Monday, December 8, 2025

Alicia Duncan: History will remember the lives saved or lost.

Alicia Duncan
This article was published by Alicia Duncan on her substack.
  • Prevent MAiD for Mental Illness. Guide to supporting Bill C-218 (Link).
  • EPC video. No MAiD for Mental Illness (Link)
Below is the speech by Alicia Duncan at the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition Press Conference on December 5, 2025 at the Parliamentary Press Gallery. The full video of the event. Alicia begins at 9 minutes 55 seconds.


Good morning. My name is Alicia Duncan, and I am here today as the daughter of Donna Duncan—who died through Canada’s medical assistance in dying regime, becoming the first MAiD death in history to trigger a police investigation.

A single moment changed the course of her life. A concussion in February 2020 marked the beginning of her mental and physical decline. Over the next twenty months, her symptoms worsened. She became anxious, depressed, and paranoid, turning to the medical system for answers. But test after test revealed nothing. Her weight was dropping drastically with no clear explanation—and with it, her hope of recovery.

When she brought her MAiD request to her longtime physician, he refused to assess her, believing she wasn’t engaging with treatment. But under the law, he was required to refer her to someone who would.

We would later learn from her medical records that she was consuming roughly 800 calories a day—so frail that the two clinicians who assessed her, nurse practitioner Shawn Young and Dr. Grace Park under the Fraser Health Authority, interpreted this as a “reasonably foreseeable” death. Her MAiD procedure was scheduled for two days later.

But my sister and I saw what the assessors did not, and in a last-ditch attempt to save her life, we provided evidence to a provincial court judge—who halted her MAiD appointment to allow for a psychiatric assessment.

When our mom learned her death had been postponed, she attempted to end her own life and was placed on a temporary involuntary hold in the very psychiatric unit she once managed. She had spent her career as a psychiatric nurse, caring for people in crisis. But when she needed care, psychiatrists deemed her capable—despite every indicator of the opposite—and released her, knowing she was returning home to pursue MAiD. Four hours later, my sister and I received texts from her common-law partner: she was gone.

There was no chance for a final conversation. We said goodbye to her frozen body in a crematorium, the IV used to inject the MAiD drugs still in her arm—inches above the incision from her suicide attempt days earlier. That image became the source of flashbacks, later diagnosed as post traumatic stress disorder.

In the weeks that followed, we searched for answers. What we found was a system with no mechanism for accountability. Her records were contradictory. Another recent overdose attempt had never been disclosed. Self-diagnosed conditions were written as clinical fact.

When we brought this evidence to the police, they opened an unprecedented investigation in Canada’s MAiD history. But Fraser Health refused to release the MAiD assessment records, even to investigators. The Privacy Commissioner upheld that refusal. The only person legally entitled to request the documents that might reveal whether her assisted suicide was lawful was my mother. And she was dead.

Her death compelled our family into advocacy. It has carried her story to the federal committee reviewing Canada’s assisted-suicide laws in 2022, where policymakers confronted the ethical terrain her case laid bare. And earlier this year, it carried that story into parliamentary rooms across the United Kingdom, where lawmakers are studying Canada as a test case as they consider legalizing assisted suicide there. What our family lived through stands as evidence of a law expanding faster than the safeguards meant to keep people safe.

Four years later, we still do not know whether the law was followed. Not because the truth is complicated, but because the system is designed to prevent families—and even police—from finding out.

Her case showed there is no requirement for a practitioner to verify a diagnosis for a MAiD assessment. No burden of proof. No consequence when errors end a life. No access to records. No appeal. There is no meaningful oversight.

And now, in fifteen months, Canada is scheduled to expand assisted suicide to those whose sole underlying condition is a mental illness. Yet leading experts warn: mental illness cannot be declared irremediable. There is no test, no scan, no metric that can say a person’s recovery is impossible.

Autonomy—the word we hear so often—does not survive in a system where the alternatives are untreated suffering, homelessness, poverty, extensive waitlists for specialists, emergency room closures, or disability payments that do not cover rent. Autonomy collapses when people are forced to choose between pain and death because care simply does not exist.

But consider this: if restricting MAiD is viewed as a violation of human rights, then denying Canadians timely access to care must also be understood as a violation of their human rights.

My mother’s life—and her death—reveals something we can no longer ignore: a country that cannot reliably provide care cannot responsibly provide death as its substitute.

In the coming months, MPs will vote on Bill C-218. If passed, its impact will be profound: it will permanently halt the upcoming MAiD expansion, sending a message that people living with mental illness deserve a meaningful standard of care.

To Canadians listening: your voice matters. Call your MP. Visit their office. Tell them what this issue means to you. Because if someone you love is ever in a moment of crisis and approved for MAiD—with no legal recourse to protect them—this moment may come back to you with a question you cannot undo: what if I had spoken up?

And to Members of Parliament: you are not casting a vote on ideology. You are casting a vote on whether mental illness is met with treatment and dignity—or with a state-sanctioned death…and whether stories like my mother’s become rarer, or more common.

History will not remember the talking points or the politics of this moment. It will remember the lives saved or lost because of the choice you made. If Canada is going to defend the right to die with dignity, then we must first defend the right to live with dignity.

