Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Doctors group looking at intensive course to train willing MDs in assisted death

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Aug, 2015 12:47 PM
  • Doctors group looking at intensive course to train willing MDs in assisted death
Doctors who are willing to assist in a patient's death once the act becomes legal early next year will need to be trained because they've never been taught the procedures for ending a life, the Canadian Medical Association says.
 
"There's a lot of complexity in this for Canadian doctors and it's the first time really any of us can remember that (we) have been forced to undertake an entirely new procedure or new intervention without any training or experience," Dr. Jeff Blackmer, vice-president of medical professionalism, told a media briefing Tuesday during the CMA's annual meeting in Halifax. 
 
Blackmer said the 80,000-member doctors' organization is considering an intensive two-day course for physicians "who have never had to learn this, who have not taken it in medical school or residency."
 
Physicians who choose not to participate in assisted death may be offered an online course so they can counsel patients who want to pursue help in dying. Those who are willing to provide the service would continue to take courses over the years, he said.
 
"We want to make sure people are trained and have the competencies to do this," Blackmer said.
 
On Feb. 6 of this year, the Supreme Court of Canada struck down the law banning doctors from assisting a patient to die or from performing euthanasia. The court stayed its decision for a year to give the federal government time to draft and pass replacement legislation.
 
If no such law is passed, doctors can legally begin helping patients who meet certain criteria to end their lives.
 
Outgoing CMA president Dr. Chris Simpson said time is growing short for regulators to determine how the service would be provided and how doctors would decide whether a given patient is eligible for assisted death under the Supreme Court's ruling.
 
"We don't want to arrive at Feb. 6 with everybody saying, 'Well, assisted dying in Canada is legal. Does anybody know how to do it? Does anybody know who qualifies?'" Simpson said.
 
"That is a situation I think we all agree cannot happen."
 
Simpson said the CMA is lobbying for replacement legislation with national standards, rather than a patchwork of provincial and territorial regulations that wouldn't serve patients across the country equally.
 
"At the end of the day, regardless of who wins the election, the law that banned assisted suicide is no longer in effect as of February and so governments are going to have to deal with this," he said. 
 
"The question is whether or not we're going to deal with it in a rational and professional way that serves the needs of Canadians or whether we're just going to leave it to chance."
 
The CMA recently invited its members to participate in an online survey about assisted death. Of 1,407 members who responded, 29 per cent said they would consider providing the service, 63 per cent said they would not, and eight per cent said they weren't sure, the CMA reported.
 
Delegates discussing the issue during a session at the Halifax meeting on Tuesday expressed a number of concerns, including whether doctors against the practice on moral or religious grounds would be required to refer a patient to a willing physician.
 
In the end, they favoured a recommendation to provide patients with information about the option, including how to access the service, Blackmer said.
 
"My concern remains more in the rural and remote communities, where there may only be one or two GPs, and if they are both unwilling to participate, I think that's when we're going to have to look at what some solutions are," he said, noting that the Netherlands has a mobile clinic that goes from community to community to provide assisted dying.
 
"The geography of Canada obviously is somewhat limiting in that respect, but we plan to examine some of those models and see what may apply here in Canada."

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Man Accused Of Killing Uncle Says His Mental Health Not Issue At Trial

B.C. Man Accused Of Killing Uncle Says His Mental Health Not Issue At Trial
A man accused of murdering his uncle muttered to himself repeatedly and turned often to stare at people in a B.C. courtroom as details of a grisly killing were revealed.

B.C. Man Accused Of Killing Uncle Says His Mental Health Not Issue At Trial

American Blogger's Rape Comments Have 'No Place' In Toronto: Mayor John Tory

Toronto's mayor is calling for the cancellation of a show by an American blogger who says rape should be legalized on private property.

American Blogger's Rape Comments Have 'No Place' In Toronto: Mayor John Tory

Amanda Lindhout, Canadian Survivor Of Somalia Hostage-Taking, Helps Girl Who Survived Brutal Attack

WINNIPEG — A freelance journalist who was kidnapped in Somalia has joined the growing list of Canadians stepping forward to help out a Manitoba girl who survived a vicious attack of her own.

Amanda Lindhout, Canadian Survivor Of Somalia Hostage-Taking, Helps Girl Who Survived Brutal Attack

Open Burning Ban Lifted As Cool, Wet Weather Quenches Northern Half Of B.C.

Open Burning Ban Lifted As Cool, Wet Weather Quenches Northern Half Of B.C.
PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — Soggy conditions across north-central British Columbia have allowed the Ministry of Forests to immediately scrap bans on open burning in the Prince George and northwest fire centres.

Open Burning Ban Lifted As Cool, Wet Weather Quenches Northern Half Of B.C.

CMHC: Slowdown In National Seasonal Rate Of New-Home Construction In July

CMHC: Slowdown In National Seasonal Rate Of New-Home Construction In July
OTTAWA — The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. says the pace of new home construction slowed in July for the first time in three months, mostly as a result of fewer multi-unit projects started in urban areas.

CMHC: Slowdown In National Seasonal Rate Of New-Home Construction In July

Hepatitis C Man Gets Prison Sentence For Stabbing Store Employee With Needle In Kamloops

Hepatitis C Man Gets Prison Sentence For Stabbing Store Employee With Needle In Kamloops
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Stabbing a store employee with a dirty needle has netted a Kamloops, B.C., man with hepatitis C more than two years in prison.

Hepatitis C Man Gets Prison Sentence For Stabbing Store Employee With Needle In Kamloops