Dr. Yves Robert*
					Introduction
						As noted in the commentary below, the state medical 
						regulator in the province of Quebec, the Collège des 
						Médecins du Québec, published an reflection in 2009 that 
						effectively encouraged the legalization of euthanasia. 
						During hearings into Quebec's Bill 52, which eventually 
						became the province's euthanasia law (the Act 
						Respecting End of Life Care), Dr.  Charles 
						Bernard, 
						Dr. Yves Robert and Dr. Michelle Marchand appeared on 
						behalf of the Collège.  They were effusive in their 
						support for the proposed law,
						
						describing it as "a very important milestone," the 
						product of "outstanding work," and "responsive to the 
						vision we initially proposed."
						One of the points Dr. Bernard
						
						emphasized was that euthanasia should be "an option 
						of last resort for  exceptionally difficult 
						situations at the end of life. . . in the final stages 
						of a serious and incurable disease that is inflicting 
						refractory suffering."  Dr. Robert himself
						
						added that euthanasia should only be considered in 
						what was truly the "last slice of life in the final 
						phase of the life."  Only then, he said, might it 
						be considered an option "from a medical point of view."
						Consistent with these views, the original text of the 
						Bill was
						
						amended to include a provision that a patient had to 
						be "at the end of life," even though the legislators 
						could
						
						not agree on what this meant.  It is not 
						certain that the term is being interpreted consistently 
						throughout the province, though returns from reporting 
						agencies sometimes report refusal to provide euthanasia 
						because a patient is "not at the end of life."  
						About 8% of refusals in the first half of 2017
						
						were attributed to patient ineligibility, which 
						includes this criterion among others.
						In any event, the May, 2017 commentary by Dr. Robert 
						indicates alarm at increasing pressure to provide 
						euthanasia in circumstances and for reasons apparently 
						not envisaged by Collège des Médecins du Québec when it 
						published its 2009 reflection and expressed its support 
						for the new legislation.  Of particular interest, 
						he suggests that, if current trends to broaden criteria 
						for euthanasia continue and are affirmed, it may be 
						appropriate for the medical profession to be replaced by 
						some kind of non-medical (but presumably technically 
						competent) euthanasia service.  
						During the legislative hearings into Bill 52, 
						Professor Margaret Somerville
						
						suggested that lawyers could be trained for this 
						purpose.  Her suggestion was ignored at the time, 
						but Dr. Robert's comments suggest that he and other 
						euthanasia supporters may now be more open to Dr. 
						Somerville's proposal.  Having a corps of voluntary 
						euthanasia service providers would relieve the pressure 
						now being experienced by physicians and health care 
						workers who object to euthanasia for reasons of 
						conscience.  [Administrator]
	If anything has become apparent over 
					the past year, it is this paradoxical discourse that calls 
					for safeguards to avoid abuse, while asking the doctor to 
					act as if there were none. Many are ill at ease with 
					exclusion and paradoxes, especially opinion leaders and 
					media columnists who denounce refusals of MAID and promote 
					death à la carte "to 
					respect the choices of each individual."
					Just over a year after the adoption of the 
					Act 
					Respecting End-of-Life Care (hereafter the Act) in 
					Quebec, the Minister of Health and Social Services recently 
					announced his plan for a reflection on expanding the scope 
					of Medical Aid in Dying (MAID). It would seem that we 
					already want to relax the access criteria.
					It should be noted that the debate in Quebec was launched 
					in November 2009 following the publication of 
					the 
					Collège des médecins du Québec's reflection on the 
					subject. The logic of care based on seeking the most 
					appropriate care for each patient was the primary motivation 
					for the approach that led to the law authorizing MAID, which 
					came into force on December 10, 2015. With this logic of 
					care, the Quebec legislator sought to recognize a logic of 
					rights, confirming that the patient had a say in how he 
					wished to live his last moments. Thus, the law grants the 
					patient the right to quality end-of-life care: palliative 
					care, including palliative sedation and, exceptionally, if 
					it is not relieved by usual care, medical aid in dying. The 
					Act also established a system of Advance Medical Directives 
					(AMD), through which the physician is bound to respect the 
					wishes expressed therein by a patient, regarding five 
					specific treatments[1] 
					required by his or her state of health if, having become 
					incapable, the patient is in one of two particular clinical 
					situations.[2] 
					MAID is excluded by law from the AMD.
					In just over a year, 
					more than 400 patients have received 
					MAID in Quebec. This period was a learning process for all 
					of Quebec society, during which we collectively understood 
					that there were criteria for access to MAID and that, when 
					these criteria were not met, 
					requests were refused. This 
					observation, although obvious, was brutal for many.
					Thus, patients suffering from progressive diseases but at 
					an early or intermediate stage were denied MAID. Patients 
					with disabilities, who were not at the end of their lives, 
					were reduced to choosing to die through fasting. Finally, 
					more recently, a patient suffering from dementia, incapable 
					of consenting to care, 
					was allegedly killed out of 
					compassion by her spouse.
					Since the coming into force of the Act, and particularly 
					since the debate on the federal bill following the Carter 
					decision of the Supreme Court of Canada, some people have 
					invoked a "new constitutional right": that of obtaining MAID 
					on demand or even to claim it "pre-emptively" shortly after 
					being diagnosed with severe or terminal illness, even before 
					suffering from the dreaded incapacities or limitations. For 
					many, it is about having control over their death and the 
					right to choose its moment and manner. While MAID was 
					reserved for the suffering patient, we see the emergence of 
					pressure demanding a form of death à la carte. But 
					is this really what our society wants?
					We all know that at least three questions remain 
					unanswered after the coming into force of the current laws: 
					what happens to incapable persons, to minors, and to those 
					with mental illness? These issues are not simple; we may 
					have to accept that there is no answer. The question of 
					incapable persons, which will be discussed by an expert 
					committee formed by the minister in the coming year, is 
					probably the most complex. It is envisaged to allow persons 
					who are still capable to issue advance directives to request 
					MAID in case of incapacity. In particular, it should be 
					ensured that, where appropriate, the person clearly 
					determine the medical condition for which he or she would 
					want MAID. It's not easy when one is still in good health. 
					For obvious reasons, this possibility could not have the 
					same binding power as an AMD. 
					
