
wljourney
Waiting for the bus
- Apr 2, 2022
- 1,419
QUICK RECAP:
Since MAID (medical assistance in dying) was legalized 6 years ago in Canada it is considered a healthcare option.
It is a voluntary choice of treatment with a number of safeguards in place.
It is not available to people who don't live in Canada (to prevent suicide tourism!)
Right now people who suffer from a "grievous and irremediable" illness can apply for MAID, they do not have to be terminally ill.
However, people who suffer solely from mental health conditions are excepted until March 2023.
UPDATE:
the government has created a working group to provide guidelines on HOW TO ASSESS patients with mental illness come March 2023.
They were supposed to publish their report this spring (2022).
Yesterday the government announced that the report of the working group is delayed and has been given an extension to publish their final report until October 2022.
The working group must publish an interim report by June 23, 2022.
These reports will tell us what exactly the eligibility criteria will be. I.e. how many assessors have to sign off, how many treatments must the patient have tried, how severe the disability due to mental illness has to be, how doctors can assess the "suffering" of a person, how to make sure the patient is competent and able to make this decision, etc.
WHAT DOES THIS MEAN FOR PATIENTS:
Doctors who assess patients and have to decide if they are eligible for MAID likely wont know early enough what the legal requirements are.
They will need checklists, forms and follow a procedure that likely wont be set up by March 2023.
It is very likely that there will be a delay in accessing MAID for patients with MH illness as a result.
If you are interested in accessing MAID in Canada be prepared, start the conversation with your doctor, but also assume that this will not happen immediately and there are many legal and administrative hurdles to overcome before anything happens.
Since MAID (medical assistance in dying) was legalized 6 years ago in Canada it is considered a healthcare option.
It is a voluntary choice of treatment with a number of safeguards in place.
It is not available to people who don't live in Canada (to prevent suicide tourism!)
Right now people who suffer from a "grievous and irremediable" illness can apply for MAID, they do not have to be terminally ill.
However, people who suffer solely from mental health conditions are excepted until March 2023.
UPDATE:
the government has created a working group to provide guidelines on HOW TO ASSESS patients with mental illness come March 2023.
They were supposed to publish their report this spring (2022).
Yesterday the government announced that the report of the working group is delayed and has been given an extension to publish their final report until October 2022.
The working group must publish an interim report by June 23, 2022.
These reports will tell us what exactly the eligibility criteria will be. I.e. how many assessors have to sign off, how many treatments must the patient have tried, how severe the disability due to mental illness has to be, how doctors can assess the "suffering" of a person, how to make sure the patient is competent and able to make this decision, etc.
WHAT DOES THIS MEAN FOR PATIENTS:
Doctors who assess patients and have to decide if they are eligible for MAID likely wont know early enough what the legal requirements are.
They will need checklists, forms and follow a procedure that likely wont be set up by March 2023.
It is very likely that there will be a delay in accessing MAID for patients with MH illness as a result.
If you are interested in accessing MAID in Canada be prepared, start the conversation with your doctor, but also assume that this will not happen immediately and there are many legal and administrative hurdles to overcome before anything happens.