A parliamentary committee has made 23 recommendations to improve Canada’s assisted-dying regime.
Members of the committee held 36 meetings, heard from nearly 150 witnesses and reviewed more than 350 briefs on the medically assisted dying program.
It is recommending the Liberal government improve access to palliative care and boost financial support for people with disabilities.
Without more financial supports and better access to social support, the report says “persons with disabilities might see (medical assistance in dying) as a way to relieve suffering due to poverty and lack of services.”
Read more:
Canadians supportive of assisted dying law but wary of mental health expansion: poll
Read next:
Part of the Sun breaks free and forms a strange vortex, baffling scientists
The report also recommends better engagement with Indigenous communities and persons with disabilities on how Canada’s assisted-dying program works.
It says the federal government should convene an expert panel to “study and report on the needs of persons with disabilities” as they relate to medically-assisted death.
The report recommends developing a system that harmonizes access to the program across Canada.
It also says Health Canada should do a review of “promising therapies, such as psilocybin, for both research purposes and for individual use as part of palliative care supports.”
It supports a proposed delay to expanding the eligibility for medical assistance in dying for Canadians whose sole condition is a mental disorder.
Members of Parliament are expected to pass a government bill this sitting to delay that expansion until March 2024.
The report recommends that another joint parliamentary committee should be created five months before that “in order to verify the degree of preparedness…
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at : Politics…