Senators approve amendment allowing advance requests for medical assistance in dying
OTTAWA — Senators voted Wednesday to expand Canada’s assisted dying regime to allow individuals who fear losing mental capacity to make advance requests for medical help to end their lives.
The amendment to Bill C-7 was approved by a vote of 47-28, with eight abstentions.
Sen. Pamela Wallin, a member of the Canadian Senators Group who proposed the amendment, argued that the law currently traps Canadians in “a perverse diagnosis lottery.” Someone diagnosed with incurable cancer can receive an assisted death, she noted, but someone with Alzheimer’s disease or other cognitive-impairing conditions may have already lost the mental competence to consent by the time they’re diagnosed.
“As someone with a history of dementia in my family, I seek the peace of mind that an advance request and consent to it will provide,” Wallin told the Senate.