The cost & courage of caring - stories that spark resilience.
Welcome to this week's episode of
the Caregiver's Podcast.
I'm your host, Dr.
Mark Ropolesky, and you can call
me Dr.
Mark.
Our guest today is Dr.
Ramona Coelho, a family physician
who works closely with
marginalized and medically
vulnerable patients
and one of the most visible
physician voices in Canada's MAID
debate.
She has testified before a
parliamentary committee studying
MAID, written extensively on the
issue,
and serves as an adjunct research
professor of family medicine at
Western University
and is a senior fellow at the
MacDonald-Laurier Institute.
In today's conversation, we
examine what she's saying is
happening inside Canada's MAID
system,
how vulnerable patients may be
affected, and what kind of medical
and moral culture this country is
building.
Dr.
Ramona Coelho, welcome.
So glad you're here with us today.
Let's jump right in.
So you're a family physician, and
you care for disabled, poor, and
very medically complex patients.
And before we get into things like
policy debates and some of the
politics around that,
I'd really like to know, what were
you seeing with MAID around the
time with your patients' lives and
their care
that sort of made you feel like
you started to need to speak out
about this?
Well, thank you, Mark, for having
me.
I, like you said, I've been taking
care of people with complex issues
for many years.
For almost 20 years now, I've been
in practice.
And I've been dealing with, in my
regular care, death wishes, my
whole career,
trying to help people have
solutions to mitigate that
suffering.
And when MAID came along,
initially I wasn't too active on
the political front.
I was concerned that I'd be able
to continue taking care of my
patients, like in terms of
conscience rights.
But otherwise, I was pretty not
involved in the debate.
And then I started to see that
this issue was going to touch my
patients more than I had
anticipated.
I read the legislation for the
2021 expansion to people with
disabilities who are not dying.
And in the legislation, I could
already read that there were
certain things I considered to be
issues,
that you had to offer people
options, but they didn't have to
be accessible or tried.
That suffering was deemed
intolerable, but was totally
subjective.
There didn't seem to be an
objective scale or a time to kind
of try to mitigate it.
90 days, I was concerned because
for my patients, it takes a lot
longer than that to sometimes to
deal with very intense suffering.
But we do deal with their
suffering, you know, wait times to
see a specialist can be long.
Then there has to be trials of
care.
So I was concerned about that
timeline.
And then patients started to get
offers of MAID, my own patients.
So some patients already, if they
had gone to the emergency room,
could sometimes, you know, in a
rushed emergency room,
can sometimes be sent home even if
they are sick and you have to kind
of like advocate for them and send
them back,
especially some of the patients
that I take care of.
But it turned out that some of my
patients were being offered MAID
immediately when they found out
they had a new diagnosis.
I had a cluster of patients who
had new dementia.
You know, they had still had a
prognosis of seven years or more.
They had very mild findings.
This is really the beginning of
their journey and they were
terrified.
And the, you know, the
geriatrician had written in the
consult, well, Dr.
Coelho, I, I think they said that
they're not sure they can live
like this.
So I have connected them to the
MAID team.
And I'll share, as I've shared
many places that I've also cared
for my father who has dementia,
who lived with me, who died a year
ago, last March.
And also I used to do dementia
care at the CLSC in Montreal.
And so even just with being able
to work with them and explain to
them how we could cope and how
people can live well with dementia
and how I would be there for them.
They decided they didn't want
MAID, but they were already
approved for MAID within two
weeks, both of them.
Both under track one, even though
they would have, they're both
alive today.
And this is like six years ago, I
think.
And, and they were not offered
options by, like, they were no
concrete options in place.
This is like first diagnosis.
I had another family that, where
this lady had a liver cancer and I
have a lot of palliative care
skills.
I had done home care in Montreal.
So actually the palliative care
team was not actively involved.
I was taking care of her.
We were managing her pain and her
shortness of breath.
Those were her two main symptoms
that she was doing quite well.
Her family had taken time off for
their last days to go through
photos and spend time together.
And home care booked a half day to
talk to her about MAID.
And they all called me after.
And they were like, well, we've
booked the MAID assessment in the
morning because you apparently
wanted it and you sent this team
to the house.
And I said, I didn't do that.
And what do you mean?
They were pretty angry.
They were angry and they thought
that I wanted this for them when
they were actually enjoying the
little time they had with their
mom and they wanted that time.
And actually she died two days
later.
So they felt like we were robbed
of half a day.
And they had felt pressured
because the power imbalance of
being offered this to have that
MAID assessment.
And I had told them, you can
cancel that.
And I didn't set that up for you.
How did you offer to arrange that
MAID assessment?
I guess it was home care that was
wanting to inform her of her
options.
And so I don't know if it was a
social worker who went to the
house to talk to them.
And I started, I had a patient who
had a relatively new spinal cord
injury, no time for adjustment,
was told by a MAID provider.
She could come back whenever she
wanted that she would qualify.
And anyways, I started speaking
about these things.
And then doctors started
connecting with me about cases of
concern.
And that's what I ended up
speaking in Parliament to share
these cases.
And it really hasn't stopped since
then.
So, you know, I think that you've
witnessed the introduction of MAID
as a physician in practice.
And if we consider Track 1, which
is the original legislation that
was offered to Canadians as an
exceptional measure for, you know,
exceptional cases of suffering.
But that's now kind of rapidly
shifting.
In your view, what is MAID
becoming?
I think, you know, I was just
involved, I've written an article
in BMJ about safety in MAID.
That's the British Medical
Journal?
Yeah, the British Medical Journal
of Supportive and Palliative Care.
I wrote an article with the
coroner of Ontario's cases that he
released.
And in that, I talk about the
drift that I think is happening.
And part of, you know, I think
that we've had very little kind of
corrective measures in terms of
how MAID is implemented.
So, you have certain MAID
professionals, clinicians who do
an excellent job.
They self-regulate themselves.
They will look for other options.
And then you have a very, I think,
a very small group of MAID
providers who potentially have a
very lax interpretation of the
law.
And no one is really correcting
that drift.
And so, patients can shop until
they find those few MAID
providers.
And I think that there are, in my
opinion, there are proving cases
that the rest of Canadians, the
rest of their own MAID community,
the rest of our medical community,
would not consider to be in
keeping with the spirit of the
law.
So, we hear so much these days
about quality assurance in
medicine and medical care.
What are the quality assurance
measures looking at this whole
process and reassessment and, you
know, re-evaluation using real
live data in terms of where and
how the process is evolving?
Are those measures in place?
I would say they're not.
So, the government did not
legislate that any special
training happened to happen for
MAID assessors and providers.
So, any physician and nurse
practitioner can be a MAID
provider in Canada.
They do not have to do any special
training.
Alberta has just tabled a bill
that would enforce training before
becoming a MAID provider.
But otherwise, no.
So, you had a lot of people
joining on who wanted to help this
along but might not have had
chronic care skills.
But aren't assessors?
I've heard that assessors go
through some training to become
assessors.
But by that, you mean they have no
experience in the field of
palliative or other rehabilitative
care?
No, they have no training,
actually.
No, they have no training.
Really?
No.
So, I'll tell you.
So, basically, the government did
give a certain amount of money to
CAMEP, which is the Canadian
Association of MAID assessors and
providers.
And they have developed or are in
the process of optimizing their
curriculum that can be offered.
It's not mandatory.
It's CMEs.
And you have people like David
Henderson, Nova Scotia Health
Authority, who has shared in
parliamentary hearings when he was
called that he's very concerned
that a lot of MAID assessors in
his area do not have an
understanding.
So, he's a palliative care doctor
by training that a lot of them
don't necessarily have that kind
of palliative approach,
evidence-based approach to chronic
care or symptomology, like
managing symptomology.
And a lot of them, he offered to
create a curriculum.
This is just a local story, but
just to explain.
And it was declined because he was
told it would be too
time-consuming to do that.
So, you have some people who are
very motivated, who want to learn,
who will learn the best evidence
to how to mitigate suffering.
But then, actually, you don't have
a standardized training program
across Canada.
So, that can lead to potential,
like I said, drift of certain lax
providers.
And you have Alberta that's moving
towards enforcing training to
have, to be a MAID provider.
So, I remember hearing about how
there's sort of very firm belief
among leadership nationally that
standards are in place and this is
all going to be covered by
standards.
Is that the case on the street?
No, it's not.
