Two days of hearings before the Ontario Court of Appeal Jan. 21-22 has provided (CMDS) executive director Deacon Larry Worthen a dollop of confidence as he waits for a decision from the three-judge panel.
“We gave a very good presentation,” Worthen told The Catholic Register after the appeal. “There were some new arguments. There was new evidence.”
The three-judge panelƵapp ruling has been reserved, with observers expecting a decision in March.
With support from OntarioƵapp Catholic bishops, the (Evangelical), and the and , the was appealing last yearƵapp court decision in favour of the (CPSO). The court ruled that although the College had infringed on the Charter rights of objecting doctors with rules that force doctors to refer patients for assisted suicide assessments, their rights had to be balanced against the right of patients to timely access to assisted suicide.
The original three-judge panel said that objecting doctors could avoid being forced to refer by retraining for a specialty where requests for assisted suicide could be avoided.
“We had evidence from an expert that talked about the difficulty, the virtual impossibility, of doctors retraining,” Worthen said. “We had one affidavit that said that only 2.5 per cent of all doctors positions in all of Canada would provide a safe zone for doctors.”
Pathology, hair loss, obesity medicine, sleep disorders and research medicine were about the only areas left to objecting doctors, he said. “We argued that the decision of the court is just not practical,” said Worthen. “Can you imagine someone trained as a cardiologist suddenly having to go back and do sleep medicine?”
The CPSO argued that practising medicine is not a right but a privilege. In balancing the moral convictions of some physicians against ensuring access to legally permitted medical procedures, the policy must favour the wishes of patients, the collegeƵapp lawyers said.