Thank you.

Surgery Denied. Death Approved.

This article was published by Kelsi Sheren on her substack on December 8, 2025.

The Quiet Violence of Neglect

By Kelsi Sheren.

Canada’s assisted-death regime has reached a point most people assumed was dystopian fiction and it’s doing so with bureaucratic calm. A woman in Saskatchewan, Jolene Van Alstine, suffering from a rare but treatable parathyroid disease, has applied for MAiD not because she is dying, but because she can’t access the surgery that would let her live.

Read that again. Not terminal. Not untreatable. Just abandoned by a system that has the audacity to call itself “universal.”

Jolene Van Alstine
CBC news article (Link).

Her assisted death is scheduled for January 7, 2026.

And the country shrugs. Van Alstine described spending years curled on a couch, nauseated, in agony, isolated, and pushed past endurance. The disease is brutal, but treatable a surgery here, a specialist there. The kind of medical intervention that in a functional system wouldn’t even make the news.

But in Saskatchewan? There are no endocrinologists accepting new patients. Without one, she can’t get referred. Without a referral, she can’t get surgery. Without surgery, she loses her life either slowly through suffering, or quickly through state-sanctioned death.

If you’ve ever lived through pain that warps time…
If you’ve ever had your mind hijacked by trauma…
If you’ve ever stared down suffering with no end in sight…

You know how thin the line can get between endurance and surrender.

And that’s why this story hits differently: it reveals how fragile people become when the system meant to protect them becomes an accomplice in their despair.

Canada frames MAiD as empowerment. As compassion. As choice.

But choice is only real when the alternatives are viable.
If your options are slow agony or assisted death, that’s not autonomy it’s coercion with a friendly tone.

Disability advocates, chronic-pain patients, the elderly, and low-income Canadians have been sounding the alarm for years: MAiD is expanding faster than support systems can catch up. Every expansion widens the chasm between the rhetoric of compassion and the lived experience of those who actually need help.

The Canadian Human Rights Commission itself warned that MAiD is being accessed because people cannot get the services required to live with dignity. And dignity matters. Anyone who has lived on the edge knows this: humans don’t just need survival, we need a reason to keep surviving.

When the healthcare system withholds that, death can look like mercy. This is the part polite society doesn’t want to confront.

Canada’s healthcare system is collapsing. Not strained. Not overburdened. Collapsing.

We have a growing list of citizens choosing death because medicine has become a lottery →
  • a quadriplegic woman who applied for MAiD because she couldn’t secure basic home-care support,
  • veterans offered MAiD instead of trauma treatment,
  • homeless Canadians considering MAiD because they can’t survive winter
And now a woman denied a simple, lifesaving surgery.

At some point, we have to call this what it is: a nation outsourcing its failures to death. I’ve sat with veterans who couldn’t find themselves inside their own minds after war. I’ve watched people suffer silently because bureaucracy didn’t move fast enough to keep up with their pain.

I’ve coached clients who were one dropped ball, one missed appointment, one shut door away from losing the will to fight.

The lesson is the same every time. People don’t break because they’re weak. People break because they’re left alone with their suffering.
Van Alstine wasn’t offered community.
She wasn’t offered care.
She was offered an exit.
And she took it.

Not because she wanted to die but because Canada didn’t give her any path to live.

We need to stop pretending this is compassionate. Compassion is presence. Compassion is support. Compassion is a surgeon who actually exists, a referral that actually happens, a system that catches someone before they fall into the dark.

If MAiD is going to exist, it must be the last, quiet, grave option not the discounted aisle Canada sends you to when the cost of real care is too high.

A society reveals its soul by how it treats the people who can’t fight for themselves.
Right now, Canada is revealing something hollow.

People will debate the ethics of assisted dying forever. Fine. Debate it. But this is the wrong battleground. The real question is this →

What does it say about a country when death is easier to access than medical care?

Until Canada answers that honestly, we’re going to see more names on the calendar scheduled deaths, stamped and approved — for people who didn’t want to die. They just wanted someone to give them a chance to live.

Canada has failed every single citizen, and not a single person seems to care.

Tamara Jansen, speech in the House of Commons on Bill C-218, preventing MAiD for Mental Illness.

Speech by Tamara Jansen MP (Cloverdale - Langley City) in the House of Commons on December 5, 2025 in support of Bill C-218, the bill that she sponsored, to amend the law to prevent MAiD for Mental Illness alone in Canada.

  • Guide to supporting Bill C-218. (Link).
  • No MAiD for Mental Illness (Link).

Moved that Bill C-218, An Act to amend the Criminal Code (medical assistance in dying), be read the second time and referred to a committee.

Mr. Speaker, I want the members to imagine someone's son. He is in his forties and life has worn him down. He lives with a painful illness that leaves him sick, exhausted and often unable to leave the house. On top of that, he struggles with addictions, depression and anxiety, which have taken more from him than anyone can see from the outside. Some days, he can barely hold it together. He relies on his family for a place to live, food and help getting through the week. They are doing their best, and he is doing his best, but the weight of it is crushing.