And I think that that's been,
like, I try not to be political,
but it's been very difficult
because the government, even in
the parliamentary hearings that
are ongoing, what they want to
hear is that we are professionals.
We will get this right every time.
Trust us to do the best job.
You have CAMAP and Pursuit & Al
publishing in CMAJ saying, yeah,
there's wide variation in how we
practice MAID and what we believe,
but let us figure it out with MAID
consensus internally.
You have the disability community.
I know that you had Krista Carr on
on a previous episode who have
been trying to share their
experiences, even under track one
of people getting MAID because of
long-term care, forced separation
from their families, lack of
resources.
And you have the government, I
suspect, that doesn't want to lose
face, who just keeps saying, like,
we have standards, there's no
issue.
The thing that we hear often is,
like, there's no police charges,
there's been no college issues, so
there's no issue.
And for me, I understand, I have
friends who are MAID assessors who
are doing a good job, like,
according to the legislation,
whether I agree with the
legislation or not.
But there are others who are not.
And trying to pretend that there
are no issues because of the
polarization of this debate really
leaves the disability community in
a bad position, in my opinion.
So that when you have people who
have transient suicidal crisis,
just like me or you would have,
you have people looking at them
saying, yeah, I totally agree.
If I were you, I think it would be
totally compassionate to end your
life.
And so in very short order, ending
their lives.
In terms of quality insurance, in
terms of that question you asked,
every province has different
legislation.
So even though MAID is a criminal
framework, it's an exemption to
homicide and assisted suicide,
it's carved out federally, you
have each province enacting
medical legislation in terms of
how MAID will happen in each
province.
And Ontario, I would say, has the
best oversight.
Our chief coroner of Ontario was
legislated, mandated to have
oversight of MAID.
And he has a team of specialized
nurses called the MAID review
team.
And they review all cases of MAID
in Ontario.
And they give feedback to MAID
providers if they think there were
some medical issues.
There were some complaints, like
in the media, about how, you know,
feedback is great, but if it's not
changing their practice and
there's no enforcement, that's
problematic.
That's not the coroner's fault.
He doesn't have the ability to
sanction them.
I think he could refer them on to
the police or the college if he
wanted to, but he does a lot of
great teaching.
And so I think Ontario has the
best model, but it still doesn't
have sanctions.
And so I would say that we have
the best quality assurance, but
whether that leads to correction
will remain to be seen.
You know, part of this is
generating some conversation
around an issue that, you know,
people think about all the time.
I think it's on the topic agenda
of things that people consider
when they're sick, when they're
unwell.
And it's not surprising that there
are lots of opinions out there.
But getting back to track two,
which has been the expansion from
the original indication where
death was imminent,
are we seeing an increase in the
growth trajectory of the number of
track two cases?
Yeah.
So actually, I just want to say
for track one, just so that people
understand, it was never about
imminent death.
So Canada already had a very broad
legislation from 2016.
We had reasonably foreseeable
natural death.
And that has been interpreted, as
I said, like, because it's not
easily medically translatable.
It has been interpreted as weeks
to months by some made assessors
and providers and some up to five
years prognosis.
And track one allows for same day
death.
And we can talk about that.
But in terms of track two and in
terms of growth in general, there
has been astronomical growth in
Canada.
I would say, you know, Health
Canada would probably frame it
differently than me.
But, you know, year after year, we
were seeing like 36 percent
increase in made totals.
The last year's, our last report
is the sixth annual report on
made, which came out in 4-2024.
So it came out in December 2025,
reporting on the 2024 year.
And I think it showed a 7 percent
growth increase of all made.
And I think the numbers for track
two went from 450 to 750.
You have to look those up for
sure.
But I would say that the increase
is quite substantial.
And already in track two, like I
said, some made providers are
calling that five years.
It's actually in Pursuit and Al's
made assessors and providers'
scientific research that she
published in CMAJ last month, I
think.
So that is from the made community
themselves.
But for track two, you don't have
to be anywhere near the end of
your life.
So you can have people in their
20s or 30s with fibromyalgia.
You can have people who have
social vulnerabilities.
So in terms of the MAID Death
Review Committee, which again, is
what the, so like I said, the
chief coroner has been doing
oversight of MAID.
But he decided in the beginning of
2024 to enact a MAID Death Review
Committee on top of his MAID
Review Team.
And I'm one of his members.
There are 16 of us on a panel.
And his team selects cases that we
look at, look at the cases, review
them, and then lend our expertise
in terms of public safety for him
to make reports that he's
published.
They're out there with the cases.
And in the track two reports that
came out in October 2024, you can
see that track two cases had more
women than men, tended to be
poorer people, tended to not have
as many have a next of kin.
So like for me, already we know
from the Health Canada reports
that loneliness and being a
burden, what are those?
For me, those are societal
neglect, right?
The people we have failed to make
them feel included in community.
But in the track two reports, like
in terms of looking at statistical
evidence, many of them could not
name a family member as their next
of kin.
Some of them naming their doctor
or their lawyer.
To me, that speaks of social
isolation.
If you look at the treatments they
were offered before they got MAID,
99, I think, percent of them, 99
percent of them got medicines,
drugs.
But only 50 percent of them had
been offered disability or mental
health supports, and less than 10
percent had been offered community
solutions.
As somebody who has done chronic
care of vulnerable people, often
housebound in my life, most of
them have benefited most from
mental health supports, disability
supports, and community solutions.
And so I find that very worrisome.
So, you know, as we approach the
100,000 number for MAID in about a
decade, you've certainly said that
that marks a quiet but very
profound transformation in how
medicine understands suffering and
autonomy and its own purpose in
this.
What has changed here, or is
changing in real time, that
Canadians are just not realizing
that we need to acknowledge?
Well, you know, there was a very
interesting study done by Choi et
al.
It was published in BMJ Open.
It was an NIH, like a National
Institute of Health study, of
Canadians.
From the States, yeah.
Yeah.
But it was a survey of Canadians
to see what they knew about
medical assistance in dying.
And what it showed is that the
majority of Canadians in that
survey strongly support medical
assistance in dying.
But the survey followed up with
cases that are actually happening
in Canada, that there are
legislatively allowed by our
framework.
And actually support for medical
assistance in dying in those cases
fell a lot.
So it means that I think that most
Canadians, even though they
strongly support medical
assistance in dying, like they
think of it as, as you mentioned,
eminent death.
First of all, it was never about
eminent death.
They think about it for people
that we have tried everything,
that we care about, and we have
really failed.
And so we're offering this option.
And that's not actually the case.
That has never been the case.
Our legislation is much broader
than any American jurisdiction's
approach to MAID.
Or they say assisted suicide
because they self-ingest their
meds.
They have a much tighter
prognosis.
You know, in the Netherlands and
Belgium, even though they have
problems.
And actually, it's Carter.
The judges said we would never be
like them.
They actually discounted evidence
from Belgium because they said we
would never have such a kind of
open approach.
They still have to, in most cases,
say that everything has been tried
and the patient has not responded.
So tried, not just suggested.
Yeah.
But tried.
And as you said, like as I pointed
out in the track two cases, what
are we offering people before we
offer them death?
We have another report, a dementia
report.
And again, my father died for
dementia, so this one.
And he died, he was dying as that
dementia report was coming out.
It was very sad for me that of the
people who received MAID for
dementia, they were citing fear of
decline in the future, fear of
being burdened.
Things that, you know, we should
be comforting people with.
We should be offering them
existential psychotherapy.
We have Harvey Chachanov has, you
know, he is like a pioneer in the
world in creating dignity therapy
and letting people understand that
they still have value, even as
their lives change, to help them
adjust to illness and injury.
Yet, people received MAID, only
13% of them had been connected
with palliative care before they
died.
That, to me, is a human rights
failure.
That we're not offering care
first.
That this is not really an
exception.
And I am disappointed that
Canadians don't know.
It's not their responsibility.
But it's not been very high in the
public interest either, I would
say.
And there's a lot, and because
there's a lot of polarization, you
can have unkind players on both
ends of the spectrum.
That can make it more difficult to
have what is a very complex
debate.
But I do think that people are
allowed to have their opinions on
both ends of the spectrum.
I'm just, I'm talking about unkind
players.
I think people are allowed to have
their positions.
But then we have to bridge.
And we have to bridge with reality
and what's actually happening.
And these cases are actually
happening.
