Showing posts with label Will Johnston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Will Johnston. Show all posts

Thursday, September 29, 2016

New Assisted Dying law claims unintended victims.

This article was written by Dr Will Johnston, a Vancouver physician, and published in the Huffington Post on September 28, 2016.


Will Johnston is a family physician and the chair of EPC-BC

The Carter decision to allow assisted suicide and euthanasia claimed that Canada could avoid abuses through careful guidelines and screening. Medically facilitated elder abuse by greedy relatives and medicalized suicide for the depressed -- a grim reality where this practice is legal -- were supposed to be avoidable, said the judge,because of a superior medical culture in Canada. The abuses of Belgium? Not for us.

Experience proves otherwise.

According to the new law, it will be five years before Canada's assisted suicide and euthanasia regime has to report back to the nation. Two stories offer reasons why that report will fail to reveal those depressed patients, far from death, who are steered to suicide by others and by their untreated mental illness.

A friend, herself dealing with advanced ovarian cancer, heard from a neighbour that his wife was going to get assisted suicide. The neighbour said they would be going to a doctor in Vancouver to get this done. This baffled my friend, who had seen the woman outside her home, gardening. The husband made other comments suggesting that his wife would be dead soon. She had heart trouble.

My friend tipped off her own nurse to get community services involved and the suicidal woman's depression began to be addressed by a nurse and social worker. This apparently able-bodied woman did not go to Vancouver right away -- but she had been invited, as soon became clear.

I will let my friend's words testify to the end of that story:

"A few days later the husband came over with a clipboard and a pen. He started by saying, "Damn government did not pass the bill." He asked me to sign a form -- that he needed two signatures for the doctor in Vancouver. He stated that none of their family and friends would sign. I almost passed out! 
Seriously. I told him I would not sign. He assumed that it was on religious grounds and I said no it was experiential. He said "OK, then I will ask your husband." I told him he had better not even bring it up! 
We went on a two-day visit to the grandsons and came back on June 7 (the designated day of the euthanasia) and his balcony was draped in black crepe. 
Several days later I bumped into him at the mailbox and he complained that none of the neighbours had given condolences even though he made it obvious that [his wife] had "passed." I asked him how he was and he said that his wife had a nice last day, that she liked the walk around the seawall. 
He also told me that he felt sorry for the poor doctor because she was so tired because she had so many euthanasias that day. He and the boyfriend are now residing together in a big new travel coach parked elsewhere in the same trailer park and the Mustang has become the vehicle of preference and he sold his house. No one talks to him..."
This appears to be medical homicide as a solution to depression, apparently facilitated by a husband with other interests.

Several weeks ago I was contacted by the wife of a young man with a neurological disease. The man had been assured by a euthanasia-performing doctor in Vancouver that he qualified for an assisted suicide. He was depressed and never ventured outdoors.

At the patient's invitation I visited him in his shared room in a dingy nursing home, a place once described to me as "a prison." He told me about his struggle to find a cure with massive doses of vitamins. He was less disabled than, for instance, Walter Lawrence, who works in Vancouver as an inspiring peer counsellor to spinal injury patients and others.

But this patient had lost hope for the future and felt his existence was meaningless and that death was the only solution. This death-focused tunnel vision defines a suicidal depression, and any able-bodied person would be given psychological help to relieve it. This disabled man, who was nowhere near dying, was instead killed by a Vancouver physician.

The physician's rationale for circumventing the law, reportedly given over the phone before she met or examined the patient, was that he could easily get bed sores and then die of infection, so that his death "was reasonably foreseeable."

What surprised his wife was "how easy" it was for her depressed, self-isolated husband to be killed under the new regime. What seems obvious is that the whole nature of this death is not going to be reported to the Minister of Health or the Minister of Justice -- there is no transparency to this system.

Five years from now, the mandatory report is going to be full of bland and self-justifying statistics presented by the very doctors who have done the killing. By sanitizing these medicalized suicides and homicides with the now-familiar euphemisms about "medical aid in dying," the uninvolved public will be reassured that nothing has gone wrong.

Canada has simply created a system which offers, and completes, suicide for people whose personalities, disabilities and personal situations put them at high risk for it. Well over a hundred real people have died in the few months since the old law was discarded. To complain that this was repeatedly predicted is to indulge in powerless understatement.

And next, we have the unfolding tragedy of palliative care. That medical specialty has always struggled to reassure fearful dying people that palliation has nothing to do with "mercy killing" and assisted suicide. Reluctant families have been truthfully promised that hospice nurses and doctors are not self-appointed angels of death.

Sadly, palliative care wards and hospices across Canada are, right now, in a hailstorm of administrative edicts to perform euthanasia inside their walls, in whispering range of those families and patients who had been promised a refuge of care.

Violating the principles and purposes of palliative care is in no way required by the new law. The thoughtless imposition of this radical shift needs to be halted. Hospital administrators can and must provide other locations for those few final minutes.

Our Minister of Health and her provincial colleagues would be wise to act quickly on this. The principles of suicide prevention have been betrayed. It is not inevitable that the principles of palliative care must be next.


Friday, June 3, 2016

Will Johnston: The case against physician-assisted dying

This article was published by the CanadianHealthcareNetwork.ca on June 1, 2016
Discussed: The 'wedge' cases, the language of the debate, the moral culpability of the doctor, and the question of pure autonomy
Dr Will Johnston
By Tristan Bronca.


