Better mental health care over more assisted death: poll
Four in five Canadians (82 per cent) oppose expanding euthanasia eligibility further without first improving mental health care services, according to a new poll co-released by the Angus Reid Institute and Canadian think tank Cardus.
No to MAiD, bishops reiterate
The incoming president of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops has served notice that so-called Medical Assistance in Dying is a no-go for institutions and associations the operate under the ChurchƵapp name.
Fraser Health ignored experts over MAiD
A new set of secret documents that the Fraser Health Authority tried but failed to keep from the public confirms that its board of directors overrode advice from its own experts in ordering that euthanasia be offered in all its facilities, including hospices and palliative-care wards.
Fraser Health ordered to uncover MAiD documents
A provincial adjudicator has ruled in favour of The B.C. Catholic newspaper and ordered the Fraser Health Authority to take the wraps off additional sections of secret documents related to the development and implementation of its controversial assisted-suicide policies and practices.
The Catholic choice is true dignity
It has been just over seven years since Canadian law has permitted euthanasia and assisted suicide on demand. In those seven years restriction after restriction on euthanasia provision has fallen and now we stand on the threshold of euthanizing the mentally ill and permitting the as-yet-undefined “mature minor” to end his or her life. Euthanasia is now presented to patients as a health care option.
Providence palliative director a MAiD provider
The appointment of a Medical Aid in Dying (MAiD) provider as Interim Clinical Director of Palliative Care at a Catholic hospital in Ontario has provoked renewed concern about the future of Catholic health care in Canada.
Anti-MAiD forces ‘need to tell better stories’
A Christian think tank is spinning a hopeful narrative for MAiD (Medical Assistance in Dying) legislation expansion in Canada.
Refuse to be silenced
QuebecƵapp Catholic bishops deserve heartfelt commendation for their courage and conviction though the gesture demonstrating it was doomed to be ignored before they even made it.
Liberals should stick to MAiD promise, MP says
Conservative MP Ed Fast is looking to stop the intended expansion of CanadaƵapp assisted-suicide regime in its tracks with Bill C-314 and harnessed his argument to Liberal promises when MAiD was first introduced.
By expanding euthanasia and assisted suicide to those suffering with a mental illness, the federal government is closing the door to “any hope of recovery,” CanadaƵapp bishops have said in an open letter to the Government of Canada.
Euthanasia document authors’ biases questioned
Multiple aspects of the recently released Health Canada guidance about Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) trouble Nicole Scheidl, executive director of Canadian Physicians for Life.
Verbatim: Ilora Finlay's presentation to ParliamentƵapp Special Joint Committee on MAiD
Transcript of the presentation by Ilora Finlay, Barroness Finlay of Llandhoff, a member of the House of Lords in the United Kingdom, professor of palliative medicine, and a Welsh medical doctor, to the Canadian ParliamentƵapp Special Joint Committee on Medical Assistance in Dying.
Patient beware, B.C. man warns on MAiD
Beware entering a B.C. hospital if you are gravely wounded, elderly or suffering from dementia, warns Richard Leskun.
Opposition mounts to MAiD expansion
The legislative effort to delay broadening MAiD eligibility to individuals solely afflicted with a mental illness by a year is forging ahead, but there are signs Canadians are not comfortable with moving forward.
MAiD expansion delay bill passes
Bill C-39, legislation that would delay by one year the expansion of assisted suicide to those suffering solely from mental illness, passed the House of Commons on Feb. 15