It's not helpful to anyone to have
certain groups saying that, to the
disability community, basically
they're saying they're all liars.
Not, not okay.
Not okay.
This is the community that the UN
has said is marginalized.
We don't meet their needs.
We don't meet their health care
needs.
We don't include them in society.
We don't have the accommodations
they need to get into most places
to actually be able to connect
with people.
And then that is the one group
that we offer, death.
And then we say, no, your stories
are fake.
That's basically why I got
involved.
Because, you know, it's very sad.
But in terms of discrimination,
people have a harder time when
medical experts get involved.
Even though I'm only saying what
the Indigenous and disability
community has been saying from the
beginning.
So are we at risk or is there this
looming risk of heading towards
euthanizing the poor and
disadvantaged in Canada in the
name of compassion?
Well, like I said, I think it's
pockets of providers.
You know, there was actually an
Associated Press investigative
journalist article that came out
by Maria Chang and Angie Wang in
2024, where they were given access
to MAID providers' private forum,
where MAID physicians were talking
about how distressed they were but
felt compelled to do these cases
because they fit the legislative
criteria and patients really
wanted them.
So I'm not blaming those doctors,
but I don't think that that's what
the legislation intended.
Like, I understand that there's no
definition of suffering, but
really, like, poverty?
That's not irremediable.
If we cared to fix that, we could.
Housing insecurity, loneliness,
going into long-term care.
What does that say about the state
of our long-term care?
And is MAID not, because MAID is
lending a life, is that not
further neglect?
When we're saying that we can't
offer them a better situation, so
we will offer them death.
There was a case in the MAID Death
Review Committee of a woman who is
in her 60s, I believe, and she's
obese.
And that was also part of what was
leaked in the Associated Press
article through the forum of MAID
providers.
And this lady was disconnected
from care for years.
She was housebound, and she had a
history of depression, but she had
been off her meds for several
years.
She requests MAID, and she refuses
any workup, any workup, to figure
out what her actual prognosis is,
how she would do.
And the MAID providers approved
her.
And this is a MAID Death Review
Committee case that's been
published.
The MAID providers deemed her as
having a grievous and irremediable
suffering with a reasonably
foreseeable natural death because
she would refuse any treatment
anyways if she got sick.
And a reporter asked me about this
case.
Well, it's her choice.
People are allowed to decline
care, so wasn't it compassionate
to offer her MAID?
And, you know, this is where I
feel like there's, like, a little
bit of disconnect.
I'm not talking about the
reporter.
I'm talking about everybody, like,
in general.
And, like, some of us have had
these life experiences that are
changing for us.
But when I did home care, I was
called several times into homes of
people, like, where they had gone
to do work in the apartment and
realized this person was in a
total state of neglect.
You know, there'd be, like, feces
on the floor.
There could be papers.
There could be hoarding.
There could be lots of things.
Total social isolation, not
malnutrition.
And sometimes these patients
wanted to die or they wanted me to
go away.
Either way, right?
So now it sounds like they found a
similar patient in the time of
MAID and they offered the MAID.
So what would I have done if I had
met this lady when I did CLSC
Metro Home Care or, like, the
other patients that I met?
I would say, please, let me be
your friend.
Please let me come back.
Let me get to know you.
And actually, I would like to send
other people from my team.
They're really nice people and
they'd like to just have tea with
you, right?
And we would send in the social
worker and we would send in other
people.
And I would keep going back and
we'd be building that relationship
as long as they would let us in.
That is what I consider good care,
right?
You build up that trust and then
eventually you get them reengaged
with care.
You reconnect them with community.
That is the appropriate response
to someone in that state.
But saying, well, you're not going
to get treatment anyways, I'm
going to give you MAID, to me is
just a worsening of the neglect
that they have found themselves in
for whatever reason.
You know, people say, and that's
what really concerns me, people
say this is autonomy.
You know, autonomy is a fragile
concept.
And some of us have more choices
and therefore more freedom in our
autonomy to make choices than
other people.
Some people have been dealt a
really, a really shitty card, like
a really shitty hand.
And it's our job to help them
repair that.
It's, it's not, I think that when
we say like, I care about what I
hear and what I'm, what, how I
interpret this is, I care about
you so little that I'll help you
end your life.
I know that's not their approach,
but this is how I see it because I
have accompanied so many people
and you can't help it when you do
chronic care and you follow people
for years yet, you, you learn to
love them, right?
You know them, they know you.
They're like, it's, to me, it's
very personal.
This is not, this is not true love
to end someone's life when they're
like suicidal and in a state of
neglect.
I mean, Health Canada's own data
shows that loneliness, fear of
being a burden like you alluded
to, and existential suffering are
major drivers in the emergence of
more and more track two cases.
I mean, why is the answer here to
those conditions increasingly
death instead of care?
And when those are exactly the
kinds of suffering that, you know,
medicine and community are
actually supposed to respond to.
You know, I can share a personal
story about that.
Yeah, well, first, first, it
shouldn't be so easy.
I think that the government has
had a failure here, a major
failure.
I'm not talking about the main
clinicians.
I'm talking about the government
in terms of the lack of, of
willing to correct or willing to
mandate teaching or other kinds of
things.
But, you know, what I think is, is
I said, like I said, it's very
personal to me, but it's also
personal to me because I could see
myself in a different time having
made very different choices if I
hadn't, if I hadn't accompanied
those patients for a long time.
So when I started practicing and I
shared this on a different
podcast, I was given the care of
people who with very severe
disabilities and I felt scared.
My, I personally, I felt scared
and I started to project my own
fears, uncertainty of what would
happen to them and about their
death.
Those fears created what I call,
or what has been called in
evidence, therapeutic nihilism,
right?
This understanding that I can't
fix anything here, nothing's going
to get better, and maybe it would
be better if all of this just went
away for all of us.
And I shared that I probably had a
major depression or existential
crisis, it's hard to know now, but
part of that, that therapeutic
nihilism, which can, which I think
is a very natural response.
And I think a lot of Canadians are
scared of disability as well.
And so the thing is, it can feel
like a compassionate response if
you don't have the learnings and
potentially don't have the
psychological maturity, like you
haven't actually lived through
that, to understand the evidence
that people largely recover,
right?
If you look at the evidence on
major illness and injury, most
people by two years rate their
quality of life as the same as
age-matched, healthy individuals.
But now, in that time of crisis,
we can end their lives with MAID.
And so we absolutely need a
correction here.
Who it comes from, I don't care.
If it comes from the MAID
community and the clinicians who
are evidence-based, helping their
confers, great.
But I do think that for the
protection of Canada, there needs
to be some sort of external group
also providing oversight and
making sure.
This is not just any program.
This is a program to end life.
And it's been, for better or for
worse, it's been inserted in
medicine.
You know, my husband's a surgeon.
And can you imagine if, he's not,
he's a kidney cancer surgeon, but
anyways.
But imagine that he was doing
amputations and he was offering
them for things that could be
treated otherwise.
That would be unacceptable.
He'd probably have lost his
license.
And rightfully so.
We would all understand that.
But there seems to be a hard
disconnect.
And I think it's because of that
nihilism or people who call it
discrimination, call it what you
want.
But you see people who are with
disabilities and that fear that
you think you never want to be
there.
You would just be compassionate to
offer them death.
That needs to be corrected.
I wanted to switch gears a little
bit and sort of talk a little bit
about some of the illustrative
cases so people can understand a
little bit better what you've seen
and what the reviews have shown.
Some of your research has flagged
track two deaths among people with
no fixed address.
Now, how is it possible that
homeless people could be dying
under a system that actually
claims to have safeguards?
So actually, that stat was pulled
from the Health Canada report
itself.
And so I don't have a lot of data
on that.
But the Associated Press article
did speak about MAID for also in
that leaked document about MAID
for people with housing
insecurity.
So we do know that those cases are
happening.
We do know that there are cases of
people who are, their needs, their
suffering is not from their
disability.
In fact, the previous president of
CAMAP said in an interview with
Megan Gilmore for the Canadian
Affairs that the legislation
doesn't tie the suffering to the
disability.
And so you have some people
interpreting that as it could be
any suffering.
And we know that homelessness,
financial insecurity, loneliness,
all of these things, they are real
suffering.
I mean, no one's going to deny
that they're real suffering.
But I don't think the intended
legislation was that we would end
lives for that kind of suffering.
