Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian MDs, many hesitant about assisted death, assessing Supreme Court ruling

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2015 10:42 AM
  • Canadian MDs, many hesitant about assisted death, assessing Supreme Court ruling

TORONTO — The Supreme Court's unanimous decision to allow doctor-assisted death in Canada has many physicians in the country warily reviewing the landmark ruling.

Dr. Chris Simpson says the decision is not a surprise to the Canadian Medical Association, which he leads.

Simpson says his organization has done a lot of work studying laws in other jurisdictions where assisted death is permitted.

The CMA will ask for a role in helping to frame the new law that the federal government has been tasked with creating.

He says Canada's doctors want a seat at the table to ensure the legislation is drafted in a way that protects vulnerable people.

Dr. Marc Beauchamp, president of Living with Dignity, a group that opposes assisted death, says the ruling is a disappointment and a source of severe and deep concern for like-minded doctors.

Beauchamp expressed concern that in the future, people with terminal illnesses will be pressured to end their lives rather than allow them to follow their natural course.

The CMA membership used to be firmly opposed to assisted death, but that objection has softened over time. A 2014 survey of 5,000 doctors found that 45 per cent favoured legalizing physician-assisted death. However, only 27 per cent said they would likely or very likely participate if the act was decriminalized.

The Supreme Court acknowledged that doctors need to have the right to be conscientious objectors and cannot be made to assist deaths if doing so would offend their beliefs.

Simpson admitted the death-bed plea for a change in the law by the late Dr. Donald Low has had an influence on the evolution of the association's policy.

Low, a prominent infectious diseases specialist and one of the leaders of Toronto's response to the 2003 SARS outbreak, died of a brain tumour in September 2013. Shortly before his death he recorded a video calling for a change in the law.

Simpson said the video was shown at a CMA medical council "and you could have heard a pin drop in the room."

"I have no doubt that having one of our colleagues, particularly a really respected colleague like Don, it probably did (make a difference). It certainly made me stop and think," he said.

"I think it was a really important part of the process of change that we've undergone. A touchstone."

MORE National ARTICLES

Kinder Morgan Stops Pursuing B.C. Court Action Against Anti-Pipeline Protesters

Kinder Morgan Stops Pursuing B.C. Court Action Against Anti-Pipeline Protesters
BURNABY, B.C. — Kinder Morgan says it will not continue court action against protesters who demonstrated against the proposed expansion of a pipeline while survey crews drilled on Burnaby Mountain.

Kinder Morgan Stops Pursuing B.C. Court Action Against Anti-Pipeline Protesters

IKEA Canada's President Talks Business, Furniture Assembly And Winter

IKEA Canada's President Talks Business, Furniture Assembly And Winter
TORONTO — Ikea Canada's new president has an eye towards expansion in 2015 but is not saying whether the Swedish furniture giant will add to its 12 Canadian stores or open pickup locations.

IKEA Canada's President Talks Business, Furniture Assembly And Winter

Former Quebec union boss sentenced to 12 months for faking, inflating bills

Former Quebec union boss sentenced to 12 months for faking, inflating bills
MONTREAL — The former leader of one of Quebec's main construction unions was sentenced Friday to a year in jail after previously being convicted of faking and inflating bills worth more than $63,000.

Former Quebec union boss sentenced to 12 months for faking, inflating bills

Ottawa sues law firm for alleged legal fee fraud in residential schools case

Ottawa sues law firm for alleged legal fee fraud in residential schools case
REGINA — The federal government is suing a Saskatchewan law firm, alleging lawyers fraudulently over billed for their work with victims of Indian residential schools.

Ottawa sues law firm for alleged legal fee fraud in residential schools case

Alberta's sky palace unveiled, but in revised form as spartan meeting room

EDMONTON — Former Alberta premier Alison Redford's so-called sky palace has been officially revealed, but in its revised role as a straightforward meeting room.

Alberta's sky palace unveiled, but in revised form as spartan meeting room

No Wrongdoing By West Vancouver Officer Who Stopped Longboarder: Watchdog

No Wrongdoing By West Vancouver Officer Who Stopped Longboarder: Watchdog
VANCOUVER — West Vancouver Police say an officer has been cleared of wrongdoing in a videotaped confrontation with longboarders that went viral last year.

No Wrongdoing By West Vancouver Officer Who Stopped Longboarder: Watchdog