Despite postponement, Canadian government ‘fully committed’ to expanding assisted suicide, warn country’s bishops – Catholic Herald Online

Posted: February 24, 2024 at 12:00 pm

NEW YORK The Canadian government remains just as committed to its drive to expand assisted suicide despite a decision to postpone expanding current euthanasia policy to include people suffering solely from mental illness, the countrys bishops have warned.

As a result, the postponement doesnt represent good news, with the bishops citing the governments unwavering commitment to the legislation.

The Canadian government announced on 1 February that it had introduced legislation to postpone the expansion to its assisted suicide law, formally known as Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID), for three years. The expansion was set to go into effect 17 March 2024. It is now scheduled to go into effect 17 March 2027.

The federal governments decision to simply postpone legislation that would broaden the eligibility for Medical Assistance in Dying, which is assisted suicide or euthanasia, to persons suffering solely from mental illness, is not good news, Bishop William McGrattan of Calgary toldCruxin a statement.

Despite the opposition that has been voiced by mental health practitioners, disability groups, faith communities, and even several provincial Ministers of Health, the federal government remains fully committed to implementing this legislation, which received Royal Assent on 9 March 2023, added McGrattan, the president of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops.

MAID was enacted in 2016. The initial language of the law meant people eligible for assisted suicide included those who have a grievous and irremediable medical condition and those whose natural death was reasonably foreseeable. However, in March 2021, the reasonably foreseeable language was repealed, thus expanding the law to allow any eligible person to pursue assisted suicide regardless of whether their natural death is reasonably foreseeable.

The 2021 expansion also included people with mental illnesses, on the proviso of a two-year study for experts to recommend the protocols and safeguards that should be followed. The Canadian government has essentially extended that review of protocols and safeguards for another three years.

Under Canadas current MAID law, people suffering solely from a mental illness who meet all the eligibility criteria and safeguards would have been eligible for MAID as of March 17, 2024, the Canadian government announced 1 Feb. 2024.

It added that while important progress has been made to prepare for MAID eligibility for persons whose sole medical condition is mental illnessin its consultations with the provinces, territories, medical professionals, people with lived experience and other stakeholders, the Government of Canada has heard and agrees that the health system is not yet ready for this expansion.

The postponement, according to the government, provides more time for provinces to prepare their health systems for the expansion, including the development of policies, standards, guidance and resources to provide MAID in situations where a persons sole underlying condition is mental illness.

The Canadian government has also proposed the creation of a new joint parliamentary committee specifically to further study the MAID expansion.

After thoughtful consideration, we believe an additional extension, until March 17, 2027, is necessary, Arif Virani, the Attorney General of Canada, said in a statement accompanying the governments announcement. The healthcare system must first be ready to safely provide MAID to persons whose sole medical condition is a mental illness before that access can be granted.

Canadas Catholic bishops have been steadfastly opposed to assisted suicide in all of its forms. In a 30 Nov. 2023 statement, the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB) implied that government officials and outside organizations have applied pressure to Catholic Canadian healthcare institutions to perform assisted suicide. They iterated that the practice does not and will not take place in Catholic institutions.

Today, there are 129 Catholic healthcare providers across Canada, accounting for nearly 20,000 healthcare beds. These facilities are supported by 19 dioceses and 14 Catholic sponsors. They span across six provinces and 27 health regions and authorities.

Euthanasia and assisted suicide (MAID) have always been, and will always be, morally unacceptable because they are affronts to human dignity and violations of natural and divine law, the bishops said. Catholic healthcare affirms that every person, made in the image of God, has intrinsic value, regardless of ability or health.

For these reasons, we, the members of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops, unanimously and unequivocally oppose the performance of either euthanasia or assisted suicide (MAID) within health organizations with a Catholic identity, the bishops continued. We oppose efforts by governments or others to compel such facilities to perform MAID in violation of Catholic teachings.

Anything to the contrary would deeply betray the identities of these institutions as Catholic and would not be in keeping with the Churchs moral teachings on the sanctity of life and the dignity of the human person, the bishops added.

Canadas bishops advocate for a greater investment in mental health resources.

According to data published by the Canadian government, in 2022 there were 13,241 assisted suicide deaths, accounting for 4.1 per cent of all deaths in the country. That 2022 figure represents a growth rate of 31.2 per cent over 2021, when there were 10,092 assisted suicide deaths. The government data shows that between 2016 when it was legalised and 2022, there were 44,958 assisted suicide deaths.

By multiple accounts, these figures are among the highest in the world. The situation in Canada regarding assisted suicide, especially the degree of mission creep occurring, is causing concern in the likes of the UK, especially among its Catholic leaders, where there are similar moves at the governmental level to expand and liberalise current euthanasia policy.

We cannot emphasize enough how important it is for public healthcare to invest more in mental health resources, the Canadian bishops said in their 30 Nov. statement.

This investment is urgently needed, not only because of the present mental health crisis in which needs far exceed resources, but because discouragement and despair can also result from this very scarcity of reachable, reliable, and robust support.

Photo: Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau gives a thumbs up as he arrives to deliver his victory speech at the Fairmount Queen Elizabeth Hotel following parliamentary elections, Montreal, Quebec, 21 September 2021. Canadians returned the liberal prime minister to power after a hotly contested election against a relatively unknown conservative leader. (Photo by ANDREJ IVANOV/AFP via Getty Images.)

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Despite postponement, Canadian government 'fully committed' to expanding assisted suicide, warn country's bishops - Catholic Herald Online

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