One day, he finally meets a psychiatrist. He goes, hoping that this might finally be the start of real help. His addictions still have not been treated, and his mental health care has not truly begun. He is vulnerable, scared and hanging on by a thread.

At that appointment, instead of being offered a plan to get him stable, MAID is raised as an option. The assessment moves ahead, and before he ever receives proper support for his mental health or addictions, he is approved. His MAID provider is the one who drives him to the place where his life is ended. This is someone's son who needed help, not a final exit. 

Believe it or not, this actually happened here in Canada, and this is where we are headed if we do not act. Unless this Parliament chooses a different path, Canada will allow MAID for people whose only condition is mental illness. That means men and women struggling with depression, trauma or overwhelming psychological pain could be steered toward death by a system that too often cannot offer timely treatment, consistent follow-up or even basic support. This is why I brought forward Bill C-218, the right to recover act. It is simple. It asks Parliament to stop, consider what we have learned and act responsibly before people are irretrievably harmed.

I often think of my grandparents, who immigrated here after World War II with very little. They chose Canada because it was a place where people had endless opportunities to better themselves, where neighbours watched out for each other and communities worked in unison to make a better life for all. They built a Canada where the vulnerable were cared for and the less privileged in society were valued and treated with equal care. Those fundamental values attracted millions of immigrants over the years.

Today, many Canadians fear we are losing those values. Canadians themselves remain some of the most compassionate people anyone will ever meet, but our system is overwhelmed, stretched thin and unable to meet the needs of people who are suffering.

When people fall through the cracks, the easy temptation is to accept that failure is inevitable. When that happens, people facing mental illness can end up alone, waiting months, or sometimes years, for specialized treatment, and when help does not come, they lose hope. That moment of hopelessness should never be treated as an opportunity for the state to end their lives through MAID.

When the House last debated MAID, mental illness was not a part of the core discussion. It was added in a last-minute Senate amendment to Bill C-7. The implications were not fully considered or understood by the House.

Since then, we have learned a lot more. Psychiatrists across Canada, including the chairs of psychiatry at all 17 medical schools, have told us plainly that there is no reliable way to predict when a mental illness is irremediable, which is a requirement in the MAID law. People get worse, but they also get better, and most do. There is no test, scan or clinical tool that can reliably tell us that someone will never recover. All people deserve the opportunity to get better. No one should be encouraged to give up on themselves.

As legislators, we need to listen to what so many medical professionals are telling us, which is how hard it is to distinguish between suicidal ideation and MAID. The feelings behind them, such as hopelessness, loneliness, fear and the belief that one is a burden, are the same. For decades, clinicians have understood that, when someone feels hopeless or sees themselves in a very negative way, it can look like they are thinking clearly, that they are rational, even when their judgment is clouded by despair.

In 2021, most of us did not have the evidence we now have about how MAID assessment functions in the real world or the specific dangers of expanding MAID to mental illness. We now know there is no reliable way to determine when a mental illness is truly irremediable. Suicide prevention experts, including the Canadian Association for Suicide Prevention, warn that how we talk about these issues shapes the choices people make. Suggesting that death is a solution to suffering undermines hope. It puts people at real risk.

The expansion of MAID to mental illness forces Canada into a huge contradiction. On one hand, we invest in suicide prevention. We train professionals to intervene, listen and pull back people from the edge. On the other hand, with the expansion of MAID, we would invite those same vulnerable people to consider state-facilitated death.

We must ask, who receives suicide prevention and who is guided toward MAID? If a person suffering from depression calls a crisis line tonight, do we encourage them to hold on or do we quietly redirect them to an assessor? What principle decides the answer? What medical test? What ethical standard? There is none. That is because the very feelings that drive someone to seek MAID, hopelessness, despair or the belief that they are a burden, are the same signals that every suicide prevention worker is trained to treat as a cry for help. 

We would never tell a struggling teenager that their wish to die is rational. We would not tell a grieving spouse that their darkest moment is a reasonable exit point. We would reach out. We would support them. We would insist that their lives still matter. Why should that change simply because despair is given a different label? When someone feels worthless, our duty is not to agree with them. It is to stand with them until the light returns. Canada must decide: Are suicidal citizens people in need of protection or candidates for state-sanctioned death? We cannot pretend that they are both. Besides all this is the fact that we already know the current safeguards are failing.

Let us be absolutely clear about what an expansion of MAID to mental illness would mean. If Canada cannot protect vulnerable people under the current rules, then expanding eligibility to those whose very illness clouds judgment, hope and decision-making will lead directly to preventable deaths. We are already witnessing cases where safeguards fail, where capacity is misjudged and where people are assessed in moments of confusion, exhaustion or pressure. If the system cannot uphold basic protections now, it will not and cannot protect those suffering from severe psychological distress. An expansion would be reckless. 

