Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Manitoba Patient Wants Court To Grant Doctor-Assisted Death, Anonymity

The Canadian Press, 15 Mar, 2016 11:36 AM
    WINNIPEG — An unnamed Manitoba patient is going to court for the right to die with the help of a doctor. 
     
    Court documents show the patient wants a constitutional exemption for a physician-assisted death because of two grievous medical conditions that are causing suffering.
     
    The Supreme Court has ruled that anyone who wants an assisted death before the federal government enacts a new law can apply to a judge.
     
    The documents say the patient has the capacity to make an informed decision and is physically incapable of hastening death without a doctor's help.
     
    The patient is also seeking a publication ban that would include the names of all health-care workers involved.
     
    A hearing on the ban was scheduled for Tuesday afternoon.
     
    The application says doctors who are willing to help the patient die are reluctant to do so if their identities are not protected.
     
    "It could be very harmful to other vulnerable and mentally ill patients that are treated by the respondent physicians and may impair the physicians' therapeutic relationship with their patients," says the patient's application.
     
    The patient's family is also concerned about privacy.
     
    "If the names of the applicant and the applicant's family are made public, the applicant may not be able to spend their remaining days in private and die with dignity surrounded by their family," the application states.
     
    "The applicant and the applicant's spouse are afraid they will be contacted or harassed by individuals or groups opposed to the applicant's decision to end their life with the assistance of a physician."
     
    The application notes that an Alberta court has already allowed a physician-assisted death and granted a publication ban. Last week, the Ontario court ordered the identity of an 80-year-old man seeking a doctor-assisted death, along with the names of his family and any doctors involved, be kept secret.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Woman's Lost Jewelry Turns Up In Septic Tank After Three Years

    B.C. Woman's Lost Jewelry Turns Up In Septic Tank After Three Years
    Good things can happen even when hope is all but lost. It's the only way the British Columbia woman says she can explain finding her lost jewelry at the bottom of a septic tank.

    B.C. Woman's Lost Jewelry Turns Up In Septic Tank After Three Years

    Ismael Habib, Quebec Man Charged With Attempting To Leave Canada To Join Terror Group

    Ismael Habib, Quebec Man Charged With Attempting To Leave Canada To Join Terror Group
    Ismael Habib appeared briefly in a Montreal courtroom today after the RCMP announced the new charge against him.

    Ismael Habib, Quebec Man Charged With Attempting To Leave Canada To Join Terror Group

    B.C. Government In Supreme Court Seeking To Shut Down Victoria's Homeless Camp

    Housing Minister Rich Coleman says the B.C. government has homes for every courthouse camper but some are refusing to leave, forcing him to go to court in an attempt to take down the camp.

    B.C. Government In Supreme Court Seeking To Shut Down Victoria's Homeless Camp

    15 Sex Assault, Indecent Act Complaints Against Winnipeg Cabbies

    15 Sex Assault, Indecent Act Complaints Against Winnipeg Cabbies
    The statistics represent complaints filed between Jan. 1, 2015, and Feb.19 of this year.

    15 Sex Assault, Indecent Act Complaints Against Winnipeg Cabbies

    Buzz Building Around 'World's First' Bionic Knee Brace Developed By Dalhousie University Students

    Buzz Building Around 'World's First' Bionic Knee Brace Developed By Dalhousie University Students
    Chris Cowper-Smith, 31, and his partner got the idea for their business in late 2012 when the two were working on their PhDs at Dalhousie University.

    Buzz Building Around 'World's First' Bionic Knee Brace Developed By Dalhousie University Students

    British Man Stunned After Six-Day Detention For Drug Test On Friend's Ashes

    British Man Stunned After Six-Day Detention For Drug Test On Friend's Ashes
    Russell Laight, 41, was travelling from Britain to Nova Scotia when his flight was diverted to St. John's, NL, due to a storm on March 2.

    British Man Stunned After Six-Day Detention For Drug Test On Friend's Ashes