So in the theme of safeguards
then, identifying individuals in
this predicament,
shouldn't there be built into this
whole system provisions for
something like a crisis team for
these types of track 2 requests so
that there's expedited access to
the care that's truly needed to
help start the process of turning
things around for these
individuals who are otherwise at
risk of death, potentially?
Yeah, I couldn't agree with you
more, Mark.
Actually, I'm friends with David
Shannon.
David Shannon is a gentleman with
disabilities.
He's also won the Order of Canada,
Order of Ontario.
He's a human rights lawyer.
And we have written an article
about needed legislative
safeguards that could potentially
make this regime safer.
You know, I personally, I'm with
the United Nations that track 2
needs to be repealed.
That if you look at the stats,
like, the question is, like, it's
a public policy, right?
So one has to decide how many
wrongful deaths one thinks is okay
before they stop a program.
This is not about suicide.
Suicide is a right.
We've decriminalized suicide.
People commit suicide.
It sounds very harsh.
I don't want people committing
suicide.
But this is our society helping
people end lives.
And I, from the stats, from the
stories that I've seen, I find
track 2 very dangerous.
I actually think there have to be
a lot of safeguards put into track
1.
You know, that people can have
same-day death, again, with rushed
assessments, without having access
to palliative care,
when they have clearly, in my
opinion, and from the
documentation, lacked capacity.
And these are also really
problematic.
And I think also, you know,
there's two levels of things that
we're dealing here with this MAID
program.
You have a group of people who
want compassionate access to
death.
But we have to balance it with the
safety of vulnerable Canadians.
And a lot of people say, well,
these are white, elderly, wealthy
people getting MAID.
Therefore, they're not vulnerable.
You know, I'm so sorry.
I used to do part of my CLSU home
care in Westmount.
When you're near the end of death,
it doesn't matter how rich you
are.
You can still have
vulnerabilities.
You can still have
vulnerabilities.
You can still have, unfortunately,
family and elder abuse is very
high in Canada in general.
You know, in the MAID Death Review
Committee, you have cases of
families raising MAID repeatedly
to the clinical team,
not the patient, patients who have
documented pretty severe cognitive
changes who under the current law
shouldn't be getting MAID.
The family is saying they want
MAID and they're getting MAID.
You have patients where there's
caregiver burnout involved and the
family is calling the care
coordination service for MAID
assessments when the patient has
clearly documented the day before
that they didn't want MAID.
So everyone's allowed to have
their own opinion.
But just to be very honest, I
think we need to get rid of track
two and we need to fix track one.
It sounds like just a deeper lens
looking at those situations when
it comes to talking about
safeguards and sort of
prophetically saying that the
safeguards are there, they will do
their job.
And you hear more and more stories
where, you know, acknowledging the
reality and that these things have
happened.
The safeguards need to be better
developed or, as we alluded to
earlier, the quality assurance and
reassessing and taking the time to
reassess where are we at now?
You know, is there a problem?
What do we do about it?
And how do we reassess for being
successful at implementing those
changes?
You described, maybe you alluded
to it a little bit earlier, where
a patient was vigorously roused
from a state of sedation and sort
of getting rough ideas with
nodding and sort of mouthing yes
and blinking that they were
willing.
And that was sort of considered
consent for maid.
Can you take us through like what
happened in that case and how, in
terms of the principles of
consent, how that could be
considered valid in Canada?
I don't think it's valid.
I just have to be very clear.
But this is a documented case from
the coroner.
So the chief coroner actually in
2020, it's not public at the time,
but he gave a presentation to maid
providers saying that there were
documentation problems with
capacity, that patients, that
there were patients who had
clearly documented incapacity by
the treating team or were
delirious from the notes, and that
somehow the maid provision
happened anyways.
The maid assessments happened
during those times, and there was
no standard capacity assessment
done.
You know, to do a capacity
assessment, it has to be
issue-specific.
You have to show that the patient
understands and appreciates what
this choice is and what the other
options are, and that they can
reiterate to you their reasoning
and understand.
You have to make sure that their
insight and judgment is intact.
You know, there's lots of things
that go into a rigorous capacity
assessment.
And in terms of capacity, there is
usually a presumption of capacity
in everyday life, except that as
the stakes get higher for a
medical decision, as you and I
know, it's really important that
capacity is assessed.
So I will share that when my
father had dementia,
unfortunately, was not making a
financial decision.
Like, my father was very
high-functioning in terms of
presenting himself for two
minutes, even though he thought we
were still in India now and lived
on a cruise boat.
Like, it was pretty amazing how –
anyways, we had to get him
declared incapacitated for his
finances.
And we had – Ontario has – you
have to hire a capacity assessor
who's been trained and certified
by Ontario.
They have to come to the house.
They had to meet my dad separately
and then us and actually look at
the finances and find out what was
real.
And all of this to protect my dad,
which I appreciate.
But the standard of financial
capacity assessments is very high,
right?
And they decided my dad did not
have financial capacity.
And so the POA for my mom was
enacted.
For a maid, one could say that the
stakes are just as high or higher,
right?
We're talking about life and
death.
And so in this case that you're
talking about that was published
by the coroner, and I wrote an
analysis of it in an article, I
think, called Rushing to Die.
This gentleman had made maid
inquiries.
So it's not that he had actually
had maid assessments.
It's not that he had met an
assessor and talked about his
suffering and been approved.
He had made maid inquiries.
And then he became delirious, as
according to the documentation of
the treating team.
And actually, he was made
comfortable.
His POA was enacted.
His substitute decision maker was
enacted, meaning that everyone had
acknowledged that this patient
didn't have capacity.
And he was being prepared for a
transfer to hospice.
A maid assessor shows up and says,
well, I think he wants maid.
I'm paraphrasing now because I
don't have the case in front of
me.
He holds medication to try to make
him more alert, shakes him, like
rouses him to try to get him to
open his eyes, accepts nods,
mouthing yes, as confirmation that
he has capacity and that the
assessment is good enough to do
under those conditions.
Facilitates a second virtual
assessment that way.
And then the patient's life is
ended through maid.
I don't think in any way that that
fits the capacity standard in
Canada.
I do not know if the chief coroner
put the case forward.
We don't know those kinds of—we're
not entitled.
Like, as the May Death Review
Committee, we're not entitled to
that kind of information.
Like, if there was an inquest or
if he was reported to the college,
I don't know.
But I think it's very clear
for—I'm sure you understand, too,
as a physician, that doesn't meet
the standard of capacity and
currently maid is supposed to be a
voluntary decision where there is
capacity.
You know, you also describe or
speak of a patient saying that she
would rather die than live in
poverty.
But by definition, that's not a
medical crisis.
And it's a social crisis.
And when a patient says that to
you and hearing it as a physician
or as a citizen, like, what does
that reveal about what the system
has become or is at risk of
becoming?
Yeah.
You know, this is—I'm concerned
about social messaging in general,
Mark.
So in terms of suicide prevention
principles, the strongest one that
we have is that messaging affects
our choices, which is why the
Indigenous leaders are so
concerned, right?
They have a suicide crisis amongst
their youth.
And what is the strongest
prevention tool that we have?
It is the message that death is
not the answer, suicide is not the
answer to our life suffering, that
we can overcome life suffering,
that there can be hope.
So when we start to introduce very
broadly into society that actually
for a certain group of people,
death could be the answer, we are
potentially doing what we know is
suicide—the opposite of what
suicide prevention does is suicide
and inducement to suicide.
So when Robin Williams committed
suicide, suicide rates went up in
America.
When a youth commits suicide on an
Indigenous reserve, the community
has to be really careful and try
to really attend to their other
young because the rates of suicide
after that, they go up
transiently.
When people have access to
pesticides or guns or bridges,
there is increased suicide rate.
And these are—these are—these
are—like, if you put up
guardrails, we know that suicide
rates go down.
It's not like someone walks over
to the next bridge and jumps.
But here we have a program that
offers a compassionate, lethal
means, like, embedded in medicine,
very attractive, and is being
given to patients.
So that patient of mine had a
spinal cord—I mentioned to her
earlier, actually.
You know, she can't—she has a
spinal cord injury, and she let me
share her story.
I shared it in Parliament.
She can walk, but she's lost some
of her other functions.
She can't lift.
She used to be—do more manual
labor.
She would rather die than not be
able to afford to live well.