The evidence is already in front of us. A recent article about Ontario's MAID death review committee's findings lays out, in plain and troubling terms, cases that would worry every Canadian. They describe a man who had cancer. I will call him Bill. Earlier in his illness, he had briefly mentioned MAID, as frightened patients tend to do. By the time he was assessed, he was delirious, confused and heavily sedated. His own medical team made it clear that he no longer had the capacity to make major decisions, yet a MAID assessor shook him awake, took the faint motion of lips as consent, withheld sedation, obtained a rushed virtual second opinion and ended his life that same day. Bill was not stable. Bill was not capable. He did not understand what was happening.

In another case, a woman, whom we will call Margaret, wanted palliative care. She said so the day before her death, but she did not qualify for hospice. Her husband, worn down by caregiver exhaustion, arranged for an urgent MAID assessment instead. The day before she had told him she wanted to die with proper palliative support, but the next day two assessments were rushed through. Her final wishes were overshadowed by the strain of a caregiver who could no longer cope.

Another woman, whom we will call Alice, was living with advanced dementia and unable to communicate her wishes in any meaningful way. Her family brought MAID forward twice with minimal documentation, little clarity and no clear expression of consent, yet she was approved.

All of these examples were drawn from the auditor's report. These are stories about real people, who are family members, friends, neighbours and fellow citizens, the people to whom we owe a duty of care. They demonstrate that vulnerable Canadians are already at risk under the current MAID regime. People who are confused, pressured, exhausted or unable to communicate are slipping through the safeguards that were supposed to protect them. If safeguards fail for patients with physical illness, where assessing capacity is clear and verifiable, what will happen when the only condition is a mental illness which, by definition, clouds judgment and hope? To offer death at that moment will place some of the most vulnerable people in this country directly in harm's way.

Today, a person deemed unable to manage their finances must undergo rigorous capacity assessments, interviews, documentation, expert review, collateral information and verification because we recognize the risk of exploitation, yet for MAID, a situation of life or death, a brief conversation can suffice, with no thorough evaluation, and when the safeguards fail, there seem to be few consequences. We now live in a country where we protect bank accounts better than we protect a human life.

We also know of families across Canada that were deeply shaken by how MAID was carried out for a loved one. They describe decisions that felt rushed and were influenced by poverty, loneliness or a lack of access to proper treatment, not by a calm and informed choice. These experiences are warnings from the very people who lived through the consequences.

Canadians are uneasy. Polls show a clear majority do not support MAID for mental illness alone. Provinces are asking Ottawa to reconsider. They are calling for a stop. Quebec, one of the most permissive MAID jurisdictions in the world, has banned it by law.

International human rights experts have raised the alarm, including the UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, which has urged Canada to step back. It warns that our trajectory risks discriminating against people with disabilities and mental illness and recommends repealing this expansion entirely. This is what Bill C-218 would do.

We must remember a crucial truth, which is that recovery from mental illness is not rare, but common. Time and again, people who once felt utterly hopeless have rebuilt their lives once they received proper care and stable support. Every one of us knows someone, whether it was a neighbour, a colleague or a family member, who walked through a very dark season and is now grateful to be alive.

These stories matter because they show us what is at stake. Sadly, that is not true in every case, but there is no reliable way to know in advance who will recover and who will not. There is no test, no scan, no certainty. I respectfully suggest that, when someone's judgment is clouded by psychological distress, our duty is to offer treatment, protection and time, not an irreversible decision based on guesswork.

If MAID is expanded, we will be forced into an impossible paradox. A suicidal person calling a crisis line is urged to hold on, yet if they request MAID, that same despair may be treated as justification for death. This is why Bill C-218 is necessary. It would stop the 2027 expansion to mental illness because the evidence cannot support it and the safeguards cannot sustain it. Vulnerable Canadians are already at risk. Expanding eligibility now is reckless. A strong country does not turn its back on those who suffer, but believes in their future and gives them time and care to heal.

I urge every member in the House to support Bill C-218 so Canada would remain a nation that protects the vulnerable, offers treatment before despair and gives every person the chance to recover. Let us take this responsibility seriously. Let us listen to the warnings of those who are assessing the failures in the system. Let us listen to the families who have lived through the consequences of MAID and to those who survived mental illness and rebuilt their lives. Let us remember the kind of country we claim to be, one that protects the vulnerable and gives people the time, care and dignity they need to heal.

Andrew Lawton MP: If Bill C-218 does not pass, people will die.

Speech by Andrew Lawton MP (Elgin - St. Thomas - London South) in the House of Commons on December 5, 2025 in support of Bill C-218, the bill that is sponsored by Tamara Jansen MP (Cloverdale - Langley City) amending the law to prevent MAiD for Mental Illness alone in Canada.

  • Guide to supporting Bill C-218. (Link).
  • No MAiD for Mental Illness (Link).

Mr. Speaker, it is a great honour to rise and speak to Bill C-218.

In less than a week (December 9, 2010), it will be 15 years since I almost lost my life to suicide. I overdosed. I was in the hospital for seven weeks. For much of it, I was on life support and had to be resuscitated multiple times. Over Christmas, my parents did not know if they would have me as their son, moving forward. It was the culmination of a very dark time in my life that spanned many years, a time in which I felt at multiple times, although not as seriously as I did that horribly dark and sad December day in 2010, that I would be better off dead than alive.
 