The Euthanasia Prevention Coalition was officially founded in 1998 in response to rising public support for physician-assisted dying. It’s made up of about 2,000 donors—both members and organizations—who began to come together in about 1993 during the Sue Rodriguez case. One of those members is Dr. Will Johnston.

Now the chair of the B.C. chapter of the coalition, the family physician took a strong stance against euthanasia about 22 years ago, when he began writing about it and speaking to high school students and church groups. He also testified opposite euthanasia advocates in the Carter case, which led to the legalization of medically assisted death in Canada. Dr. Johnston spoke with the Medical Post about his concerns with the legislation recently passed through the house of commons, the laws around the world, and why he feels Canada is about to make a dangerous mistake.

Q: Explain the impetus for a coalition of bodies who are opposed to physician-assisted dying.

The bodies that are involved in the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition might not agree on any other issue but they share in common a sense of the huge societal mistake that is being made in euthanasia and assisted suicide. We realize that there is some strength in numbers. Obviously not enough strength to stop the freight train that ended with the Supreme Court being unanimous in its decision—which I think is a troubling sign of the shallowness of the Supreme Court’s reasoning—but nonetheless more power than we would have as individual activists.

Q: Which elements of the proposed federal legislation do you personally find most troubling?

The legislation doesn’t yet allow the euthanasia of children, psychiatric patients, or mentally incapable patients long after they consent, but the preamble to the legislation promises to explore those areas further, which is deeply troubling.

The activists who won in the Supreme Court won in part because they assured Canadians that they weren’t talking about those three groups. They were only talking about competent adults at the end of their lives who were able to give consent at the time they were killed.

Q: So you see the expansion of the legislation to include these other groups as problematic?

Absolutely. It seems clear that this no longer has anything to do with dying. This legislation has left open the door for assistance for people who want to commit suicide but don’t want to do it themselves, while it was originally marketed as helping terminally ill people in terrible pain to die sooner than they would have otherwise died. The latter was used as the cloak to wrap the agenda inside.

When the real agenda is to allow anyone who is dissatisfied with their life to be killed with the endorsement and assistance of the national medical system, it makes sense to hide those intentions behind the story of a person about to die who was having difficulty controlling physical symptoms.

Q: My understanding is that the reason why this legislation may be extended to psychiatric patients and to mature minors is because the legal experts didn’t feel that exempting those two groups would stand up to a charter challenge. It would be discriminatory to bar them from access to the service that is now being talked about as a universal human right.

You’re absolutely right and, in fact, I was making that point exactly as you have just made it back in the days when we were in court with Gloria Taylor and the Carters. You could never contain it to just these terminally ill patients but in court that’s all they claimed they were asking for: Terminally ill, capable adults who were suffering intolerably at the end of their lives and who consented and were capable of consent to be killed. That was the story on which the Carter case was won. . . .

These judicial activists were happy to pass the Carter case through on the narrow grounds knowing that it would be expanded later. They were happy to make an incremental change that they knew could not withstand a further charter challenge because of section 15 equality rights and so-forth.

Friday, May 13, 2016

Will Johnston - speech euthanasia on euthanasia Bill C-14 - Victoria BC - May 12, 2016

Dr Will Johnston
Dr Will Johnston
Chair, Euthanasia Prevention Coalition of BC

I have a dream, and in that dream the Parliament of Canada debates far into the night to perfect a new law. The new Bill has the support of the majority of our elected representatives. It strives to get just the right balance between Federal and Provincial powers over matters of life and death. In my dream hundreds of Canadians testify before Committees and Panels and town hall meetings. They all want a better Canada. In my dream our Parliament is working against a deadline to get a law into place which honors the highest aspirations of our civilization. Finally the law has passed through the Senate and passed through Parliament and one day, let’s imagine June 6 of the year in my dream, the law goes into force.

What a law! What an achievement, worth every one of those late nights of intense Parliamentary debate and Special Joint Committees and Provincial Territorial Expert Panels and External Panels and town hall meetings and letters and papers and open-line radio shows and documentaries.

In my dream the new law says that anyone in severe pain anywhere in Canada is treated like a cardiac arrest, an emergency which activates a team of specially trained people. Anyone who is depressed and suicidal, anywhere in Canada, is treated like a house on fire, with immediate attention from another team of specially but of course differently trained people. People who are trying to live independently with major disabilities are funded and equipped like a Canadian Olympic team should be. Families with children with disabilities are treated like royalty. Having a disability or having a family member with a disability guarantees you will be kept far above the poverty line, never below that line and forgotten in the economic ditch. A report of possible elder abuse is by law to be treated like an Amber Alert, and abusers exposed to the clear light of emergency inquiry.

What a dream. When the real Canada wakes up on June 6th, it will be to a new law far removed from my dream. Instead, our great nation labored and brought forth – what?- a legal excuse to protect a doctor or nurse from a murder charge as long as they are under the opinion that you fit the right criteria before your death is inflicted. The law will let someone else sign you up, unlimited doctor shopping to find two of them to agree you are better off dead, no independent objective review before the planned death, no required notification of family members, no need for you to be actually dying, no need to be offered alternatives to suicide, no guarantee the death certificate will state the true cause of inflicted death, no requirement for a pain control assessment, no ban on health care workers being intimidated to cooperate.

The new law is careful to protect doctors. Mind you, doctors are not protected in order to use their consciences, they are protected while making mistakes causing wrongful death.

