Sunday, March 30, 2025

Euthanasia is out of control in Canada. 241 euthanasia deaths based on dementia.

Alex Schadenberg
Executive Director, Euthanasia Prevention Coalition

An article that was written by Angelo Bottone and published by thinkspot.com on March 25, 2025 examining Canada's 2023 euthanasia statistics.

Article: Canada - 15,343 reported euthanasia deaths in 2023 (Link).

Bottone reports on Canada's basic euthanasia statistics. He writes:
In 2023, 15,343 Canadians died by euthanasia or assisted suicide, according to the ‘Fifth Annual Report on Medical Assistance in Dying’. This marks a 15.8% increase over 2022 and represents 4.7% of all deaths in 2023. Since its legalisation in 2016, there have been 60,301 cases of assisted suicide and euthanasia cases in Canada that we know of.
Bottone writes about some of the contentious concerns such as:
Dementia was cited as a medical condition in 241 euthanasia recipients in 2023, and in 106 of these cases, dementia was their sole condition.
Euthanasia for dementia is significant because Canada's law permits euthanasia for people with dementia if the person is competent and if there are other co-morbities (another medical condition). The 106 euthanasia deaths where the sole condition was dementia should be investigated by the RCMP or the College's of Physicians.

Bottone points out that in 622 deaths, natural death was not deemed “reasonably foreseeable.” This category, called Track 2, allows euthanasia for non-terminal patients. Loneliness, as a reason for euthanasia, was far more common among Track 2 deaths than Track 1 (terminally ill) deaths.

Isabel Grant, a law professor at the University of British Columbia stated:
“When other people express loneliness or a loss of dignity or a desire to die, we usually respond with support or prevention. But with people with disabilities, we respond with an offer for MAID,”
Bottone notes that the percentage of people with disabilities among non-terminal euthanasia recipients was significantly higher: 58.3% compared to 33.5% for people with terminal conditions.

Bottone completes the article by explaining that the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association (BCCLA) who brought the original euthanasia case (Carter case) to the court has changed their position. Bottone reports the BCCLA concerns:
However, the regime has become so permissive that even the BCCLA has raised concerns, particularly about euthanasia for prisoners and disabled individuals. The organisation has highlighted reports of people accessing MAID due to intolerable social circumstances or being offered it in cases that may not meet legal requirements.

“Of particular concern are reports of MAID being used in prisons while incarcerated individuals were shackled to their beds, the programme’s lack of legal oversight, disproportionate representation of impoverished people receiving assisted suicide, and healthcare practitioners offering MAID when patients sought support for living,” the BCCLA stated.
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