There are many reasons I am so proud to be standing here in this chamber, but one of them is knowing where I have been and where I came from and the fact that there was a time in my life when I never in a million years would have believed that I could ever have the life I have now: a career that I am proud of, an amazing wife whom I love so dearly, these tremendous colleagues and friends I work with every day, and this trust that has been placed in me by the people I represent. None of that would have been possible had I been successful when I attempted to end my life.
 
I think of my own experience and the experience of many others like me when I reflect on the fact that in just 15 months' time, someone who was in the place I was in 15 years ago will be able to have not only the state's permission but the state's help to end their life by suicide. In March 2027, the criteria for medical assistance in dying are expanding, so someone with only a mental illness, with no physical ailment whatsoever, will be eligible for MAID.

This is a profound expansion and a fundamental inversion of the message that we have spent so much money and so much airtime and so much effort and energy telling Canadians for years, through countless campaigns aimed at ending the stigma surrounding suicide; through more programming, funding and resources to support people with mental illness; and through campaigns telling people that they are better off alive, that they do have a future. They are efforts that we all extend in our own lives to those around us to give messages of hope to those who need it. To put a fine point on this, and to make it personal, because it is personal, if the laws that are coming into force in 15 months had been there 15 years ago, I would probably be dead right now. I say that with full gratitude that I am not.
 
I did not want to extend a cry for help. I actually had access to resources and treatment. I had a support system. I had a family who loved me. I had these privileges that so many others who struggle with mental illness did not have. Even with all of those available to me, I felt like there was no future. The proverbial light at the end of the tunnel did not exist. I did not want to get better. It was not that I had not tried; I had not tried enough, clearly. However, I felt like I had done my time. I felt like I had put in enough effort to try to get better and when I did not, I had made my decision that I was going to end it. It was not impulsive; it was quite rational, actually. I decided it weeks out. Believe it or not, as silly as it sounds, I had it on my calendar, and I scheduled the day because I had appointments and meetings before it that I did not want to miss, as though that makes any sense at all, as though it would matter if I missed a meeting, given that I was planning on not sticking around.
 
This is how, when a person is struggling with mental illness, as I was so very seriously, it plays tricks on them. By design, a mental illness is a distortion of the person's ability to see clearly and think clearly about what they are in the midst of. It clouds their judgment. If I had ever gone to a health care worker and said, “I am planning to end my life,” they would have not just a moral but a legal obligation to stop me. They would have legal authority to detain me, because that is how sacrosanct it is that people have a right to recover, that they have a right to live and that medical practitioners must do no harm and protect them from harming themselves. We have a duty to help people.
 
I talk about my own story, and I have heard so many others like it. After my colleague from Cloverdale—Langley City introduced her bill, I launched the “I got better” campaign, in which I shared my testimony and invited Canadians to share their own. I would like to share some of those in the House today.
 
A lawyer from here in Ottawa said that they wondered if they would have used MAID if it had been available when they were in their darkest days, or if they would use it in the dark days yet to come.
 
A man reached out and said he struggles with personal family issues and mental illness. He has very bad days. He has tried attempting suicide before, and he is worried that he will not be stopped in the future if he has more of those dark days and MAID is available to him.
 
On a more positive note, a woman who was in an abusive relationship for 22 years and wanted to die said, “If MAID had been around then, I would not be here now, and I am damn happy it was not.” I will ask members to pardon the unparliamentary language. She continued, saying, “I am happy now. I have had a fantastic career caring for seniors. I have grandbabies and kids I love. I have a wonderful husband now who means the world to me.”

Another woman said she wanted to end her life many times, but looking back, she is so happy she has a life now where she is happier than she ever was before.
 
I will share one more about a woman who described two years of agony, with damage to her liver, hospitalizations, dozens of failed medications and a compilation of diagnoses without any real clarity, but she was given a second chance. She had been labelled as chronically unstable and told she had a poor prognosis, was unable to thrive independently and would likely revolve through the system for the rest of her life. She had attempted suicide several times.
 
There was one doctor who would not give up on her. As she said, “Recovery takes one person, not one pill. It takes one person who believes in you and forces uncomfortable treatment onto you for the sake of the future life that's awaiting you.” That woman went to university, became a social worker to help others, is happily married and, more importantly, is happy.
 
None of these stories could ever be guaranteed if we were to do what the government is doing in 15 months, which is to license giving up on people at their most vulnerable moments, at their darkest and lowest points.
 
Of those who die by suicide, 90% are people who have diagnosable mental illness. Physicians have testified before Parliament and its committees that suicide is often contemplated and planned over a long period of time by people who would very easily, as I am confident I would have, go to a doctor to make a rational, logical case that they have tried all of the treatments and they believe that they are better off dead than alive. There was a consensus among psychiatric experts who have testified and spoken about this elsewhere that there is no clear way to separate suicidal ideation as a symptom from a request for a health care practitioner to help in ending one's life.
 
Dr. John Maher testified before Parliament that 7% of those who attempt suicide die by suicide. That means that 93% of people who, at one or multiple points, want to end their life eventually get over that. The success rate of MAID is 100%. By design, this is a policy that will give up on people.
 