The polls show that people can imagine choosing the time of their own deaths. People expect that when that time comes , they will be in control. They think they have been given a new right, but instead they have lost the protections built into the old law. Someone will have control, all right, just maybe not always you.

To reassure those euthanasia activists for whom the new law could never go far enough, the preamble to the law promises that once the dust has settled we will look at killing children, and people whose only problems are psychiatric, and people who are cognitively disabled.

How could this happen? Parliament defeated at least 13 attempts to make such a law over the past 20 years. Basically, medically inflicted death got draped with medical prestige by the same brilliant marketing that sells everything else in our culture. The polls reflected a public who bought the marketing and didn’t get the whole picture. Then came the judges. Politicians are expected to watch the polls, judges are expected to apply the laws. Something got mixed up and judges started giving more deference to the polls than to Parliament. But judges who look to opinion polls are looking in the wrong place. Some things are wrong even when nobody will say they are. A wrong thing can’t be turned into something good and true by a poll, a judge, or a law.

So what can every one of us do?

Go to www.canadiansforconscience.ca and click on” Federal Government” and send a letter to Members of Parliament or Senators or our Justice Minister. Conscience protection is the only way that a safe haven can be maintained in our health care system. Remember that our Catholic hospitals are our best chance to keep safe places for our families in the health care system. Be ferocious in the defence of these hospitals and do anything you can to support them.

At the start of this speech I listed truly good things waiting to be done. Be full of gratitude for the freedom to do good and do it any way you can.

Thankyou.
Dr Will Johnston.


Tuesday, May 3, 2016

EPC needs you to contact Members of Parliament.

The House of Commons Committee on Justice and Human Rights will be hearing interventions concerning Bill C-14, the bill that will legalize and “regulate” euthanasia and assisted suicide in Canada.

Several MP's have said that they are receiving more communication from members of the euthanasia lobby than from our supporters. 


EPC urges you to contact members of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights with your concerns about Bill C-14.

EPC also urges you to contact the members of the Senate Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs.


Resources information:
Link to the article on Bill C-14 by Alex Schadenberg.
Link to the article on Bill C-14 by the Physicians Alliance Against Euthanasia.
Link to the article on Bill C-14 by Dr Will Johnston (EPC - BC).
Link to the article on Bill C-14 by Charles Lewis.
Link to the article on Bill C-14 by Andrew Coyne.
Link to the article on Bill C-14 by Amy Hasbrouck (Toujours Vivant - Not Dead Yet).

Contact information for Committee members:

Committee Chair: Anthony Housefather (Lib) - Anthony.Housefather@parl.gc.ca

Committee Vice Chair: Ted Falk (CPC) - Ted.Falk@parl.gc.ca

Committee Vice Chair: Murray Rankin (NDP) - Murray.Rankin@parl.gc.ca

Committee Member: Chris Bittle (Lib) - Chris.Bittle@parl.gc.ca

Committee Member: Michael Cooper (CPC) - Michael.Cooper@parl.gc.ca

Committee Member: Colin Fraser (Lib) - Colin.Fraser@parl.gc.ca

Committee Member: Ahmed Hussen (Lib) - Ahmed.Hussen@parl.gc.ca

Committee Member: Iqra Khalid (Lib) - Iqra.Khalid@parl.gc.ca

Committee Member: Ron McKinnon (Lib) - Ron.McKinnon@parl.gc.ca

Committee Member: Hon. Rob Nicholson (CPC) - rob.nicholson@parl.gc.ca

EPC also encourages you to send letters to your Members of Parliament. Link to contact your Member of Parliament.

You can mail letters to Members of Parliament (Postage Free) by sending letters to:

(Name) Member of Parliament
House of Commons
Ottawa Ontario K1A 0A6

Sunday, April 24, 2016

The Deadly problems with euthanasia Bill C-14

This article was written by Dr Will Johnston and published in the Huffington Post on April 22, 2016.

Dr Will Johnston
Dr Will Johnston is the Chair of EPC - BC.

It is not surprising that many Canadians are concerned about the dangers of the new assisted suicide and euthanasia bill, C-14.

What is really not credible is how the word-benders who used the Charter "right to life" to legalize the intentional suicide or killing of some patients are now protesting that they have been cheated of total victory. While they were in court, they said that all they wanted was for competent consenting adults who were suffering terribly at the end of life to be able to have a doctor kill them, with no criminal consequences for anyone.

Now they are hopping mad that non-adults and those who are mentally incompetent, those unable to consent, those whose suffering is purely psychological, and those with years to live just might be excluded. They don't have to worry. The same semantic ju-jitsu which delivered the Carter decision to them will have no problem convincing the courts to invite whoever else to the death party.

"Even Kay Carter would not have qualified under C-14" , says the BCCLA organization, which wants assisted suicide and euthanasia to be widely available. This is hard to believe. An awful lot of people will qualify under C-14.

Are you eligible for your provincial medicare?

Are you an adult?

Do you have a grievous medical condition (like Kay Carter's spinal stenosis)?

Is it irremediable (if you decline surgery for spinal stenosis it automatically becomes irremediable)?

Are you in an advanced state (not defined) of irreversible decline (spinal stenosis won't go away without surgery)?

Is your situation intolerable (your call)?

Is your death reasonably foreseeable ( like it is for 89 year olds like Kay Carter)?

Do you want to die?