And her—and I'll just step back
from her because I don't want this
to become all about her.
But what I'm seeing is patients
who are saying, well, MAID is
legitimate.
I don't want to go see a mental
health expert.
And it's very difficult when MAID
providers are telling some of my
patients that they don't need to,
that it's their right.
Like, that is not—the
legislation—if you actually read
the Legislative Health Canada's,
like, write-up, not in the
legislation,
the intention is not to refuse all
treatments to automatically render
yourself eligible for MAID, right?
That is—that is suicide.
And yet, you have some MAID
assessors telling my patients,
yeah, you don't have to do that.
And, like, as in the case of this
lady.
And it becomes very difficult to
offer care when you have these
competing principles.
You have someone else kind of
saying, like, hey, come here.
I'll take care of you.
I really care about you.
I'll end your life.
Don't worry about that treatment.
It can be very difficult, then, to
do the hard work—it is hard work,
right?
It's not hard—I don't know if
you've—I have personally, like I
shared, had a depression myself.
I've been suicidal myself.
Very ambivalent.
I would have been very happy if a
bus had hit me when I was doing
home care those years ago, for
many years, actually.
And the idea that someone would be
there offering death to a certain
group of people when they have
their down,
that it's not understanding, that
it can still be mitigated, that it
can still be treated, is very
worrisome to me.
You've talked of some cases where
a disabled patient in hospital was
feeling medically neglected
and sort of even felt humiliated
and being left hungry, just in a
state of decay and still moving
through the MAID process.
Now, who's supposed to protect the
patient in those scenarios where
the care provided by an
institution in itself
is actually wearing them down,
making them see MAID as being more
appealing?
So in that case, that's one of the
cases where I gave a talk and the
doctor involved in this case
called me.
Not the MAID provider, but
somebody who is associated.
And he said, Dr.
Coelho, I have to say, I thought
you were a bit over the top.
He's like, I heard you give a talk
of what you're worried about in
the legislation, but we're all
professionals here.
He said, except that there's this
case, and I have taken care of one
of the family members for years,
and I know this family.
And this patient was also
delirious, and he had his MAID
provision booked before he had his
assessments,
and he was separated from his
family during COVID.
And could you help?
That's how I got involved in this
case, unfortunately, after he had
died.
And I offered kind of support to
the family, who basically have a
lot of PTSD from what happened.
But, you know, a lot of the cases
I spoke about in Parliament since
it became public were also during
the time of COVID.
So add on that layer mark of them
being separated from their family.
They're not allowed to have that
many visits.
So this gentleman was eventually,
initially, he came in, I think he
had a fall,
and then they put him on the COVID
floor in case he had COVID.
He caught C.
difficile while he was there.
So these are all acute things,
right?
You know what?
I don't think we should be
offering MAID for someone when
there are things that are acute.
It also affects our voluntariness.
So, like, when we talk about,
someone could have capacity,
but if you are in a state of acute
suffering, that might not be the
best time to talk about death.
And yet someone, when they
mentioned to him that he wouldn't
be able to go back home,
that he'd have to have a longer
rehab admission, they said, or he
could have MAID.
And so all of these things affect
voluntariness.
And then our system failing people
also adds on to that in terms of
affecting our choice.
Again, it comes back to, like, is
this really just about autonomy?
Or can we understand that life is
a bit more complex than that?
And that there are different
constraints.
You know, if no one had offered
him MAID during that time, it
would still be a horrible memory,
but at least he would have come
home.
Maybe he would have still chosen
MAID when he was stable and later,
but we will never know.
And also I strongly question
whether he had capacity.
I do not believe he did.
Like, he was so sick during that
time that there was, from what I
understand, he was delirious.
Many failures there.
You mentioned something that sort
of really struck me, and that's
the distress the families
sometimes experience,
and even to the point of having a
PTSD-like reaction.
Can you comment further about
family and caregivers of patients
pursuing different avenues,
respect to, you know, track to and
MAID?
Sure.
What is the impact on families and
caregivers?
I'm sure it's very diverse.
You know, I am sure it depends on
how the family is, what their
values and preferences are,
and how they perceive MAID went
for them.
There was an article that came out
of the Joint Center of Bioethics,
and they had used CAMAP, so like a
pro-MAID, like scientific group,
to acquire the families.
So, you know, you wouldn't think
that these are people who all hate
MAID.
And they interviewed these 12
families, and then they wrote up
their findings.
And one-third, so I guess that's
four families, thought that MAID
was amazing,
that it was a dignified death, and
they were so happy their family
had access to that death.
But one-fourth found the,
the procedure in itself traumatic,
that it didn't go, it wasn't
peaceful,
it was either rushed, or the
person was in pain,
and they weren't comfortable,
and there were other things going
on.
And then one-thirds, the last
four,
found it was undignified because
it was driven by socially unjust
reasons.
That's very hard.
And actually, that's an older
study,
but a newer study just came out,
literally, I think, 15 days ago,
so like at the beginning of March,
from a group of University of
Alberta researchers
on family perspectives of MAID.
And Sharon Kirkey published an
article,
the reason I know about this is
because she interviewed me for her
article
and sent me the link to the study,
so I read the study.
And, you know, again, diverse
responses,
but a significant amount found
that there was a rushed assessment
where, you know,
the patient didn't necessarily
have like a deep dive of their
suffering.
They weren't sure that all options
had really been covered.
There was virtual assessments that
they felt were inadequate,
and some reported in that study
only finding out about MAID of
their loved one after the fact.
And the reporter had asked me what
I thought about that.
Like, should families,
I think the question to me was,
should families be able to veto
MAID deaths?
And I said, you know,
I don't think it's that families
want to be able to veto MAID
deaths.
We have certain laws about
autonomy.
But I think families want to be
involved
because they are a necessary
safeguard.
They can offer information, for
example,
about past suicidal things,
about options that have not been
explored,
about ambivalence.
They can add a certain layer.
I mean, not all families,
but a lot of families could do
that.
And a lot of families would just
want to know
that really this was actually a
good medical choice for the
family.
It is going to affect them.
And so I ended up accompanying,
after I spoke in Parliament in
2020,
I ended up accompanying not a
small group of families.
I have been connected by lots of
reporters
of distressed families
and lots of physicians with
distressed families.
And so part of all of this
is also becoming a support for
families
who have an incredible level of
trauma.
And what I'm really concerned
about
is like how many people,
because all of these people were
very pro-made
and potentially in principle are
pro-made,
but now do not feel like it's a
safe law
because of what's happened to
their family member.
And so the question is like
when I circle back to the Choi et
al.
study
which showed that most Canadians
don't understand
what can happen in our MAID
program,
how many people will it take for
there to be changes,
for there to be the will
to really change this program and
make it safer?
One of the things I noticed
when I was researching this story,
particularly for the episode with
Krista Carr
and yourself,
is how the language has shifted.
There seems to be a control
around the language we're using,
which seems to align with sort of
the pro-made agenda.
You know, initially we were
talking about
doctor-assisted suicide.
Now we're using the acronym MAID,
which is much cleaner.
It's avoiding all the trigger
words.
Suicide isn't in there.
We're not referring to death
directly.
So we've got this sort of clean
use,
a shift from some of the more sort
of
triggery or difficult language.
Also, I noticed this with mature
minors.
And I read that.
I was like, we're talking about
children.
Why are they calling them mature
minors?
What does that even mean?
But it seems to me there's a shift
away
from some of the more challenging
and problematic language
that might actually stop people
and get them to sort of reconsider
this.
Have you noticed a shift in the
language
or a shift around the control of
the language
that's being used to describe
what's happening?
Yeah, it's a very good
observation.
And it's one, like, for example,
the palliative care community,
so Balfour Mount, who pioneered
palliative care.
You went to England, learned from
Dame Cicely Saunders,
came back.
He was a urologist in Montreal,
who became one of the first
palliative care doctors in Canada,
had said, we've always had medical
aid in dying.
Because that's what they called it
in Quebec.
They called it medical aid in
dying.
That's what palliative care people
do.
And I remember that my parents
didn't even understand
the difference between palliative
care and MAID.
And that was largely part of the
debate.
And I don't know if you have ever
seen the article.
It's by Miranda Schreiber in The
Walrus.
It's called The Lobby Group That
Owns the Conversation.
And it talks about how certain
very wealthy lobbyists
have funded, well-funded
lobbyists,
have employed PR companies to come
up with these terms.
