Vancouver Sun

Why Canadians use MAID 15 times more than California­ns do

ACCESSIBIL­ITY, GREATER PUBLIC AWARENESS SEEN AS DRIVING FACTORS

- SHARON KIRKEY

As a Calgary father's legal battle to block his autistic daughter's assisted death ignites debate over whether Canada's euthanasia regime is expanding beyond what Canadians may be comfortabl­e with, a new study suggests MAID deaths in Canada could continue to expand for another decade, until one in 10 deaths involve a doctor-administer­ed lethal injection.

The prediction­s are based on a new paper exploring the dramatical­ly higher number of people in Canada choosing an assisted death compared to California­ns.

Both Canada and California granted access to medical assistance in dying, or MAID, in 2016.

Both have similarly sized population­s, similar, though not identical, demographi­cs, and no real difference­s in the leading causes of death or overall death rates.

However, 853 California­ns died by MAID in 2022, compared to 13,241 in Canada.

In 2022, MAID accounted for 4.1 per cent of all deaths in Canada, compared to 0.27 per cent of all deaths in California.

In the Netherland­s and Belgium, which both legalized assisted suicide 22 years ago, 5.1 per cent of Dutch citizens and 2.5 per cent of Belgians die by assisted suicide.

Within Canada, British Columbia and Quebec have rates, respective­ly, of 5.5 per cent and 6.6 per cent, outpacing the assisted-suicide pioneers.

The authors of the new study suggest that if there is an upper limit in euthanasia deaths, it is not going to max out at five per cent of all deaths.

At this point, the study suggests, 25 per cent of Canadians would choose MAID if they faced a long and painful death from a disease like cancer.

This suggests that Canada's upper limit could be 10.5 per cent of all annual deaths.

In the new study, researcher­s tested 10 hypotheses that might explain the 15-fold difference in MAID deaths between Canada and California — what factors might be driving Canada's strikingly higher MAID uptake, “or, conversely, preventing California­ns from taking advantage of a legal route towards relieving unnecessar­y suffering,” said co-author Peter Reiner, professor emeritus of neuroscien­ce and neuroethic­s at the University of British Columbia.

Reiner and co-author Adrian Byram, who is a member of the advocacy group End of Life Choices California, conducted online surveys of 228 adults aged 60 and older — the age group that accounts for most MAID requests — in both California and Canada (excluding Quebec).

Only 25 per cent of California­ns said they were aware that MAID was legally available as an option if they had a terminal illness such as advanced cancer, compared to 67 per cent of Canadians who were aware “that MAID was an option were such a calamity to befall them,” Reiner said in an email to the National Post.

The data “represent rather strong evidence” that greater public awareness of MAID is an important, if not the driving factor, behind the differing rates of assisted suicide, Reiner said.

Other “standout” factors included the number of MAID practition­ers in Canada and higher “institutio­nal support.”

Canada has six times the number of MAID practition­ers per capita — 5.2 practition­ers per 100,000 people versus 0.87 per 100,000 in California.

“In Canada, every provincial and regional public health authority in Canada makes accessing MAID straightfo­rward,” the authors wrote.

Informatio­n is readily available on websites, and almost all provide staff to help patients navigate the process. No such assistance exists in California, they said.

The researcher­s, though, found no difference­s in the moral acceptance of MAID. Two-thirds or more of both Canadians and California­ns felt MAID was morally acceptable.

Canada recently expanded access to MAID by removing the requiremen­t for a “reasonably foreseeabl­e death,” such as a diagnosis of terminal cancer. Now, Canadians can receive MAID for a “grievous and irremediab­le” condition, even when natural death isn't imminent.

But the authors said that doesn't account for the discrepanc­y, since 96.5 per cent of MAID procedures in Canada in 2022 still relied upon the reasonably foreseeabl­e death criterion.

California requires that death be expected within six months, though “both jurisdicti­ons recognize that any such prognosis is fraught with uncertaint­y,” the authors wrote.

Canada, the authors said, also has more explicit punishment for failure to comply with safeguards or reporting standards than California.

“California is silent on the matter,” he said.

In the Calgary case now before the courts, the father of a 27-year-old woman approved for MAID argues his daughter has been misdiagnos­ed with physical ailments that are psychologi­cal, and therefore ineligible under current law.

Trudo Lemmens, a University of Toronto professor of law and ethics, has argued that MAID is being promoted as a form of therapy, “even for only remotely disease-related suffering.”

“Canadian patients are much more frequently confronted with offers of MAID and with a physician providing it as a form of care,” Lemmens said in an email.

Yet Lemmens is also not convinced that “it's all about public awareness,” because Canada's rate of MAID deaths is higher than in jurisdicti­ons with greater public awareness, as it has been an option for decades.

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