We just approved Kay Carter for assisted suicide. How hard was that?

Now let's say you have some money and some real estate and your heirs are waiting for you to die. Your doctor does some tests and thinks you have something - let's call it malignant sarcophagosis. You are duly impressed and share your story with your beneficiaries. Under C-14, your beneficiaries can tell you how you don't have to suffer and how OK it would be with them if you let a doctor, nurse practitioner, or anyone aiding them kill you . Blatantly urging someone to commit suicide remains illegal, but how do we enforce that against a quiet word, a wink and a nod?

One of your heirs can even sign the request for you, if you have difficulty writing.

Then two independent doctors will agree that malignant sarcophagosis will work for you just like spinal stenosis would have for Kay Carter. It is not surprising that they will agree, because one of those independent doctors is the one who will kill you with an intravenous injection or provide you with suicide pills. The other doctor will reliably concur, not least because there is no limit to the doctor shopping to locate a compliant one.

But what if your sarcophagosis is of milder sort, the semi-malignant kind? No problem, because your "natural death" just has to be "reasonably foreseeable", and no need to specify "the specific length of time."

But what if the physicians goofed, and you don't have malignant sarcophagosis, or the mental competence to consent, or an uncoerced wish to die? No worries, because a blanket protection called "reasonable but mistaken belief" about "any fact" protects them even if you are dead as a result.

Oh, by the way, absolutely anyone is allowed to "assist" you to administer your suicide dose, with no oversight yet mentioned in this law. If you had changed your mind and struggled, who would know?

Meanwhile, aboriginal leaders, including Liberal MP Robert-Falcon Ouellette , are justified in wondering where the intensity required to prevent suicide among youth is going to come from.

If one ounce of the effort that has been put into assisted suicide and euthanasia had gone toward suicide prevention, or of course palliative care, it would be easier to take the howls of outrage from the extremists for whom C-14 will never go far enough.

So what should be done? Ideally, throw out the law, and strengthen the wording of the current law against assisting suicide (because the Supreme Court played games with the old wording about needing to protect only the "vulnerable"). Make palliative care access, not suicide access, mandatory in law.

But failing that, at bare minimum ensure independent third party review before all proposed deaths. Don't let any two wannabe Kevorkians wave these things through. Defend the rights of all Canadians by guaranteeing that no doctor or institution will be coerced to participate, and say so loud and clear in the law.

We must not leave such a pillar of our freedom to an uncertain fate inside Ministry of Health regulations, which, "for lack of time," have not yet been revealed.

Will Johnston is a Vancouver family physician and Chair of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition of BC


Thursday, April 14, 2016

Euthanasia Prevention Coalition: the design of the euthanasia law will either discourage or enable abuse.

Media Release

April 14, 2016

The Euthanasia Prevention Coalition (EPC) opposes giving anyone, the power in law, to cause the death of another person. We oppose any form of euthanasia and assisted suicide. 


In all jurisdictions where assisted death is legal, the laws lack effective oversight stated Alex Schadenberg, EPC executive director. Even the need for consent from the patient may often be ignored.
A study concerning assisted deaths in Belgium published in the NEJM (March 2015) found that more than 1000 deaths were intentionally hastened without request in the Flanders region of Belgium in 2013. The same study determined that many assisted deaths were not reported.
EPC legal counsel, Hugh Scher, urges the government to ensure effective oversight of the law. 
Prior approval by the court or an expert panel is essential to any assisted suicide regime that Parliament introduces. It is the only way to ensure compliance with legislative criteria established to identify vulnerability and prevent abuse of the law before people are put to death.
EPC VP Amy Hasbrouck,  a lawyer and disability leader, works in coalition with many groups.
Effective oversight based on a court approved or expert panel is endorsed by multiple stakeholders across the country including from the disability community, the medical community and legal experts.
Dr. Will Johnston, EPC – BC Chair stated that Euthanasia is not a form of health care. 
Defining euthanasia as health care would mean that lethal injections become a form of medical treatment. Not only is this an Orwellian concept, but may leave Canadians without a safe space within the healthcare system.
Dr Johnston continued: 
Forcing doctors to participate in killing their patients is paternalistic. To require doctors to refer patients to a doctor who will lethally inject them undermines conscience rights and my oath that I will “Do No Harm.”
EPC urges the government to protect people at the most vulnerable time of life.

For more information contact:

Alex Schadenberg, Executive Director (London) 519-851-1434, info@epcc.ca

Hugh Scher, EPC Legal Counsel (Toronto) 416-816-6115, hugh@sdlaw.ca

Dr Will Johnston, Chair EPC – BC (Vancouver) 604-220-2042, willjohnston@shaw.ca

Amy Hasbrouck, EPC – VP (Montréal) 450-921-3057, tigrlily@gmail.com

Wednesday, February 3, 2016

Joint Parliamentary Committee on Assisted Suicide Refuses to hear from leading experts on the need for effective oversight to protect Canadians

TORONTO, Feb. 3, 2016 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE

Fundamental to keeping Canadians safe in the operation of a state-sanctioned assisted dying regime is the need for rigorous before the fact oversight by an independent judge or tribunal stated Hugh Scher, Toronto constitutional lawyer and disability rights advocate. Scher stated:
Hugh Scher
Before the fact judicial oversight is essential to any assisted suicide regime that Parliament may seek to introduce. It is the only way to ensure compliance with legislative criteria established to identify vulnerability and prevent abuse before people are put to death.
EPC VP Amy Hasbrouch stated that:
This position is endorsed by multiple stakeholders across the country including from the disability community, the medical community and legal experts.
In all jurisdictions where assisted death is legal, the laws lack effective oversight. Consequently, safeguards, including the need for consent from the patient are routinely ignored.

