Canada And Euthanasia Essay, Research Paper
There is considerable debate today, both among the public and the politicians, about euthanasia. While the government is hesitatant to venture into morals and ethics, it appears that euthanasia is gaining more press coverage, in light of the Sue Rodriguez and Robert Latimer cases. Indeed, the issue is difficult to resolve, and despite few advances, the government has enacted penalties in the Criminal Code to punish assisted suicide. Without reservation, euthanasia is illegal in Canada. An increasing number of people are turning to doctor-assisted suicide. As a result of a more liberal political arena, more people are agreeing that some form of euthanasia must be acceptable in specific circumstances. Politicians, and the courts, claim that the country is not yet ready for such a climate. The characterization of pro-euthanasia advocates by their counterparts as selfish, taking the easy way out, diserespectful of life, and challenging human dignity is misconstrued. Pro-euthanasia groups advocate self-dignity, personal choice, economic well-being, happiness, family support, and individual rights. The word euthanasia simply means good death, but has come to mean causing death with intent, whether by doing something(commission), or by omitting something(omission). Euphemisms of the pro-euthanasia movement, include “right to die”, and “death with dignity”. The term “passive euthanasia” is often applied to the withdrawal of useless treatment that is onlyprolonging the dying of a person. This needs to be differentiated from withdrawing of something that is actually keeping them alive, the withdrawl of which actually causes their death. It has been pointed out that the pro-life lobby will be split and discredited if there is an insistence by some that all technological means must be used whenever possible to prolong life. No ethical doctor insists on the use of burdensome, ineffective of futile measure, commonly called ‘disproportionate’, when refused by the patient or family. Doctors must necessarily in all patients discontinue curative or therapeutic efforts at the time when death is imminent and inevitable. Patients may request all measures to be attempted if they desire but it cannot be demanded that life always be prolonged as much as possible, without fuelling the “right to die” movement. Allowing death to occur when the patient specifically refuses further therapy is to acknowledge the natural limit of autonomy. This does not extend to refusal of basic care and does not mean the withdrawal of comfort measures. In 1991, the BC Royal Commission concluded that “the person who is dying should have the right to determine the form and time of death…There is a right to commit suicide, and a physician should be allowed to assist a person who chooses to exercise that right.” The Right to Die Society in Canada, based in Victoria, “Affirms the right of any mature individual who is chroniclally or terminally ill to choose the time, place, and means of his or her death. Suicide and euthanasia are a legitimate response to the declining quality of life which many individuals experience as they growq older, or whicfh they suffer as a result of accidents or congential disabilities.”
This society actively lobbies politically for active euthanasia, and provides counselling to every member who wishes to know about assistance-in-dying. Similarly, the Canadian Medical Association has run a series of articles on euthanasia. Eike Kluge, the former CMA ethicist, is outspokenly pro-euthanasia. A recent article published as a discussion article stated, “What a strange world we live in, that we are kinder to our animals than we are to human beings.” His colleague, Ethics Committee Chairman, Dr. Arthur Parsons, asked “Who is going to get into the lifeboat? Is it better to keep a severely retarded person alive, or spend your tight resources on bypass surgery for a father of four?” This brings up two important issues, the first, that euthanasia is still used for animals, despite being called “putting to sleep”, and secondly, the issue of money and the costliness of keeping a person alive. Research shows tha
Sue Rodriguez, a 42 year old woman who has Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada to strike down the section of the Criminal Code that makes aiding suicide illegal. A graphic article published in The Globe and Mail, September 1992, written by John Hofsess, the director of the right to Die Society, describes her plight with this progressively paralysing disease as “condemned to die”. Her future is described as a “helpless, drooling, physically atrophied captive of this disease, dependent on other people and machines for an ever attenuated form of mere biological exsistence”. Her lawyers argued that Section 241 of the Criminal Code, which makes it an offence to assist aqnyone to commit suicide, violates Section 7 of the Charter of Rights, which guaratntees liberty and security of the person. The Justices stressed the significant difference between palliative care nad physician-assisted suicide, saying Rodriguez failed to show her right to fundamental justice is infringed by the existing criminal law. University of Manitoba law professor Barney Sneiderman says charges are rarely laid because the Crown recognizes that juries generally sympathize with doctors who end the agony of dying patients. Some doctors fear that even providing a patient with the means to commit suicide, for example, prescribing enough pills that might be hoarded and used for an overdose, would constitute aiding or abetting the action of euthanasia. But Sneiderman argues that the courts would likely requrie prosectors to prove intent. A doctor might suspect a patient was harding pills, but because the ipills were not prescribed for thepurpose of aiding a suicide, the doctor would probably have a good defence. For illustration, Sneiderman says an Edmonton doctor was charged under Section 217, saying a person has a legal duty to perform an act if not doing it would endanger life, and Section 219, which defines criminal negligence and includes both acts and omissions that wou
Justices Proudfoot and Hollinrake, both agreed with Justice McEarchern, the sole dissenter, that the legality of physician-assisted suicide is a matter for Parliament to decide.