Canada’s Euthanasia Laws Expand to ‘Mature’ Children, Mentally Ill

Canada is expanding its already liberal euthanasia laws to permit “mature” children under 18 and mentally ill patients to qualify for “assisted suicide.”

While the country has perhaps the most permissive euthanasia laws in the world, concerns have already been mounting about how easily people are being killed, according to the AP.

Under the new laws, however, qualifying for “assisted suicide” will become even more relaxed.

Canada first legalized euthanasia back in 2016.

The process involves doctors administering drugs in order to end a patient’s life.

The law supposedly attempts to restrict the practice to only those patients with a verifiable pathological condition, who are experiencing “unbearable physical or mental suffering that cannot be relieved under conditions that patients consider acceptable,” and whose death is “reasonably foreseeable.”

The patient must submit a request for euthanasia, and at least two physicians must approve it.

However, there have been reports that some patients, particularly the disabled, have been coerced into euthanasia.

Some of those patients who have been euthanized did not actually suffer life-threatening illnesses, the AP found.

Tim Stainton, director of the Canadian Institute for Inclusion and Citizenship at the University of British Columbia said that Canada’s euthanasia law is “probably the biggest existential threat to disabled people since the Nazis’ program in Germany in the 1930s.”

Now, the country’s euthanasia laws will expand so that “mature” minors under the age of 18 and those with exclusively mental conditions can qualify, according to the AP.

Mary Vought, founder of Vought Strategies is particularly troubled by the latter group since government lockdowns over the past two years may have instigated or exacerbated experiences of mental illness, and that “an explosion of new deaths from euthanasia” may soon result.

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Others are concerned that some hospital professionals have already convinced some vulnerable patients to request euthanasia, perhaps against their better judgment, noting that Canadian law does not oblige medical professionals to discuss euthanasia decisions with a patient’s family.

Because the safeguards in place may not have protected some patients, Trudo Lemmens, chair of health law and policy at the University of Toronto, argued that “the rules are too loose and that even when people die who shouldn’t have died, there is almost no way to hold the doctors and hospitals responsible.”

According to the AP, 10,000 Canadian patients were legally euthanized in 2021.

The number is more than a 30% increase over the year before.

Of all patients who have been euthanized since the law first went into effect, 65% of them suffered from cancer.

Heart problems, respiratory issues, and neurological conditions were also commonly listed conditions.

Changes to the euthanasia law will go into effect in 2023.

READ MORE: Canada Announces ‘Digital Identity Program’ in Partnership with WEF

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By Frank Bergman

Frank Bergman is a political/economic journalist living on the east coast. Aside from news reporting, Bergman also conducts interviews with researchers and material experts and investigates influential individuals and organizations in the sociopolitical world.

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