A study published in the NEJM (March 19, 2015) found that 1.7% of all deaths in the Flanders region of Belgium in 2013 were assisted without request. Therefore more than 1000 deaths were intentionally hastened without request. The same study determined that nearly half of the assisted deaths went unreported states Alex Schadenberg, EPC executive director.

Dr. Will Johnston states that adoption of a Belgian-style euthanasia regime in Canada, such as has been adopted in Quebec, without effective before the fact judicial oversight to ensure compliance with legislative requirements would be a recipe for disaster that is certain to put Canadians at risk.


Euthanasia is not a form of health care. Defining euthanasia as health care would mean that lethal injections become a form of medical treatment. Not only is this an Orwellian concept, but it is one that would certainly leave Canadians without a safe space within the healthcare system, states Dr. Johnston, Chair of EPC – British Columbia.

Despite more than 15 years of extensive experience with the legal, medical and practical challenges associated with assisted suicide practices in other jurisdictions, the Joint Parliamentary Committee has deliberately refused to hear from leading constitutional, medical and sociological experts, who have previously advocated against the adoption of euthanasia or assisted suicide in Canada because of the risks that it poses to all Canadians and our healthcare system.

Failure to hear particularly from those who are experts who raise concerns about euthanasia practices in other jurisdictions represents a fatal flaw to the committee's deliberations and an intentional attempt to silence those with differing viewpoints while embracing those who promote unbridled euthanasia. Such an approach runs completely contrary to the Government's stated objective of conducting a comprehensive consultation with all relevant stakeholders in order to implement a safe and measured response to the Supreme Court's ruling.

The Supreme Court's conclusion that assisted suicide could be legalized safely in Canada is predicated on the notion of strong federal regulation. The court concluded that a legislative response would require a "carefully designed and monitored system of safeguards." It was only the possibility of crafting a scheme with such effective oversight and safeguards that led the court to reject the argument that weakening the prohibitions will inevitably lead to the casual termination of life including the lives of individuals who do not wish to die, notes Scher.

The Committee's exclusion and refusal to hear from leading national experts on the subject call into question its motives and actions and greatly undermines the conclusions it may draw as a consequence of its limited and self-selected inquiry.

For more information contact:
Alex Schadenberg, Executive Director (London) 519-851-1434, info@epcc.ca
Hugh Scher, EPC Legal Counsel (Toronto) 416-816-6115, hugh@sdlaw.ca
Dr Will Johnston, Chair EPC – BC (Vancouver): 604-220-2042, willjohnston@shaw.ca
Amy Hasbrouck, EPC – VP (Montréal): 450-921-3057, tigrlily@gmail.com

Friday, October 30, 2015

Montreal Euthanasia Symposium: Theory and Reality about Euthanasia

Media Release - October 30, 2015

The Physicians’ Alliance against Euthanasia, the Living with Dignity network and the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition (EPC) are coming together for a one day conference on Saturday October 31, 2015 at the Best Western Ville Marie hotel in Montréal, to discuss our common concerns and directions.

The Quebec euthanasia experiment is scheduled to begin on December 10. The vast majorityof physicians around the world have always rejected euthanasia, above all because it is a public safety hazard: it can drive people to throw away years of their lives and provide caregivers and heirs with enormous power. Although it gives an illusion of control, the option of euthanasia will undoubtedly erode medical diligence and creativity in the medical care of people both chronically disabled and acutely disabled by illness.  

Most patients fear suffering at the end of life. This has always been the case. But we must find a less dangerous option than the constant availability of “death on demand” to address these fears. In extreme cases, i.e. for the small minority of patients for whom other options are not completely effective, palliative sedation can answer all symptom control problems.

Quebec has the only law in the world which attempts to coerce doctors to refer patients for euthanasia. Such pointless authoritarianism, of which we already had a taste in September, is a dangerous precedent which must be formally rejected.   

From a logistical point of view patients do not need help from their treating physician to access euthanasia: the government could easily set up a system of self-referral to voluntarily licensed doctors who are willing to practice euthanasia. This would avoid trampling on the professional judgment and conscience of the rest of the medical profession. 

We reject the concept that euthanasia is any kind of health care. We reject bullying physicians into referring their patients for death. And we reject the concept that intentional death is a solution to human distress.

Dr Catherine Ferrier – President, Physicians Alliance Against Euthanasia (514) 623-5737
Dr Will Johnston – Chair, EPC - BC (604) 220-2042
Dr Margaret Cottle – Vice President, EPC (604) 222-0288
Dr Marc Beauchamp – President, Living with Dignity Network.

Alex Schadenberg - Executive Director, Euthanasia Prevention Coalition (519) 851-1434

Symposium de Montréal : la théorie et la réalité sur l’euthanasie

Communiqué de presse 30 octobre 2015

Le Collectif  des médecins contre l'euthanasie, le réseau citoyen Vivre dans la dignité et la Euthanasia Prevention Coalition sont réunis pour une conférence ce samedi 31 octobre 2015 à l'hôtel Best Western Ville Marie pour discuter de nos préoccupations et de nos orientations communes.