						- What then would be the 
					decision-making process to be followed, and by whom, in the 
					name and in the interest of the incapable person? 
- Who would 
					ultimately make the decision? 
- Who would choose the moment? 
					
Medically, other conditions foreseen in the law for those 
					who are capable should also be present, including suffering, 
					which is not always present in dementia depending on the 
					stage of the disease. 
					
						- It is also important to determine who 
					would be suffering the most: the patient or his or her 
					entourage? 
- What if, at the time of the intervention, the 
					patient, unaware of their purpose, resisted the injections? 
						
- Finally, what would one do with all those patients currently 
					suffering from dementia, who have not had the opportunity to 
					express their wishes beforehand? 
- What would be the response 
					to those who would undoubtedly invoke a concern for fairness 
					and claim a need for compassionate death in the name of a 
					subjective "quality of life" that is so difficult to 
					evaluate?
As can be clearly seen with the situation of incapable 
					persons, broadening access to the MAID raises many issues 
					that should be discussed collectively, and which go well 
					beyond the current legal framework and even the Carter
					decision. Why and to what extent should new safeguards be 
					introduced when, no matter what the access criteria, there 
					will always be some people excluded by definition? If 
					anything has become apparent over the past year, it is this 
					paradoxical discourse that calls for safeguards to avoid 
					abuse, while asking the doctor to act as if there were none. 
					Many are ill at ease with exclusion and paradoxes, 
					especially opinion leaders and media columnists who denounce 
					refusals of MAID and promote death à la carte "to 
					respect the choices of each individual."
					For them, what about the logic of care and of a 
					"continuum of care" that preceded the Act Respecting 
					End-of-Life Care? If the goal is euthanasia on demand 
					based on a right, are we still talking about Medical Aid in 
					Dying, or simply Aid in Dying? What would the medical 
					profession have to do with it?
					We should recall that, without the logic of care, 
					physician intervention is not required. If the will of the 
					people is limited to respecting the wishes expressed 
					directly or indirectly by the person, society will have to 
					lucidly consider other options than those which require the 
					participation of the doctor, and transform Medical Aid in 
					Dying into simply a legally authorized aid in dying. This 
					could take the form of assisted suicide services provided by 
					a private company that would deal directly with the person, 
					as in Switzerland… But is it really in this direction that 
					Quebec society wants to go?
					What is striking after the first year of operation of 
					this law, recognized as being the source of a "major 
					opening", is the rapidity with which public opinion seems to 
					have judged this opening insufficient. Have we really gone 
					that far? Even before having fully appreciated the 
					application of the current provisions or their consequences?
					Let us take the time to reflect carefully before going 
					any further. Death is not that urgent.
					Yves Robert, M.D.
Secretary
Collège des médecins du Québec
					Notes
					
					1.  Cardiopulmonary resuscitation, respiratory 
					assistance, dialysis, hydration and nutrition
					
					2.  End of life and serious and incurable disease or 
					severe and irreversible impairment of cognitive functions
					
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