Administrative Law

COVID-19 Creates an Urgent Need for Legal Clarity in Medically Assisted Death (MAID)

 

A small percentage of Canadians infected with COVID-19 will die from the virus.  Their death will usually be horrible: lung failure creating oxygen deprivation, causing multiple organ failures.

Ventilators are used to pump oxygen into these compromised lungs, to give the patient a chance to recover.  However, the majority don’t recover, particularly not the elderly and those with other serious medical problems.  Such patients may occupy a scarce ventilator for days or weeks, with death inevitable and foreseeable.  Canada does not have enough ventilators, and it looks like we will be unable to acquire them soon enough for everyone in need.

Some very sick patients who will not get a ventilator will die slowly, from gradual suffocation.  With insufficient ventilators, physicians will have to make the godlike decision of who lives and who dies.  Physicians may be less tortured and traumatized if they know that those they have selected to die can choose, through medically assisted death (MAID), not to die slowly and painfully.  But this law is controversial. It was held unconstitutional in a recent court decision. When the law is unsettled it is risky for physicians to administer MAID because the consequence might be criminal prosecution.

For anyone whose death is reasonably foreseeable (with or without a ventilator), the current law permits a patient to choose MAID, provided they meet the legal requirements.  Most of these legal requirements can be met, but one could be an obstacle.

This is the requirement that the patient must read a request form and sign it in the presence of two independent witnesses.  Criminal Code Section 241.2 (3) (c) requires the medical practitioner or nurse practitioner who will administer the drug to:

(c) be satisfied that the request was signed and dated by the person — or by another person under subsection (4) [if the patient is too ill to sign personally] — before two independent witnesses who then also signed and dated the request; [underlining added]

Today, it would be unsafe for two witnesses to be near someone dying from COVID – 19 to watch the patient read and sign a form.  It would only be safe to do this virtually, e.g., via smart phones.  The legal question is whether the word “before” in the above-quoted law should be interpreted literally, as meaning physically in front of the witnesses, or whether it should be interpreted purposively.  The Supreme Court of Canada has repeatedly held that our laws should be interpreted purposively, which requires determining the purpose of the law.

In my view the purpose is to ensure that the patient made the request voluntarily (without pressure from family or medical staff), understood what they were requesting, and gave their informed consent.  This can be determined without being physically present.

Another requirement is that the two witnesses must sign and date the request form.  Again, a purposive interpretation would see these two signatures as being to provide the evidentiary record of the witnessing.  This could be done through a typed signature sent via text or email, or even via oral instruction to sign on their behalf given to someone physically present with the patient.

If our pet dogs or cats are terminally ill and suffering greatly we can end their lives humanely.  Should we not be able choose the same compassionate end for ourselves if we are unlikely to recover?

The Canadian Medical Association, which issues guidelines to physicians, should obtain a legal opinion (if it has not already done so) to provide physicians with guidance on how to administer MAID in the age of COVID – 19.  If necessary, the Prime Minister should recall a quorum of Parliament (as he did last week for financial assistance) to amend the Criminal Code to remove the legal uncertainty surrounding MAID.  This would help those of us who are likely to die soon to choose not to live their last few days on earth slowly suffocating in isolation.

5 replies »

  1. Andrew is characteristically right on. There’s nothing new in the euthanasia dilemma Andrew presents, but the pressures Covid-19 is putting on our palliation efforts are certainly bringing that dilemma to the fore. When mercy-killing was illegal, and where it still is, we did it anyhow, and everyone involved just turned a blind eye to it. And in most cases rightly so. But the Covid-19 pandemic is making this more difficult. I’m not sure legislation can be passed fast enough to ameliorate some of the horrors Andrew describes. But at least Covid-19 puts us on notice that the issue will have to be addressed before the next pandemic. Kudos to Andrew for highlighting that need. – Dr. Paul Viminitz

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  2. Two years ago my 92 year old father-in-law agreed to go to end-of-life care in a Hospice. He knew all his heart meds would be discontinued and they would be replaced by pain meds to keep him comfortable (but not prolong his life).
    He asked for a quicker end. The Doctor’s response was, “I think you will probably die in less time than it will take to do the paperwork and get the approval.” Three weeks later my father-in-law died.

    The point is, after the patient has requested medical assistance in dying, the ‘period of reflection’ alone is 10 days… there would have to be a different process for cases like a Covid patient on a ventilator.

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