Nova Scotia

Doctor-assisted suicide directives for Nova Scotia expected soon

Provincial directives on medically assisted death should be coming "within a few days," says Nova Scotia's justice minister.

Nova Scotia's medical colleges call for guarantee health-care professionals won't be prosecuted

Nova Scotia Justice Minister and Attorney General Diana Whalen says no one in Nova Scotia is currently seeking medically assisted death. (CBC)

Provincial directives on medically assisted death should be coming "within a few days," Nova Scotia's justice minister said Thursday.

"What we want to do is provide some clarity. That's what's being asked for here and I think that's what all the people in the medical field are looking for," Diana Whalen said.

The push for provincial directives comes a few days after Nova Scotia's medical colleges called for a guarantee from the province's chiefs of police and Public Prosecution Service that health-care professionals participating in medically assisted death would be protected from prosecution.

On the same page

The Supreme Court of Canada's ruling on medically assisted death provided direction for doctors, but the College of Registered Nurses of Nova Scotia expressed concern about how the ruling would affect nurses.

Whalen said Thursday her staff was already in meetings with the Public Prosecution Service, but her department needs to speak with the Nova Scotia Chiefs of Police Association and the judges to make sure all of their partners were on the same page.

​"That won't take us very long to do, but we just want to make sure we talk to our partners, and that we've looked at what other provinces are doing and what the options are," she said.

According to Whalen, there is currently no one in Nova Scotia actively seeking medically assisted death, but Whalen says the directive is necessary so that  if a case arrives in the future, "everybody involved will know what to do next."