You know, even in terms of forced
transfers right now,
they're having a court case about
everyone has to do MAID
everywhere,
otherwise it's cruel.
And we have forced transfers.
We do transfers all the time.
But that was a coined term
that you could read about in a
Policy Options article
by Gabrielle Peters
about this kind of language
discussion
and how we can create arguments
and how we can reach people in
society.
And that's part of what I think is
different
in the UK debate.
They didn't have so much a
monopolization
on the media and the language.
You know, so they're doing,
though,
what we did here 10 years ago.
So, you know, they talk about
initially,
like what they're talking about
here,
it was the same discussion that we
had here,
that this would be an exceptional
measure.
they said, you know,
Gaetan Barré predicted 100 cases
in Quebec,
requests per year in Quebec.
Now it makes up 7% of their deaths
and they're doing research as to
why.
And they had said it would be
first and foremost
a policy of excellent palliative
care.
I was still at McGill.
I was still in Montreal when this
happened in 2010,
when this discussion happened.
And they said that, you know,
it would be,
there would be incredible
safeguards
to prevent wrongful deaths.
And then when it passed,
the language quickly shifted.
Like, safeguards have become
barriers to access.
You know, we almost lost the
language of safeguards.
You are discriminating against
certain groups
by not allowing them access.
So instead of protecting
populations,
the language has largely shifted
to ones of discrimination
and barriers to access.
And if you look at the articles
that are coming out after Alberta,
even though, for example,
the National Post and the Globe
and Mail,
both their,
even the Globe and Mail editorial
board,
they all welcome Daniel Smith's
bill
for safeguards.
The initial articles that were
coming out
was that Alberta was restricting
rights.
I think that was,
I was actually at the press
conference.
A lot of the reporters
who were framing their questions
were like,
why are you trying to restrict
people's rights?
They couldn't even understand
that there's an intersection here
about safety.
And part of that has to do
with very smart lobbying.
Right.
We're back from the break, folks,
with our guest today,
Dr.
Ramona Coelho
on the Caregivers Podcast.
Ramona,
I'd like to speak
a little bit more broadly
about some terms.
And certainly,
you know,
there are many proponents of MAID
and MAID has its place
and it's evolving.
A lot of the conversation these
days
speaks of autonomy and choice.
But if people aren't being offered
housing,
income support,
proper mental health care first,
is that really autonomy in choice
or is this what you kind of mean
when you say
when death is given
because systems fail to offer
support,
that is not autonomy.
It's actually abandonment.
Yeah.
I say abandonment,
patient neglect,
coercive influences to die.
That is exactly how I read it.
And suicide.
You know,
the International Association
of Suicide Prevention
just released a statement
in December of 2025
reminding the world,
so they're the biggest group
of suicide prevention experts
that are coupled
with the World Health
Organization,
that,
first of all,
that MAID for mental illness
cannot be done safely,
that we don't have any evidence,
first of all,
to be able,
it's guesswork
about who will never get better.
So we're,
when we say it's grievous
and irremediable,
we're actually guessing
and we'll be wrong
more than 50% of the time.
But even for psychosocial
suffering
for people with disabilities,
we must not forget
the principles
of suicide prevention.
And so,
when someone is
wanting to die
because they have
a transient life crisis,
and by transient,
I could mean
a longer transient life crisis.
Like,
some people suffer
for a few years.
I've had patients
with disabilities
who,
you know,
I let medical students
come to my clinic
to see and meet
my patients
and to learn.
And,
I introduced them
to a lady
who had been
in the hospital
in and out
for years.
And she does have disabilities.
She would have
qualified for MAID.
And she would qualify
for MAID now.
But,
but then,
though,
some things
change.
they change
without necessarily
systems getting better.
And actually,
sometimes
even without treatment.
Just with accompaniment
and something
external of medicine
helps them.
Because community life,
meaning,
these things
can often
change
our perspectives
on whether,
on our will to live.
And so,
100%,
I see this as
patient neglect.
I also see it as,
like,
ignoring evidence-based
medicine,
suicide prevention,
medicine,
and how we actually
can best help
the patient.
Should,
well,
I mean,
you've said that
MAID
is now shifting
medicine
from treatment
of suffering
to the elimination
of the suffering
of the suffering
patient.
And what does that
do to our
medical culture today
and what impact
does that actually
have on the next
generation of physicians?
In your discussions
with medical students,
what is,
how is this
affecting their vision?
You know,
just because I have
been labeled
as extremely biased,
I'm so careful
about talking
about medical students.
And it's unfortunate,
right?
like,
it's like,
okay,
I don't feel
I've been labeled
a certain way,
so probably
that's not something
I should bring
into the discussion.
But I definitely
try to focus
on vulnerability,
on recovery,
on understanding,
not flattening
the patient
just to their suffering,
to try to understand
holistically
what is,
like,
the total pain,
what are all
the aspects,
the things that
we can offer them
outside the gamut
of traditional,
like,
medications.
So I would say
that that's my focus
with medical students.
In terms of rewriting
the ethics of medicine,
I am really concerned.
I did co-edit a book
with Shruda Lemmons,
who's the bioethics chair
at the University of Toronto
for the law faculty,
and Dr.
Sana Gained,
who is a professor
of psychiatry
in Toronto,
called Unraveling
Made in Canada.
And in that book,
we have
different chapters
from different experts
across Canada
talking about the problems
with the maid regime.
And in one of my
chapters that I wrote,
I ended
saying,
I am so worried
that,
you know,
young students
who haven't had
the,
I would say,
the,
haven't had the benefit
of long
accompaniment
of patients
with chronic
issues,
not learning
that resilience
and patience,
not learning
that we can
target suffering.
if they see
that less
than they see
made,
and we have
an incredibly
high rate
of made
in Canada
right now,
we're at
one in twenty
deaths,
our made
deaths.
And for example,
with ALS,
I wrote an article,
a gentleman
contacted me
that his
neurologist
told him
that he was
the only
person
in his
practice
who was
still alive
at his
state of
disease
that everybody
else had
had made.
and the
Health Canada
report
mentions that
as well,
that we have
much higher
made deaths
for ALS
than natural
deaths anymore.
And so the
question is
when we
no longer
have that
mentorship
or we're
not seeing
and not
having that
time to
understand
how beautiful
it can be,
how much
closure there
can be,
that there
can be
beauty
on the
other side,
will this
become like
the fastest
solution?
and I
can't say
that this
is my
own idea.
Harvey
Chachnoff,
I mentioned
him before
as the
gentleman
who pioneered
existential
therapy in
Canada,
he's also
one of my
life mentors
and friends,
but he
wrote an
article in
JAMA
about is
medical
assistance
in dying
really
palliative
care?
And he
goes through
the basis
of what
medicine
has always
traditionally
been,
and I
would say
that his
article speaks
not just
to whether
medicine,
a maid
belongs in
palliative
care,
which he
concludes
it doesn't,
but is it
actually congruent
with the
principles of
medicine,
right?
Medicine is
proportional.
We try to
really target
the suffering
and the
disease process
without hurting
the patient.
It tends
to try to
not do
harm.
Here we're
rewriting the
whole plan,
right?
We're ending
the person's
life because
we're saying
we can't
target the
suffering,
but actually
we're offering
missing the
suffering.
Anyways,
this article
goes on
principle by
principle.
It's a
brilliant
article written
by Harvey
Chachnov and
Joseph Fiennes,
F-I-N-S in
JAMA, and I
suggest everybody
reads it.
We were all
trained in the
biopsychosocial
model of
medicine, and
you alluded to
palliative care,
and that's
probably late
phase biopsychosocial
in terms of just
the whole journey
with the patient,
right?
And if you have a
patient for a long
time in your
practice, it's the
natural continuation
of the
biopsychosocial
model, but
as you sort
of start talking
about therapeutic
nihilism and
all these other
things, what
strikes me in
this conversation
is that it
seems like
there's a
halt to the
whole biopsychosocial
model, and this
is going to be
the fix.
Yes, Mark,
that's exactly it.
The biopsychosocial
model is something
that we've held
dear, it's been
rooted in our
training, it
continues to be,
yet.
I think it's
almost jeopardized
to some extent,
unless someone
would argue that
MAID falls within
the spectrum of
adapting the
biopsychosocial
model to the
patient in front
of you, but I
think that's a
difficult argument
to make, or
certainly one that
needs to be very
carefully made.
