Silencing whistleblowers. Laughing about sedating a patient into euthanasia. Expanding MAID to the vulnerable, homeless, and children, especially Indigenous children.
The next cover story for @NRO tries to answer: how did death care replace health care?
@NRO Consider a 2021 seminar from the leading group of "MAID providers" in Canada, a group that is funded by the gov't to train clinicians nationwide.
"How would folks interpret someone who... [is] shouting, pulling their arm away as one tries to insert the IV to provide MAID?"
@NRO So what does the ethicist say? What did MacLean mean by "conversation and calmness"?
The answer is blunt: he administered hydromorphone, an opiate, in order to skirt the law around consent with euthanasia—and the advice is to consider doing it covertly.
In Canada. In 2021.
"Good."
No one in the panel, no one in the audience, objects. Welcome to the world of death care.
Patients with conditions never considered to be valid reasons to die are now being helped to die by willing physicians: hearing loss, autism, sexual exploitation by a psychiatrist
In every jurisdiction that legalized euthanasia, the number of deaths at the hands of physicians or nurses is ballooning as safeguards are rescinded.
Last year, the number of deaths in California increased by 63%. In Canada, over the last 7 years, there was a 1,300% (!) growth
Health care facilities in Australia and Canada that do not allow euthanasia on site are being defunded, threatened, and even nationalized.
Calvary Public Hospital in Canberra, a Catholic hospital, was forcibly acquired by the gov't: all because it refused death care in medicine
Physicians in both countries are being censured, demoted, and forced to leave medicine for voicing their concerns.
A physician in Quebec was even targeted by his medical college... for his testimony to a parliamentary committee warning about the dangers of expanding MAID.
This is all by design. The Canadian Association of MAiD Assessors and Providers discussed in their 2018 convention how their goal is to fundamentally change medicine—not just offer death care as an alternative option to those that want it.
They even tried to hide this document:
Palliative medicine is meant "to neither hasten nor delay death," precisely to reassure vulnerable patients—as everyone at end-of-life is—that their physician won't end their life (or smother them with a pillow, as happened in Belgium last year).
CAMAP's goal is to undo that:
Should only healthcare workers provide health care?
Well, someone at CAMAP even claimed that they are a veterinarian who is also a MAID provider.
No, I have no idea what this means either. Read it for yourself:
Moreover, CAMAP discussed a lot about providing MAID to vulnerable communities because of poverty.
Now remember: Justin Trudeau promised that no one will receive MAID “because you’re not getting the supports and cares that you actually need.” CAMAP denies it is happening
@CharlieAngusNDP, you said there's no chance that MAID will be expanded to children.
But look how @CAMAPCanada in 2018 advocated to expand MAID to Indigenous children, to Indigenous people driven by poverty, and pushed against church-run homeless shelters
@BCANDS1
Even a hypothetical patient with fixed delusions was considered potentially eligible because "it doesn't matter what he wants it for: You can request MAID due to psychological suffering and if that's what caused his changed state, it would be reasonable"
In 2018. Before Bill C-7
CAMAP claims they're not an "advocacy organization." And yet they discussed how they needed to push through "politics" to get MAID-free spaces out of healthcare—which in Canada mostly means faith-based hospitals.
Instead, they described MAID as "sacred".
CAMAP, I should add, is also an organization that teaches how age alone "helps qualify for MAID", even though Quebec's monitoring agency claims that is illegal
"Advanced age and the problems associated with aging does not constitute a serious and incurable illness"
But the largest impact is not on physicians or hospitals. It's on people with disabilities, who as @mssinenomine told me, need "MAID-free" spaces to get health care.
When this doesn't happen, as I found out with 'Rachel' and 'James', it means that MAiD becomes the only option.
@mssinenomine Rachel told me that when she tried to call the suicide prevention hotline, she was told to visit Dying with Dignity's website.
Let me be clear: She tried to get help for thoughts of suicide, and instead she was being offered advice for how to die from assisted suicide.
@mssinenomine Rachel eventually managed to beat the odds and find a bed by showing up at CAMH’s ER, a mental health hospital that doesn’t allow MAID on site.
James isn’t so lucky.
@mssinenomine There is plenty more in this story. Read on here:
Thank you to @RameshPonnuru and the great editors and fact-checkers at @NRO for giving the proper attention to this storynationalreview.com/magazine/2023/…
@mssinenomine @RameshPonnuru @NRO And of course, it goes without saying, thank you to @tamaraberens for putting up with all of my euthanasia-related small talk at dinner parties now.
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BREAKING: Here's a thread of the "significant announcement" by @InclusionCA @BCANDS1 and other Canadian disability organizations regarding an imminent "Charter challenge".
(for Americans tuning in, it's Canada's version of their Bill of Rights)
🧵
@InclusionCA @BCANDS1 Krista Carr from @InclusionCA is speaking first:
"We are here today because of an appalling injustice happening in our country." She lists a list of disability organizations and two people with disabilities joining this Charter challenge.
@InclusionCA @BCANDS1 She argues that suicide prevention for some and suicide facilitation for others is wrong. People with disabilities are the only people who would qualify for non-terminal euthanasia.
"It is not just wrong. It is discriminatory and violates our most fundamental rights."
Are there problems with Canada and its euthanasia program, the world's largest? Over 140 disability groups and three UN special rapporteurs say yes.
But the @Humanists_UK claims that's all "misinformation": no one died who wasn't supposed to die.
Only problem? It's just bs. 🧵
@Humanists_UK should know better. They concede that "the facts surrounding some of the cases featured in the coverage are often hard to verify," leading to their analysis being "difficult to conduct".
That's by design. Police investigations in Canada have also been stonewalled
Instead, by ignoring most of the evidence, the British humanists decided that "we don’t believe that anyone in Canada has had an assisted death who shouldn’t have been able to."
So if facts are intentionally obscured, no worries, that means they don't exist?
It's a bizarre match. The title of an op-ed by the CEO of Compassion & Choices called dementia "a fate worse than death".
After this article came out, Compassion & Choices quickly changed the title... but not everywhere.
I suspect the backpedaling won't stop there. The new partnership wasn't announced on the Alzheimer's Association's website.
Maybe the reason is that if you want to improve "end-of-life care" to Black Americans, you would partner with a palliative association, not a lobby group
Leon Kass in @firstthingsmag in 1996: "Physician-assisted suicide, once legal, will not stay confined to the terminally ill and mentally competent who freely and knowingly elect it for themselves. Requests will be engineered and choices manipulated firstthings.com/article/1996/0…
@firstthingsmag by those who control the information, and, manipulation aside, many elderly and incurable people will experience a right to choose death as their duty to do so. Moreover, the vast majority of those who are said to “merit” “a humane and dignified death” do not fall in
this category and cannot request it for themselves. Persons with mental illness or Alzheimer’s disease, deformed infants, and retarded or dying children would thus be denied our new humane “aid-in-dying.” But not to worry.
What's going on with Canada's MAiD program? Let's ask the physicians in charge.
This piece took a long time to report. I interviewed 50+ people. I went over two years of training seminars. And it turns out, MAiD in Canada is seriously flawed thenewatlantis.com/publications/n…
Stefanie Green is the president of CAMAP, Canada's leading organization of MAiD providers and assessors. She told me that no one is accessing MAiD because of a lack of housing--or poverty, or lack of medical care.
But her own organization presented multiple seminars on exactly that. In April and May of 2021, and April of 2022, CAMAP held seminars and panels on MAiD being provided because of a "lack of resources".