There are very few things in this chamber that we can say are genuinely life-and-death issues. This is one of them. A few weeks ago we saw that, in 2024, MAID accounted for 5.1% of the deaths in Canada. That is a 1,520% increase over 2016 when it became legal. We are seeing a massive expansion to people who, in the vast majority of cases, will get better. About 50% to 60% of people with mental illness will actually recover with no treatment, and that number is even higher for people who do have treatment available.
 
I would not be here today had I been successful. I would not be here today had I not gotten over the darkest, worst feelings of my life, which anyone could encounter. That is something I believe needs to be understood by those who believe this is an abstract question of legal theory and legal rights. These are real people. There are faces to this. If Bill C-218 does not pass, people will die. We have a right and a duty to stand up for those who need it. I will be proudly supporting this bill, and I thank my colleague so much for introducing it.

Medical homicide is a discriminatory oppression for the sick and disabled

Gordon Friese
By Gordon Friesen
President, Euthanasia Prevention Coalition

Following on a most interesting disabled-oriented online zoom discussion (of which the recording is posted below) I would like to share a few reflections.

It is impressive to note the constancy of disabled opposition to assisted death.

The reason for this sentiment is very simple. It lies in our visceral, and perfectly intuitive understanding, that any special authorization of suicide, for the sick and disabled, creates a severe threat to our physical security. 

In the US there has been an attempt to finesse this opposition with the so-called Oregon Model, limiting practice to the terminally ill. But, first of all: no one is actually dupe to this incremental strategy; and second: reserving this lethal suggestion to those in the terminal category does nothing to change its discriminatory nature.

Most importantly, however, and perhaps least often noticed, is that the discriminatory harm involved is not merely suggestive. For since eligible patients may be killed with no penalty for the perpetrator (due to exceptions made to criminal law) all eligible persons are thus deprived of equal protection before the law.

From a civil perspective, this is exactly analogous to depriving a specific group of their right to vote. But from a practical perspective it is much worse, as the disputed deprivation does not involve mere political disenfranchisement. It potentially involves wrongful loss of life.

To graphically depict this situation, it is only necessary to imagine that some specific group has been denied the possibility of installing safety belts, or child seats, in their cars. This is the exact state of persons eligible for medical homicide: they possess no protection, where all others do. And that deprivation is not voluntary: for no one can "opt out" of their defined eligibility.

These facts are especially oppressive, moreover, because this deprivation does not result from a properly representative social decision.

There is a crucial distinction to be made, here, between popular approval, when expressed as democratic support, and that same approval expressed as real demand. In fact, widespread popular "support" of medical homicide does not quantitatively align with the real decisions made by those who are actually eligible to choose (see previous article). And furthermore, when the democratic opinion of disabled persons and their organizations are considered, by themselves, opposition to medical homicide is overwhelming.

We thus find that one small group is being deprived of equal legal protection, against their will, by another much larger group, under cover of democratic process.

This difficulty is supposedly refuted by the claim that a small minority cannot legitimately prevent the majority from enjoying possession of a medical homicide option which they have democratically chosen.

However this claim falls apart, upon collision with one fatal stumbling block: the majority of voters do not, in fact, enjoy any such medical homicide option, because they are not eligible for it.

We thus see that the able-bodied and healthy majority is not deprived of any real legal prerogative, but the sick and disabled minority are, indeed, deprived of a real protection enjoyed by everyone else.

There is therefore, no balance of competing interest. No equivalence at all: a designated minority is being actively oppressed by a majority (in this case on the basis of health and usefulness criteria) clearly against their will, end of story.

I do not often use the word "oppression" when discussing social issues concerning the disabled. I believe, for example that there is a definite distinction between forcing some people to accomplish hard labor, and withholding valuable special benefits from others. In this last case, I generally believe the term "neglect", to be more appropriate.

However, with regards to the legalization of medical homicide, where one group of people --having no skin in the game themselves-- is not merely refusing to provide a special benefit, but is actively depriving others of a preexisting protection which all now enjoy, then, yes: the word "oppression" is perfectly suited to the case.

Finally, restricting this practice to the terminally ill does not reduce this oppression. It actually makes it even worse. Because oppression always becomes more deadly when the oppressed group is smaller.

In the present circumstance, for example, many opponents of medical homicide (and even disabled opponents on occasion) are sometimes heard to express their "understanding" of assisted death for the terminally ill.

Let me be perfectly clear, therefore, in addressing myself directly to those people:

We who are not terminal do not (and cannot) have any such understanding. The statistics, however, are perfectly clear. The terminally ill are not willing to die, any more than you or I (just as you and I are no more willing to die than the typical able-bodied person in perfect health).

To adopt this conciliatory, "reasonable" tone, therefore, is merely to assist the advocates of medical homicide, in stealing the last years, or months, from our own terminal brothers and sisters, and to hasten the day, when that same fate shall be thrust upon ourselves.

Saturday, December 6, 2025

EPC Press Conference: Support Bill C-218. No MAiD for Mental Illness.

Parliamentary Press Gallery - December 5, 2025
Euthanasia Prevention Coalition Press Conference at the Parliamentary Press Gallery in Ottawa on December 5, 2025 - No MAiD for Mental Illness.