Le 10 décembre marquera le début de l’expérimentation de l'euthanasie au Québec. Jusqu’à maintenant, la vaste majorité des médecins à travers le monde rejette l'euthanasie, entre autres parce qu’elle représente un danger pour la sécurité publique: elle peut pousser des gens à renoncer à des années de leur vie et donne un pouvoir immense au personnel soignant et aux héritiers. L’option euthanasie procurera certes une illusion de contrôle, mais il ne fait aucun doute qu’elle érodera la diligence et la créativité dans les soins médicaux, tant pour les personnes avec un handicap chronique que pour les personnes gravement affligées par la maladie.

La plupart des patients craignent de souffrir à la fin de leurs jours. Il en a toujours été ainsi. Mais nous devons trouver une solution moins dangereuse que la disponibilité constante de la « mort sur demande » pour répondre à ces craintes. Dans les cas extrêmes, c’est-à-dire pour la petite minorité de patients pour qui les autres options ne sont pas totalement efficaces, la sédation palliative peut répondre à tous les problèmes de contrôle des symptômes.

Le Québec a la seule loi au monde qui veut contraindre les médecins traitants à référer les patients pour obtenir l'euthanasie. Un tel autoritarisme inutile, manifesté publiquement en septembre dernier, constitue un dangereux précédent qui devrait être formellement rejeté.

D’un point de vue logistique, un patient n'a aucunement besoin de l’intervention de son médecin traitant pour avoir accès à l'euthanasie. Le gouvernement pourrait facilement mettre en place un système dans lequel le patient aurait accès par lui-même à des médecins certifiés et volontaires qui accepteraient de pratiquer des euthanasies. De cette façon, on ne foulerait pas aux pieds le jugement professionnel et la conscience des autres membres de la profession médicale.

Nous rejetons le concept que l'euthanasie constitue un quelconque soin de santé. Nous rejetons l'intimidation des médecins pour les forcer à référer leurs patients vers la mort. Et nous rejetons l'idée que la mort provoquée soit une solution à la détresse humaine.

Dr Catherine Ferrier - Le Collectif  des médecins contre l'euthanasie, (514) 623-5737
Dr Will Johnston - L'euthanasie Prevention Coalition - BC
Dr Margaret Cottle - L'euthanasie Prevention Coalition
Dr Marc Beauchamp - Vivre dans la dignité 

Alex Schadenberg
Directeur exécutif
L'euthanasie Prevention Coalition
(519) 851-1434

Monday, October 19, 2015

Beware of Assisted Suicide Bullies.

This article was published in the National Post on October 19, 2015.

Will Johnston
By Will Johnston


Dr Will Johnston is a family physician in Vancouver and the chair of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition of BC

For at least a few more months, the Canadian medical system will continue to be a safe space, free of assisted suicide and euthanasia. But all that is about to change. In order to ensure our hospitals and palliative care centres remain places where patients feel safe and secure, we must respect doctors’ conscience rights, rather than listen to activists who seek to impose their one-size-fits-all policy on the rest of us.

For instance, the palliative care centres in Quebec that refuse to have anything to do with euthanasia, for reasons of medical judgment and ethics, have apparently angered Jean-Pierre Menard, the lawyer who helped write Quebec’s euthanasia law, Bill 52. The act specifically states that palliative care centres are not required to provide euthanasia service — but maybe to Menard, those were just soothing words to get the bill passed. Now Menard says money should be taken away from palliative services that won’t provide euthanasia on their premises. And the minister of health, Gaetan Barrette, has threatened to revoke the hospital privileges of doctors who won’t comply.

This is wrong. The doctors and nurses who devote themselves to the care of dying people reject euthanasia because it is a tempting substitute for diligence and creativity. People with exceptionally difficult end-of-life illnesses can have reversible palliative sedation, which preserves their life and completely alleviates their symptoms. This makes intentionally killing the patient an unnecessary, dangerous and irreversible intrusion.

Quebec’s hospice workers are wary of the risks and harms, which include causing distress among many dying patients and their family members who want safe spaces with no risk of interaction with euthanasia-minded doctors or nurses. (The broadly worded law would seem to allow for disabled or depressed people who are not dying to be killed as well, but these people are living in the community, not in palliative care centres.)

So why the temper tantrum from the euthanasia enthusiasts who designed Bill 52? We are seeing a winner-takes-all mentality among the activists who recently celebrated the Supreme Court’s carter decision legalizing assisted suicide and possibly euthanasia. These activists are far from planning a peaceful coexistence with those many doctors and nurses who want nothing to do with killing or suicide.

After years of agitation by publicly funded activist Jocelyn Downie, an assault on the objectors’ rights to exist as doctors and nurses in the Canadian health-care system is underway. Downie and others claim that unless their version of medical ethics reigns, a patient’s choice to undergo euthanasia and assisted suicide is threatened.

But many patients would choose against having suicide pills and lethal injections available in their hospital. And Downie and company seem oblivious to the demoralization of doctors and nurses who are being told to do what they think is wrong because tax dollars pay for the buildings.

It is alarming to see an activist assault on medical judgment inside Quebecois politics, but truly dangerous when officials in the provincial colleges of physicians and surgeons buy in. Using bits of Downie’s preferred “model conscience policy” word-for-word, the college in Saskatchewan has been angling to coerce its members into referring patients for assisted-suicide and euthanasia services, just as Ontario’s college did a few months ago. This arm-twisting is notable for its pointlessness. In our totally connected world, suicidal people and others under their direction will have no more trouble contacting euthanasia providers than ordering pizza.

