Canada moves to extend exclusion of mental illness from assisted death
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[February 03, 2023]
By Anna Mehler Paperny
TORONTO (Reuters) -Canada's federal government on Thursday introduced a
law that would exclude people suffering solely from mental illness from
pursuing assisted death for an additional year.
Legislation passed in 2021 temporarily excluded people whose only
underlying condition is a mental illness from accessing assisted death -
a provision that expires on March 17. If the bill tabled Thursday
passes, it will extend that until March 17, 2024.
The government says extending the exclusion is necessary to ensure
assisted death providers have the information and resources they need
and to let the government consider a parliamentary committee report on
the topic.
"It is clear that more time is needed to get this right," Justice
Minister David Lametti told reporters Thursday, adding that this would
give additional time for provinces and providers to "internalize"
guidelines.
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"We would have met the deadline. But
in order to be prudent, in order that everybody be on the same page,
we heard a number of different voices saying, 'Slow this down.'"
Canada's assisted dying framework has come under fire from
disability advocates who say it has become easier to access assisted
death than it is to access resources or supports that would make
life more bearable.
People with non-mental disabilities or chronic health conditions
that cause them intolerable suffering can still access assisted
death if clinicians find them eligible and having the capacity to
make that decision.
(Reporting by Anna Mehler Paperny; editing by Jonathan Oatis and
Deepa Babington)
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