EPC film: No MAiD for Mental Illness (Link).

My name is Alex Schadenberg and I am the Executive Director of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition (EPC). EPC is a Coalition of groups and individuals from all walks of life and beliefs that oppose euthanasia and assisted suicide.

Today we have with us, from remote: Kelsi Sheren, a military veteran, business owner, speaker, writer and social media influencer, and Alicia Duncan, whose mother died by euthanasia in 2021 based on circumstances related to her mother’s mental health. Alicia has become a world-wide speaker, author and advocate. Dr Paul Saba (in-person), is a well-known family physician in Lachine Quebec. (Link to the Press Conference Video)


Today we are speaking about Bill C-218, the Private Members Bill that is sponsored by Tamara Jansen (MP - Cloverdale - Langley City) to exclude mental illness as being a “grievous and irremediable medical condition.”

This minor change to the criminal code will prevent persons with their sole condition being a mental illness, from being approved for medical assistance in dying, better known as euthanasia.

Canada legalized euthanasia by creating exception to the criminal code for homicide, therefore MAiD or euthanasia has enabled doctors and nurse practitioners to poison their patients to death.

The issue of MAiD for mental illness brings other questions into the debate such as: Is the request to be killed part a symptom of their mental health condition? Is the person fully competent to consent to be killed? Could the person recover with treatment at some time in the future?

I want to share part of the story that we received from Kathryn:
It's been 4,620 days since my suicide attempt. Leading up to it, I'd been diagnosed with a cornucopia of mental illnesses (including, at different times, schizo-affective disorder, bipolar disorder type II, agoraphobia, panic disorder, and others). I felt, at the time, that even if my situation could get better in the future, I was too exhausted to continue to live until it did improve. I had been so highly medicated and sleep deprived that I was convinced, beyond all arguments, that I needed to die to end my suffering.

At the time of my suicide attempt, I was unable to attend school. I was unable to regularly sleep through the night due to night terrors and a psychotic detachment from reality. While awake, I experienced almost hourly panic attacks, which wreaked havoc on my already underweight and exhausted body. I could not have dreamed of ever being capable of working, of living a life without extreme support measures, or considering myself to be a generally happy person.

Recently, I got married, and my husband and I are expecting our first child. I was able to finish high school, I got my college diploma and have maintained ongoing full-time employment for 4 years. I received the support I truly needed, and no longer require medication to live a fulfilling, beautiful life. I cannot remember the last time I had a panic attack. I look forward to the years ahead of me now, and enjoy the days as they come, even when I might feel tired or discouraged. I am so proud of the girl I was, who endured so much hardship to overcome the seemingly endless, and utterly hopeless pit of mental illness I was trapped in. I am so grateful for a medical system that could not suggest that my suicidal desires might have actually been good, true or helpful. I am so thankful to be alive. I do not doubt that had euthanasia been a lawful option, I would have sought it wholeheartedly, and I am moved to grief when I consider that the difference between life and death, for me, could have so easily had a different outcome.
Canadians deserve better mental health care than death. Canadians deserve the dignity of our suffering and burden being shared and earnestly helped. Canadians deserve more than euthanasia.

There are many Kathryn’s in Canada who need the law to protect them, not kill them.

Bill C-218, a private members bill that would prevent MAiD for Mental Illness alone in Canada. (Link to the campaign article).

Call Illinois Governor Pritzker. Urge him to veto assisted suicide Bill SB 1950

Alex Schadenberg
Executive Director, Euthanasia Prevention Coalition

Illinois Governor JB Pritzker
John Clark reported for WTVO news that Illinois Governor JB Pritzker has received assisted suicide Bill SB 1950 and has until January 24, 2026 to either sign the bill, veto the bill or allow it to become law without a signature. Clark reported:

Pritzker has not committed to signing the bill. Speaking in Chicago on Wednesday, he described the issue as “hard” and emphasized compassion and careful consideration. He acknowledged hearing passionate arguments on both sides and shared personal anecdotes about friends who faced end-of-life decisions in other states.

“I don’t want anybody to think that making up your mind about this is very easy. It’s not. I think there’s a lot to consider, but most of all, it’s about compassion,” Pritzker said.

Olivia Olander reported for the Chicago Tribune on November 3 that Governor JB Pritzker has not yet decided if he will sign or veto the recently passed assisted suicide bill. Olander reported:

Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker on Monday said he was still deciding whether he’d sign legislation that would permit doctors to help terminally ill people end their lives, after the bill narrowly passed the General Assembly last week.
“It was something that I didn’t expect and didn’t know it was going to be voted on, so we’re examining it even now,” Pritzker said.
We need everyone to call Illinois Governor JB Pritzker at 312-814-2121 or 312-814-2122 and tell him to veto assisted suicide bill SB 1950. Some talking points include:
  • Legalizing assisted suicide gives doctors the right in law to be involved with causing the death of their patients at the most vulnerable time of one's life.
  • Assisted suicide is not about freedom or choice but is a form of cultural and medical abandonment, people need care not death.
  • A caring culture supports good end of life care and opposes assisting suicides.
  • Suicide is always a tragedy. Legalizing assisted suicide enables other people to be directly involved with the suicide act.

