Trudeau government's assisted suicide program increasingly requested by Canada's poorest citizens
The committee's report, accounting for "age and labour-force participation" as "measures of disadvantage," revealed that 57 percent of Track 2 MAID requests came from the poorest in society, while 42 percent of Track 1 requests were from the same sector.
A recent report from
the Ontario Coroner’s Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID) Death Review Committee
has apparently confirmed what critics of the Trudeau government’s euthanasia
program have said would happen: poor people are increasingly being offered MAID
even if they are not in chronic pain from an incurable disease.
The program
divides its recipients into two categories, the National
Post reports: Track 1 (“for those whose death is reasonably
foreseeable") and Track 2 (“for those whose death is not reasonably
foreseeable”). The report found that 48.6 percent of those eligible for MAID
under Track 2 are living in the poorest parts of Ontario, while 41.8 percent of
those under Track 1 were from poorer sections of the province. Other studies of MAID
recipients within cities have found comparable results.
A closer
analysis of the Death Review Committee’s report accounting for "age and
labour-force participation" as "measures of disadvantage"
reveals that 57 percent of Track 2 MAID requests came from the poorest in
society, while 42 percent of Track 1 requests were from the same sector.
This is a
phenomenon, the Post notes, that seems almost unique to Canada, especially when
evaluating data from other countries where assisted suicide is legal. In the
Netherlands, for instance, “the overall rates of assisted dying were somewhat
higher for people (living in areas) of higher socioeconomic status,” the Post
noted.
In Canada,
euthanasia has become a more probable choice for the dispossessed. The Post
notes the case of “Sophia,” a 51-year-old woman who became a MAID candidate
because of chemical sensitivities. She opted for assisted suicide because she
found her apartment unbearable. “The government sees me as expendable trash, a
complainer, useless and a pain in the ass,” Sophia explained.
Mr. A (so
described by the committee) was offered assisted suicide because he not only
had inflammatory bowel disease but a history of “mental illness, previous
episodes of suicidality, and ongoing alcohol and opioid misuse.” The criteria
would suggest that mental illness is already being considered as a factor in
deciding who is eligible for MAID.
But the Post
is more concerned about how many people are streamlined into euthanasia because
of poverty. As commentator Chris Selley notes, “What Sophia received wasn’t
medical assistance in dying at all. Death is no more appropriate a prescription
for multiple chemical sensitivities — or for the mental conditions that likely
explain it — than chemotherapy or a hip replacement.”
The
parameters of MAID continue to expand. Quebec has
authorized its doctors to issue “advance directives” if patients are
unresponsive or suffering from dementia. A previous written request will
suffice as permission to proceed with assisted suicide.
Trudeau's
Health Minister has already announced that the Liberal government plans to
expand MAID for the mentally ill, now
scheduled in 2027. "On February 29, 2024, legislation to extend
the temporary exclusion of eligibility to receive MAID in circumstances where a
person's sole underlying medical condition is a mental illness received royal
assent and immediately came into effect. The eligibility date for persons
suffering solely from a mental illness is now March 17, 2027," the
Canadian government states.
An
investigation into private online posts revealed that Canadian doctors are
feeling uneasy
or even guilty about their participation in the MAID program. Patients
are sometimes offered euthanasia in lieu of medical treatment. Canadian cancer
patient Allison Ducluzeau revealed in November 2023 how doctors
offered her euthanasia before an operation for her abdominal cancer. She
decided to go to Ohio for surgery and save her life.
https://thepostmillennial.com/trudeau-governments-assisted-suicide-program-increasingly-requested-by-canadas-poorest-citizens
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