With a little creativity and a spirit of fairness, it would be easy to design a system that allows legal but unsavory practices like euthanasia without bullying those who want to continue providing actual medical care. Our hospitals and hospices are national treasures that are awaiting an invasion by bitterly contentious new practices. This is faced with deep foreboding by many of us.

Monday, October 5, 2015

Assisted suicide and euthanasia: political parties are fleeing their responsibilities

The election campaign is moving ahead and politicians are firing out their promises. Yet despite their life or death implication for all Canadians, the issues of assisted suicide and euthanasia remain taboo! The next government will have as a first duty the enormous responsibility of passing a law to regulate assisted suicide in time for the Supreme Court’s February 6, 2016 deadline.

Moreover, the aggressive reaction of Quebec politicians against palliative care professionals who refuse to kill people under their care announces a serious danger for all of Canada. This attack on freedom strongly suggests that the "right to die" will inevitably become an obligation to kill if we do not take all legislative precautions to avoid it.

We recognize that the wording of laws and regulations will either enable or discourage misuse of assisted suicide or euthanasia. However, it is well known that no safeguards can entirely prevent the deaths of ineligible and non-consenting people. The data from a recent study in Belgium, where euthanasia is legal, found that 1.7% of all deaths were intentionally hastened without request and people with depression and cognitive disorders are dying by euthanasia. The new Canadian government must use all means available to prevent such tragedies.

Faced with the silence of the political parties, the Physicians’ Alliance against Euthanasia, the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition (EPC), the EPC – BC, and Living with Dignity are adding their voice to those calling for a clear position with firm commitments from all political parties before the end of the election campaign so that Canadians can make an informed choice.

Together, we ask that all political parties publicly commit themselves to enact legislation and implement regulations which:

• protect vulnerable citizens from inducement to suicide, including people with physical and intellectual disabilities, those with mental illness, loss of autonomy or advanced chronic disease, and those at the end of life; 
• improve the quality and accessibility of palliative care for all Canadians, for there is no true free and informed consent to death if the patient is not aware of, or has no access to, the alternatives; 
• uphold freedom of conscience for caregivers in all health care environments by preventing any form of coercion and pressure to participate in the killing of persons under their care.
It would be a serious injustice to Canadians to leave unaddressed such fundamental issues for the future of our society. Canadians have the right to know how our elderly, disabled and terminally ill citizens will be treated after the federal election of October 19.

For more information contact:

Suicide assisté et euthanasie : les partis politiques fuient leurs responsabilités

La campagne électorale avance et les politiciens mitraillent leurs promesses. Or les enjeux liés au suicide assisté et à l’euthanasie continuent d’être un tabou, même s’il s’agit d’une question de vie ou de mort qui concerne toute la population canadienne! Le prochain gouvernement aura comme premier devoir l’immense responsabilité de faire passer une loi pour réglementer le suicide-assisté à temps pour la date d’échéance donnée par la Cour suprême, soit le 6 février 2016.

De plus, la réaction agressive des politiciens du Québec contre les professionnels des soins palliatifs qui refusent de tuer des personnes sous leurs soins annonce un sérieux danger pour tout le Canada. Cette attaque à la liberté suggère fortement que le "droit de mourir" versera inévitablement dans l’obligation de tuer si nous ne prenons pas toutes les précautions législatives pour l'éviter.

Nous reconnaissons que les termes utilisés dans les lois et la réglementation auront pour effet d’encourager ou de décourager l'utilisation abusive du suicide assisté ou l'euthanasie. Cependant, il s’agit d’un fait avéré qu’aucune protection ne peut complètement empêcher les décès de personnes non admissibles et non consentantes. Les données d’une récente étude belge, où l’euthanasie est légale, montre que 1,7% des décès ont été intentionnellement hâtés sans qu’il n’y ait eu demande. Et des personnes souffrant de dépression et de troubles cognitifs meurent par euthanasie. Le nouveau gouvernement canadien devra utiliser tous les moyens pour prévenir ce genre de tragédies.  

Ainsi, devant le silence des partis politiques, le Collectif des médecins contre l’euthanasie, la Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, la Euthanasia Prevention Coalition – BC , et Vivre dans la Dignité ajoutent leur voix à toutes celles qui réclament une prise de position claire avec engagements fermes de la part de tous les partis politiques avant la fin de la campagne électorale pour que la population canadienne puisse faire un choix éclairé.

Ensemble, nous réclamons que tous les partis politiques s'engagent publiquement à adopter une législation et à mettre en œuvre des règlements qui vont:
 protéger les citoyens vulnérables contre l'incitation au suicide, y compris les personnes avec des handicaps physiques et intellectuels, celles atteintes de maladie mentale ou de maladie chronique avancée et celles en perte d'autonomie ou en fin de vie; 
  améliorer la qualité et l'accessibilité des soins palliatifs pour toute la population canadienne parce qu’il n'y a pas de véritable consentement libre et éclairé à vouloir la mort si le patient n’a pas connaissance ou n’a pas accès aux alternatives; 
   respecter la liberté de conscience pour les soignants dans tous les environnements de travail en prévenant toute forme de coercition et de pression contre les professionnels qui refusent de tuer des personnes sous leurs soins. 
Ce serait une grave injustice envers la population canadienne que de laisser en suspens des enjeux aussi fondamentaux pour l’avenir de notre société La population a le droit de savoir comment les citoyens âgés, handicapés ou en fin de vie seront traités après l'élection fédérale du 19 octobre.