It is important to remind the Governor that the disability community opposes assisted suicide. Legalizing assisted suicide provides death rather than living with dignity. If you have a personal story, please share it.

Assisted suicide Bill SB9 passed on April 9, 2025 by a vote of 8 to 3 in the Senate Executive Committee. SB9 stalled but restarted when the sponsor gutted the Sanitary Food Preparation Act (SB 1950) and replaced it with the assisted suicide bill. It is ironic that a bill that enables physicians to prescribe lethal poison to kill patients was attached to a food preparation safety bill.

Once assisted suicide is legal, the assisted suicide lobby will work to expand the law. The original assisted suicide bill was designed to pass in the legislature. Once passed incremental extensions will follow.

Friday, December 5, 2025

Federal Appeals court rejects lawsuit demanding expansion of New Jersay assisted suicide law.

Alex Schadenberg
Executive Director, Euthanasia Prevention Coalition

Nikita Biryukov reported for News From The States that a federal appeals court has upheld the right of New Jersey's right to limit assisted suicide to New Jersey residients.

The assisted suicide lobby launched a lawsuit on August 29, 2923 to force the state of New Jersey to drop its assisted suicide residency requirement. The lawsuit claimed that the New Jersey assisted suicide law is unconstitutional because it denies equal treatment.

Dana DiFilippo reported for the New Jersey Monitor on September 19, 2024 that U.S. District Court Judge Renée Marie Bumb upheld the New Jersey assisted suicide law residency requirement.

The assisted suicide lobby appealed Judge Bumb's decision and today a federal appeals court rejected the assisted suicide lobby's demand to force New Jersey to eliminate their assisted suicide residency requirement. Biryukov reported:
The three-judge U.S. 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals panel ruled Friday that assisted suicide is not a fundamental privilege the state must extend to residents from other states. ... 
“A prescription lawful in Camden can be evidence of a felony in Philadelphia,” Judge Stephanos Bibas wrote for the panel. “If a New Jersey doctor prescribes a Pennsylvanian lethal pills and she swallows them back in Pennsylvania, the doctor might reasonably fear prosecution.”
The court further decided that:
“There is no longstanding tradition of doctor-assisted suicide. On the contrary, there is a centuries-long tradition against it,” Bibas wrote.

For the same reasons, the law does not violate the Constitution’s equal protections clause, the panel said.

New Jersey’s law “aims to keep both patients and pills in-state” to avoid exposing Garden State doctors to prosecution in other jurisdictions and avoid causing discord with states where assisted suicide is illegal, the court ruled.
In October 2021, the assisted suicide lobby group, Compassion and Choices, and Dr Nicholas Gideonse, an assisted suicide doctor, launched a court case challenging the Oregon assisted suicide residency requirement. Instead of defending the residency requirement, the Oregon Government, on March 29, 2022 agreed to remove the residency requirement.

A February 2023 article by James Reinl for the Daily Mail reported that Dr Nicholas Gideonse has opened the first assisted suicide clinic in Oregon to prescribe lethal assisted suicide drugs for death tourists. At least one person from Texas and an east coast resident has died by assisted suicide in Oregon.

In August, 2022, Compassion and Choices launched a lawsuit on behalf of a Connecticut woman and a Vermont doctor challenging Vermont's assisted suicide residency requirement.

Withdrawing the assisted suicide law residency requirement allows for assisted suicide tourism. Every American is currently eligible to die by assisted suicide in Oregon and Vermont.

EPC video: No MAiD for Mental Illness. Support Bill C-218.

The Euthanasia Prevention Coalition (EPC) supports Bill C-218, a private members bill that would prevent MAiD for Mental Illness alone in Canada. (Link to the campaign article).

In March 2021, the Canadian government expanded the euthanasia law by passing Bill C-7. One of the expansions was to permit euthanasia (MAiD) for a mental illness alone. The government delayed MAiD for mental illness alone to provide time to prepare for this change. The government is now planning to implement MAiD for mental illness alone on March 17, 2027. Bill C-218 would prevent MAiD for mental illness alone.

EPC is producing a social change film. Part of that film concerns euthanasia for mental illness. Please share our short video: No MAiD for Mental Illness (Video Link).
This short video features: Alex Schadenberg, Executive Director of EPC; Alicia Duncan, whose mother died by euthanasia based on mental health, Kelsi Sheren, a combat veteran who experienced PTSD while serving our country, Dr. David D'Souza, a chronic pain specialist and Dr. Will Johnston, a family physician and leader of Euthanasia Resistance BC.

To pass, Bill C-218 needs Member of Parliament from all political parties to support it. Talking points for speaking to your Member of Parliament:
  • Only comment on MAiD for mental illness alone. Bill C-218 only deals with that issue. There are many concerns, but mixing issues weakens your position.
  • Contact your Member of Parliament, even if you know his/her position on MAiD.
  • Ask others, including groups that you belong to, to contact their Member of Parliament.
More information on Bill C-218.