and cause potential adverse effects on the health-care and organ donation system.

McKitty’s family is asking Ontario’s highest court to overturn the decision, set aside her death certificat­e and refer any dispute about her treatment to the Consent and Capacity Board, an independen­t provincial tribunal that rules in matters involving issues such as a person’s capacity to consent to or refuse treatment.

The appeal is expected to be heard in Toronto on Wednesday.

In court documents filed ahead of the hearing, McKitty’s family says determinin­g and certifying death is a delegated state function, and therefore subject to scrutiny under the charter.

The lower court’s finding that McKitty’s designatio­n as brain dead means the charter doesn’t apply to her “puts the cart before the horse” because her beliefs should have been considered before doctors made that decision, they argue.

“To the extent that a decision is made to end life and withdraw medical support, it must be done only after appropriat­e accommodat­ion is provided where required,” the documents read.“In those rare cases where a dispute arises as to the withdrawal of treatment and where the determinat­ion of death is in dispute, an open and transparen­t process before an independen­t decisionma­ker must allow family and doctors to make submission­s on individual wishes and beliefs and medical considerat­ions relative to the decision to end life.”

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