Pour plus d’informations, veuillez contacter:
  • Aubert Martin, (Montréal QC), info@vivredignite.org, 438-931-1233
  • Catherine Ferrier, (Montréal, QC), info@collectifmedecins.org, 438-938-9410
  • Dr Will Johnston, (Vancouver BC), willjohnston@shaw.ca, 604-220-2042
  • Alex Schadenberg, (London ON), info@epcc.ca, 519-851-1434

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Euthanasia Symposium 2015


The Euthanasia Symposium 2015 is in Montreal at the Best Western - Ville Marie Hotel and Suites on October 31, 2015 from 9 am to 5 pm.

Book your room at the hotel for $119 single or $149 double by calling: 1-800-361-7791.

The Euthanasia Symposium 2015 is an event of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, the Physicians Alliance Against Euthanasia and the Living with Dignity.

Registration is only $50 and includes lunch and coffee breaks.


Margaret Somerville
Speakers include:
  • Dr Margaret Somerville: She will be speaking from her new book: Bird on an ethical wire.
  • Dr Margaret Cottle: Palliative care physician and Vice President of EPC.
  • Dr Will Johnston: Family Physician, Chair of EPC - BC.
  • Dr Patrick Vinay: Former Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, University of Montreal.
  • Dr Catherine Ferrier: Geriatrician, President - Physicians Alliance Against Euthanasia.
  • Amy Hasbrouck: Lawyer and Director of Toujours Vivant - Not Dead Yet Canada.
  • Nic Steenhout: Former Director of Living with Dignity Québec.
  • Albertos Polizogopoulos: Lawyer, who will be speaking on Physicians Conscience Rights.
  • Alex Schadenberg: Executive Director - Euthanasia Prevention Coalition
  • Hugh Scher: Legal Counsel - Euthanasia Prevention Coalition
  • Jen Romnes: Will be sharing her story (book) about caring for her mother.
Register by contacting the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition at: 1-877-439-3348 or info@epcc.ca

Thursday, September 10, 2015

California assisted suicide bill and World Suicide Prevention Day.

By Alex Schadenberg
International Chair, Euthanasia Prevention Coalition

Yesterday, California assisted suicide bill ABX2-15 narrowly passed in the California assembly, in-spite of the fact that disability rights group opposed the dangerous bill.


Link to the petition urging Governor Jerry Brown to Veto assisted suicide bill ABX2-15 petition.

This vote occurred on the eve of World Suicide Prevention Day (September 10) with the theme of Reaching Out and Saving Lives. The International Association for Suicide Prevention (IASP) brochure states:‘
 
Preventing Suicide: Reaching Out and Saving Lives’ is the theme of the 2015 World Suicide Prevention Day (WSPD), an initiative of the International Association for Suicide Prevention (IASP) and the WHO, a co-sponsor of meetings and events related to WSPD 2015. Since 2003, WSPD has taken place on 10th September each year. It serves as a call to action to individuals and organizations to prevent suicide. This year, the theme encourages us all to consider the role that offering support may play in combating suicide.
Out of concern for people who live with suicidal ideation, the IASP brochure states:
It is hard to imagine the extreme psychological pain that leads someone to decide that suicide is the only course of action. Reaching out to someone who is struggling can make a difference. 
The act of showing care and concern to someone who may be vulnerable to suicide can be a game-changer.
Does legalizing assisted suicide show care and concern to someone who is living with psychological pain?

Recently, Dr Will Johnston wrote about a young adult patient who became suicidal after watching a video about Brittany Maynard, the California woman who moved to Oregon to die by assisted suicide.

A primary risks associated with depression is suicidal ideation. The data indicates that legalizing assisted suicide does not reduce suicide, rather it appears to have a suicide contagion effect.

In the next day, the California Senate will vote on assisted suicide bill ABX2-15. Knowing that the California Senate already passed the previous version of the assisted suicide bill, it is likely that California Governor Jerry Brown will need to veto the assisted suicide bill.

Link to the petition urging Governor Jerry Brown to Veto assisted suicide bill ABX2-15 petition.

Saturday, September 5, 2015

Dr Will Johnston: "My young adult patient became actively suicidal after watching a Brittany Maynard video.”

Dr Will Johnston
Dear California Assemblymembers:

I am a doctor whose young adult patient became actively suicidal after watching a Brittany Maynard video.

I urge you to vote against legalizing assisted suicide so as to not encourage other young adults to seek this path.

In the first week of December 2014, a mother brought in her twenty year old son for an emergency appointment. She had told me that he had been acting oddly and talking about death.

During the appointment, I asked the young man if he had a plan. He said “yes” that he had watched Ms. Maynard’s video, that he was very impressed and identified with her and that he thought it was a good idea for him to die like her. He also told me that after watching the video he had been surfing the internet looking for ways to obtain suicide drugs.

He was actively suicidal and agreed to go to the hospital, where he stayed for five weeks until it was determined that he was sufficiently safe from self-harm to go home.

Legal assisted suicide sends the wrong message to young people. I urge you to vote "no" on ABX2-15.

Thank you.

Will Johnston MD
Family Physician
Vancouver, BC Canada

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