Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alberta Tells Police The Province Won't Prosecute Physician Assisted Deaths

The Canadian Press, 08 Jun, 2016 10:59 AM
    EDMONTON — Alberta says it will not prosecute any physician or member of a health care team involved in a physician assisted death that falls within the scope of the Supreme Court of Canada's 2015 ruling on the issue.
     
    The policy is spelled out in a directive from Alberta's Justice Department to police services in the province.
     
    The directive says there is no reasonable likelihood of a conviction for charges under the Criminal Code for physicians or any other member of a health care team, including pharmacists.
     
    A link to the directive is posted on the College of Licensed Practical Nurses of Alberta website.
     
    The directive says the provision for an assisted death must include the consent of a competent adult who has a grievous and irremedial medical condition that causes enduring intolerable suffering.
     
    The province says the directive was drafted because Parliament did not replace legislation struck down by the Supreme Court by Monday's deadline.
     
    The directive says that means as of Monday, physician assisted death is no longer a crime under section 241 of the Criminal Code that deals with counselling or aiding suicide.
     
    "No prosecution will be commenced or continued against a physician (or a member of the health care team) that provides information regarding physician assisted death, dispenses a drug, provides physician assisted death, or otherwise participates in a physician assisted death that falls within the parameters described by the Supreme Court of Canada in Carter 2015," reads the directive signed by Eric Tolppanen, assistant deputy minister of Alberta's Crown Prosecution Service.
     
     
    The directive says all police are to contact Tolppanen before commencing an investigation if a complaint is made about a physician assisted death.
     
    On Tuesday, organizations that regulate licensed practical nurses, registered nurses and registered psychiatric nurses in Alberta posted a joint message to their members about the directive.
     
    The nursing group says it has received a legal opinion that the directive provides an adequate level of protection for RNs, LPNs and RPNs involved with a physician assisted death.
     
    The Alberta government directive says it will remain in effect until medical assistance in dying legislation comes into force.
     
    Alberta Justice officials were not immediately available for comment.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Quebec Has Longest Emergency Room Wait Times In Western World

    Quebec Has Longest Emergency Room Wait Times In Western World
    QUEBEC — A report by Quebec's health and welfare commissioner says the province has the worst emergency room wait times in the western world.

    Quebec Has Longest Emergency Room Wait Times In Western World

    Milk Producers Protest On Parliament Hill In Favour Of Supply Management

    Milk Producers Protest On Parliament Hill In Favour Of Supply Management
    They estimate imports of the protein — known as diafiltered milk —  cost them $220 million a year.

    Milk Producers Protest On Parliament Hill In Favour Of Supply Management

    Philpott Visits Two Embattled Northern Ontario Reserves To See Conditions

    Philpott Visits Two Embattled Northern Ontario Reserves To See Conditions
    OTTAWA — Health Minister Jane Philpott is visting two beleaguered reserves in northern Ontario today —  Attawapiskat and Kashechewan — to see conditions in the communities first-hand.

    Philpott Visits Two Embattled Northern Ontario Reserves To See Conditions

    MP Hunter Tootoo Likely Hit 'Brick Wall' With Alcohol Problem: Aunt

    MP Hunter Tootoo Likely Hit 'Brick Wall' With Alcohol Problem: Aunt
    OTTAWA — Hunter Tootoo likely "hit a brick wall" before deciding to step down from his Liberal cabinet post in order to get help for a drinking problem — a struggle that's all too familiar to members of his family, his aunt said Wednesday.

    MP Hunter Tootoo Likely Hit 'Brick Wall' With Alcohol Problem: Aunt

    Calgary Trial Hears Diabetic Teen Was Malnourished, Covered With Ulce

    Calgary Trial Hears Diabetic Teen Was Malnourished, Covered With Ulce
    Forensic pathologist Dr. Jeffery Gofton detailed his examination of Alexandru Radita at the trial of his parents in Calgary.

    Calgary Trial Hears Diabetic Teen Was Malnourished, Covered With Ulce

    Quebec Becomes Latest Province To Cut Annual Physical Exams For Healthy Patients

    Quebec Becomes Latest Province To Cut Annual Physical Exams For Healthy Patients
    MONTREAL — Healthy Quebecers may now have a harder time booking routine annual physical exams after the province became the latest jurisdiction Wednesday to implement rules to eliminate the once-standard practice.

    Quebec Becomes Latest Province To Cut Annual Physical Exams For Healthy Patients