Yeah, I couldn't
agree with you
more.
You do chronic
care as well,
am I correct?
Well, I look
after patients
with chronic GI
disease.
but I
don't do,
and I have a
large patient
population of
chronic patients
in that specialty
setting, yes.
Yeah.
So, when we
think about sort
of track two
and how patients
are becoming
cognizant of
their options as
they're facing
certain situations,
and the question
is, does the
patient bring up
MAID, or is
should healthcare
workers even
be allowed to
raise MAID
first in a
vulnerable patient
as an option
amongst the list
of other things,
or sometimes
maybe even at
the forefront?
I could
understand where
nihilism and
bias could
definitely say,
well, there is
MAID early on
as opposed to
feeling somewhat
defeated at the
prospect of
everything that
needs to be
done to take
a vulnerable
patient out of
loneliness, out
of that feeling
of lack of
community.
I mean, it
takes time, and
it's a process to
bring people back
from those states,
but it is
achievable, as
you've pointed
out, and it is
something that we
can hold in our
sights.
So, before the
patients ask for
it, should it be in
the scope of what a
healthcare worker of
any kind should be
proposing to a
patient?
Yeah, I
absolutely think
it should not
be.
In some
jurisdictions, it
is, so in other
jurisdictions, it is
often illegal, like
patients must
initiate the MAID
discussion and say
that they want to
talk about it, and
in other jurisdictions
where it's not
illegal, it is
really frowned upon
to raise MAID.
CAMAP came up
with a policy called
Bringing Up
MAID, suggesting
that it was very
important that
Canadians be
informed about
this if they
could qualify, and
that has been
adopted by the
model standard by
Health Canada for
MAID.
I've considered that
to be very
concerning, and
these are just
professional standards.
Alberta has, in
their legislation
that they've
tabled, turned it
back to being a
patient-initiated
approach.
And the reason
you've touched
on it, you
know, when we're
talking about
vulnerability, we
talk about
medicine and
evidence-based
medicine about
discrimination, and
we have a lot of
evidence about
that doctors and
clinicians, unfortunately
we carry the same
biases, sometimes
consciously, and
sometimes very
dangerously
unconsciously, you
know, about, you
know, racism,
sexism, we have
lots of
disability, ageism,
you have a, there's
no shortage of
medical literature
that show that
doctors tend to
just naturally rate
the quality of life
people with
disabilities much
lower than they
rate their own
quality of life.
And so, when you
think that certain
people might be
seen as having a
life intolerable, and
that it might be a
mercy to end their
life, and so we
suggest it, you know,
that's problematic.
And the fact that,
like, the fact that
some patients get
offered MAID many
times.
I have been
contacted by
pro-MAID doctors
doctors in certain
cultures who are
really concerned, you
know, they're like,
I'm pro-MAID, like, I
have no problem with
MAID, they tell me, but
you know, I will
approach a patient and
they will say, like, if
you talk to me about
MAID again, I'm going
home, because you'll be
the third person during
the submission who
decided that somehow I
was MAID-able.
And, I mean, and
that's a very
sensitive doctor who's
concerned about it,
right?
They feel that they
have an obligation to
raise it, but they're
feeling that certain
patients are having it
raised way too many
times.
And the thing is,
there's a power
imbalance in our
relationship with
patients.
We have to
acknowledge that.
When I tell my
patients sometimes,
like, okay, these are
your options, you know,
in terms of your
values and preferences,
whatever, they're often
like, what would you
do?
Tell me, what would
you do?
Just tell me.
And I'm like, okay,
look, can we just get
back to, no, no,
what would you do?
I'll do whatever you
want.
What would you do for
your mother?
I'm like, okay.
So, like, there's a
lot of respect, there's a
lot of power imbalance.
And so, the thing is,
when someone goes to the
maid, which has
happened, what
signaling does that
sense?
That's a message of,
like, this is going to
be pretty shitty for you.
Right?
I'm terrified for you, and
I think maid might be a
good option for you.
And I think that's
incredibly dangerous.
That almost sounds like
it sets up a coercive
dynamic for the
elderly or the
disabled or the
marginalized as well.
Do you think that's a
slippery slope?
I think we're there.
I think we've, you
know, the idea that
people would say, like,
there's no slippery
slope.
This is exactly what
Carter intended.
I find that denialism.
We have enough cases.
Now we have, you know,
people saying that all
the media cases are
fake.
We have the coroner's
cases.
But, you know, not
everybody in the
disability community can
be lying.
And we have
research, emerging
research.
I can't see how people
cannot say that this is
a slippery slope.
there's definitely
been drift.
Like, you even have
some providers saying
in the media that
when they hear about
a case being approved,
well, that changes
their approach and
they open up their
approach more.
So what does that
mean?
That's what I consider
a slippery slope,
right?
When we don't keep
the safeguards tight,
there's no way to
enforce them.
We kind of, like,
open up and let more
people in, people who
are unintended, people
that we wanted to
protect from wrongful
deaths.
That's what I consider
to be the slippery slope.
Canada is now
preparing to expand
made, and I know
it's been tabled
to 2027, but to
people with mental
illness, and beyond
that, Parliament's
also even discussing
future expansion to
children deemed
capable of consenting
on their own,
even when, you know,
parents may not be
consented, or may not
be providing consent,
but rather just
simply consulted on.
Once a country or
population accepts the
principles that
suffering in itself,
just suffering alone,
can justify an
assisted death, where
does that logic stop?
Like, where are the
breaks for that kind
of thinking, and what
concerns you the most
about where this could
go next?
Yeah, it's very
interesting.
You know, Scotland has
just, I did testify in
Scotland, I was called
as an expert there, and
they did just vote
down their assisted
suicide law that had
been before them.
And it was very
interesting to see the
complexity and the
interest in a true
debate over in the
UK about safeties and
where this would stop,
and can you stop it
once you say that
death is an acceptable
answering to life
suffering?
Well, who's
suffering?
Who's suffering?
You know, they're
framing it as, like,
it's discrimination
now.
You think that people
with, this is what
we're hearing over and
over again from
people who want made
for mental illness.
You are discriminating
against people with
mental illness.
They are also
suffering.
This is stigma leading
to them being
excluded.
Well, actually, it's
the opposite.
Mental illness is not
like cancer.
We cannot predict who
will not, the few
people who will not
get better, we can't
even know who they
are.
If you put a hundred
people with severe
mental illness in a
room and asked a hundred
psychiatrists, they
would all guess wrongly
who that person was.
We have no way
prospectively...
No biomarkers or
nothing.
clinical tools
that can predict
that level of
granularity.
In fact, we have all
the meta-analyses
showing that all of
our top evidence
shows that, and yet
some doctors in
Canada and some
lobbyists have said
we can do it by
consensus.
We can just decide
that if someone meets
these 13 criteria,
apparently the CPA is
going to come out with
a consensus statement
based on people's
expert opinions.
You know, we talk
about eminence
versus evidence-based
medicine, and we're
trying to move away
from evidence-based
medicine because we
understand that there
are higher levels of
evidence.
And yet, because
ideologically people
want this to happen,
they are willing to
throw away evidence-based
medicine and say we can
just do this by
consensus.
Let's forget about the
fact that evidence says
we'll get it wrong
half the time.
But really, we're
talking about people's
lives.
People's lives who
would recover and want
to live.
And if it is a
medical, if MADE is a
medical tool, like if
it's been inserted in
medicine, then it should
obey the same kind of
checks and balances that
other things have, right?
We need to look at the
risks and harms to the
population, whether this is
something safe to
implement.
And yet, all that has been
thrown away by a certain
small group of people.
Like, the majority of
psychiatrists do not want
MADE for mental illness
in Canada.
The consensus among, like,
the chairs and other
statements have all been
that we are not able to
do this.
Like, we're not able to
actually guess who will
not get better, so we'll
be killing people
incorrectly.
Like, if the legislation
is supposed to really
help people who are never
going to get better by
ending their lives, we
won't be doing that.
Carter was actually put
forth for people who
were so physically
disabled, they couldn't
commit suicide.
That was the logic of
Carter.
We're going to help end
people's lives as an
exception because they
can't commit suicide so
they can live longer and
have someone commit
suicide for them when
they cannot.
