Quebec Physicians Launch Campaign Against Doctor-assisted Suicide

A physicians group against doctor-assisted suicide has launched a campaign to stop the practice from becoming legal.
Quebec Physicians Launch Campaign Against Doctor-assisted Suicide
A 60-year-old woman suffering from cancer rests in a hospital palliative care unit in a file photo. (Alain Jocard/AFP/Getty Images)
2/20/2013
Updated:
10/1/2015
<a><img class="size-large wp-image-1770269" title="FRANCE-HEALTH-CANCER-PALLIATIVE" src="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/09/159653878.jpg" alt="" width="590" height="402"/></a>



In January, the Quebec government said it would proceed with so-called “dying with dignity” legislation, named after a report released last March by the Select Committee on Dying With Dignity, a task force that spent two years studying end-of-life issues and holding public hearings across the province.

The task force’s report recommended doctors should be allowed to help terminally ill patients who wish to die to end their lives in exceptional circumstances.

On Jan. 15 a provincial panel of legal experts studying medically assisted end-of-life procedures released recommendations outlining the circumstances under which doctors should be allowed to assist those who wish to die, and suggested Quebec could bypass the Canadian Criminal Code, which prohibits assisted suicide.

The panel concluded that if a terminally ill patient is receiving palliative treatment, is in pain, and can clearly express the desire to end their life, helping the patient carry out that wish should be considered part of the continuum of care.

PATRE condemned the draft legislation, saying the parameters are poorly defined and not well understood, and would bring about a substantial loss of rights for both patients and health care professionals.

“It is naive to believe this would be sufficient to protect vulnerable patients from subtle or not-so-subtle coercion to choose death,” said Fernier in a Jan. 21 statement.

“The mere existence of physician-inflicted death as a legal option gives the message to elderly and terminally ill patients that their continuing existence is an unnecessary burden on their loved ones and the health care system. A desperate shortage of beds is a daily reality in our hospitals and cannot be ignored in this context.”

Since its formation last year, more than 300 doctors and 1,000 citizens have signed the PATRE declaration opposing legalized euthanasia and assisted suicide.

According to an Angus Reid opinion poll released Feb. 14, most people in Quebec would support a regulation permitting a form of doctor-assisted suicide in the province.



In the online survey of a representative sample of 804 Quebecers, 86 percent of respondents support enacting legislation aimed at allowing doctors to help certain terminally ill patients end their lives. One in ten (10 percent) were opposed to the idea, while four percent were undecided.