Senate passes Bill C-7 to expand access to medical assistance in dying

'The wait is nearly over for Canadians who are suffering,' says Justice Minister David Lametti

Image | medical aid in dying

Caption: The Senate has passed a bill to expand access to medical assistance in dying by a vote of 60-25, with five abstentions. (Radio-Canada)

The Senate has passed a bill to expand access to medical assistance in dying, including eventually to people suffering solely from mental illnesses.
By a vote of 60-25, with five abstentions, senators accepted Wednesday a revised version of Bill C-7, even though the government rejected or modified amendments made by the Senate.
It was expected to receive royal assent later Wednesday night — just over a week ahead of a court-ordered deadline.
The government had sought and received four extensions to the deadline. The latest — and very likely the last extension, the court warned — was to expire March 26.
Once royal assent is given, intolerably suffering Canadians who are not near the natural end of their lives will immediately gain the right to seek medical assistance in dying — in compliance with a 2019 Quebec Superior Court ruling.
People suffering solely from grievous and irremediable mental illnesses will have to wait two years to gain the same right.
The government had originally intended to impose a blanket ban on assisted dying for people suffering solely from mental illnesses.
But, under pressure from senators who believed that exclusion was unconstitutional, it subsequently put a two-year time limit on it.
In the meantime, the government committed to setting up an expert panel to advise on the safeguards and protocols that should apply to people with mental illnesses.

Concern over disability rights

The government rejected a Senate amendment to allow people who fear losing mental competence to make advance requests for an assisted death.
But it committed to launching within 30 days a joint parliamentary committee to review that issue and other unresolved matters, including whether mature minors should have access to the procedure.
"The wait is nearly over for Canadians who are suffering intolerably and wish to seek MAID under new rules," Justice Minister David Lametti tweeted shortly after the Senate vote. "This law will respect the autonomy of Canadians while protecting the vulnerable."
The bill was triggered by two Quebecers with severe disabilities who went to court to successfully fight for their right to choose an assisted death even though their natural deaths were not "reasonably foreseeable."
It is not often that we can truly say that with this vote we have the opportunity to save lives. - Conservative Senator Don Plett
But disability rights groups have strenuously opposed the bill, arguing it devalues the lives of people with disabilities, particularly those who are Black, racialized, Indigenous or otherwise already marginalized and face discrimination in the health system.
They fear such vulnerable people will be pressured — either directly or indirectly through societal attitudes and lack of support services — to end their lives prematurely.
Many mental health advocates have also weighed in against the eventual inclusion of people suffering solely from mental illnesses.
They argue that it's harder to predict the outcomes of mental illnesses, many of which can be treated, and point out that a wish to die is often a symptom of these illnesses.
But Sen. Stan Kutcher, a psychiatrist and member of the Independent Senators Group who first proposed a time limit on the mental illness exclusion, argued that all Canadians suffering from irremediable and grievous illnesses, physical or mental, deserve the right to make their own choice.
"It is not for us to decide if a person's suffering is intolerable to them," he told the Senate shortly before the vote.

Final consent requirement dropped

Dying with Dignity Canada, welcomed the Senate's sign-off on the bill, calling it "a momentous day for end-of-life rights in Canada."
All 20 Conservative senators voted against the bill, several because they believed it didn't go far enough but most fundamentally opposed to expanding the assisted dying regime, particularly to those with mental illnesses.
In an emotional speech just before the vote, Conservative Senate leader Don Plett pleaded with his colleagues to reject the bill.
"If there was ever a time to exercise sober second thought, it is now," he told the Senate.
"It is not often that we can truly say that with this vote we have the opportunity to save lives, to prevent the unnecessary premature death of the vulnerable, to offer hope to those who have lost it. But today we do."
For people who are near the natural end of life, the bill relaxes some of the rules for getting an assisted death.
It drops the requirement that a person must be able to give final consent immediately before the procedure is performed.
That's intended to ensure that someone who has been approved for the procedure won't be denied if they lose mental capacity before it can be carried out.
It also drops the requirement that a person must wait 10 days after being approved for an assisted death before receiving the procedure. And it reduces the number of witnesses required to one from two. People not near death will face higher hurdles.
Among other things, they'll face a minimum 90-day period for assessments of their requests for an assisted death.
They'll have to be made aware of all alternatives, including counselling, and they'll have to be able to give final consent immediately before receiving the procedure.