How does that logic
even extend to someone
who is able-bodied and
commits suicide?
And we don't want people
committing suicide.
So that's what I'd say
about MADE for mental
illness.
About MADE for mature
minors, our consent
laws and capacity laws
for children are very
different than in other
countries that have MADE
for minors.
I'm not saying I agree
with those either there,
but there there's a lot
of, like, family
consultation.
The parents have to be
okay with it.
The child is usually
older.
In Canada, we have no
younger age and it's a
sliding scale and it would
be the maid assessor who
decides if the child has
capacity.
So in Canada, for example,
we have certain laws
restricting smoking or
alcohol because we're
trying to prevent future
harms for our children.
But here we're saying that
we are going to let
children, potentially
without their parents'
consent, be judged to
have capacity on something
that is life-ending.
And when we talk
about, like, they'll
say, oh, no, it's just
for track one, Ramona.
This is whatever.
It's just for track one.
Well, we know that some
maid assessors think that
track one is okay for
people who have five years
left to live.
And the psychological
brain maturation is not
there for children.
It happens much later.
So I have a lot of
concerns.
I've written an article
that was published a few
years ago in Al Jazeera
about the, and I wrote a
chapter for the book.
This is why I know a lot
about MADE for Children.
I wrote a chapter in that
book that I co-edited
about MADE for Mature
Minors.
And I could also get into
advanced requests, but I'm
not sure how much time you
have.
You know, I really like how
you said there's a
difference between
eminence-based medicine
and evidence-based
medicine.
And, you know, good
quality consensus
guidelines revolve around
breaking things down
into some parcels.
One is, is there
consensus and how strong
is the recommendation?
That needs to always be
tempered by the quality of
the clinical evidence
that those recommendations
are being made from.
And, you know, a
moderate recommendation
with very poor quality
evidence doesn't change
my practice.
It's something to think
about, but it's certainly
not written in stone that
that's how that guideline
needs to be implemented.
So I think it's an
important caveat that you
bring up.
If you could change
three things tomorrow
to sort of stop
Canada from offering
deaths where care
should come first,
what would they be?
Well, I said this in a
press conference in Alberta.
They asked me,
the reporters,
one of the reporters
asked during the press
conference,
what would you do
that's not on this bill?
And I said,
well, that's very rude
to ask me in front of
my guests.
Like, they've invited me
to do this press
conference.
But what I shared
is that the prognosis
of the disease
needs to be clear
and has to be the driver.
So the idea that we are
letting people
into this
made regime
for, as you mentioned,
like housing
or financial
insecurity
for people who have
these kinds of
sufferings,
I think the
one legislative
safeguard that I have
mentioned publicly
and written about
is having a disease
prognosis
that is
the driver,
like some sort of
timeline like they do
in the States, right?
They say like six months
or 12 months
with the disease
prognosis
causing the death,
not making oneself
having a natural death
by refusing food
or refusing antibiotics,
but really like having
a disease
that is going to
take you out,
unfortunately,
in a certain timeline
as being the largest
safety
that you can add
to such a bill,
to have to such
a legislation.
And I think that we need
to focus
as a separate issue.
You know,
my providers always say
this is a separate issue
and I guess it is
a separate issue,
but it does touch
on people's choices.
We need to help people
with our chronic care.
Our chronic care
needs to be better
funded,
needs to be more
timely,
needs to be more
long-standing.
I will share that
my sister is a psychiatrist
and she was the head
of public health psychiatry
for New York City
and then she came
and was the lead
at one of the
psychiatric hospitals
here in London
and I eventually
convinced her
to leave all that
and to do
OHIP-covered
psychotherapy
with my patients
because they just
could not get care.
I take care of a lot
of refugees,
a lot of men
out of prison,
people who just
do not have
the financial means
to have psychology
that is not covered
for them.
And so she does
do medication
and she does stuff,
but she also does
OHIP-covered
psychotherapy.
It's not fair
that I can harass
my sister
so that I could have
that thing
for my patients,
but that is
what all Canadians
need.
We need to fund
mental health care
better.
We need to fund
disability care
better.
My father,
I shared that
we got two days
of palliative care
before he died
because dementia's
prognosis is not
so clear.
So in January,
I was telling people
like,
my dad's not
eating anymore,
he's starting to
become way weaker,
his PPS score
was too high
to qualify for
having palliative
care services.
So it took
multiple hospital
visits,
stabilizations,
bringing home,
my husband
carrying him
around the house
and then finally
they gave us
palliative care
for the two days
before he died.
Now,
me and my husband,
my sisters,
my five children,
we got that.
Most people
don't have that.
I consider that
to be coercive
influences to die
and so I think
all of that
needs to be
heavily looked into.
And the third thing
is community life.
So if you look
at mental health
outcomes,
and I do believe
that it is
mental health
that is driving
a lot of people's
made requests,
even in track
one,
even in track
two,
and obviously
will be in
track three,
there is a person
named Thomas
Insel who was
the head of
the NIMH
of the National
Institute of
Mental Health.
He wrote a book
called Healing.
And he talks
about, you know,
with or without
medications,
what leads
to a good
prognosis,
right?
It is like
feeling included
in society.
It is feeling
like you bring
other people
meaning.
Not that you
can do things
like our
society is like
very metric
focused and
we do this
and we do
that, but
that we
belong and
that if we
weren't there,
it would bother
people because we
mean something to
people, that we
mean, like that
kind of relational
society, relational
autonomy.
And I think
partly COVID, I
think partly like
this kind of weird
politics that makes
people feel like
they can't talk
or connect
because they're
different.
Guess what?
We're very
pluralistic, we're
a very diverse
society, but I
think that we
all have a lot
more in common
than we don't
and we need to
start reaching
out to our
neighbors and
our communities
and rebuilding
community life
after COVID
because otherwise,
regardless of
MAID, we are
going to have an
increasing mental
health crisis for
our young people.
Those are the
three things I
think we need
to change.
I think we're
going to end it
there and with
that message
that community
is so strong
and it
permeates so
many elements
of suffering,
it permeates
elements of
caregiver burnout,
it permeates
medical training,
all of these
things, a sense
of community
and belonging,
contributing and
receiving contributions
from your
community
partners, if you
will.
bring so much
to the human
experience and
I just want
to take the
time to thank
you for
speaking to us
today, coming
from your
recent travels
and with your
busy schedule
and I think
what we've
created today
is just an
ability to just
put it on the
table and talk
about it and I
really appreciate
just being able
to talk and
listen and hear
what you have
to say and I
invite everyone
to do the same.
Thank you, Mark.
And thank you
for having me
as a guest and
what I know
can be a very
polarizing topic
and just to
reiterate that I
think a lot of
people who do
may do it
well and it's
not meant to be
about a personal
attack but it's
about how we can
protect vulnerable
people in our
society.
That wraps up
this week's
episode of the
Caregivers Podcast.
See you again
next week.
I'm your host
Dr.
Mark.
Dr.
Coelho, thank
you for joining
us today.
This is one of
the most difficult
and divisive
conversations in
Canadian public
life today.
We appreciate
your willingness
to bring both
clinical experience
and moral
clarity to it.
Whatever people
think about
MAID, this
discussion forces
a deeper question
that no country
should be able
to avoid.
When someone's
suffering, are
we meeting that
suffering with
care, protection
and support?
Are we allowing
some lives to
become easier
to end than
to help?
Before we wrap
up, I wanted to
remind you of
something important.
The conversations
you hear on this
podcast are here
to inform, to
support, to
spark reflection.
We're not a
substitute for
professional medical
advice, care,
therapy or crisis
services.
Listening to this
podcast does not
create a doctor
patient or caregiver
client relationship
between us.
If you're facing
a medical concern,
health challenge,
a mental health
challenge or a
caregiving situation
that needs guidance,
I encourage you to
reach out to a
qualified professional
who knows your
story.
If you're ever in
crisis, please
don't wait.
Call your local
emergency number or
recognize crisis
hotline right away.
You deserve real
time help and
support.
The views you hear
on this show,
whether from me or
my guests, are our
own.
They don't necessarily
reflect any
organizations we
work with, are
part of, or have
worked with or been
part of in the past.
This podcast is an
independent production
and it's not tied to
any hospital, university
or healthcare system.
Thank you for being
here, for listening,
and most of all for
taking the time to
care for yourself
while you continue to
care for others.
I look forward to
hearing from you.