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Xavier Moss's avatar

To me this still reads a bit like an American moral panic. The 27-year-old woman, for example, wasn't granted MAID for being autistic. The ruling was that her autism did not prevent her from making the choice for herself. Her actual conditions, if any, were undisclosed. Similarly, the woman with cancer is facing problems with a badly managed health system, not with MAID. My father is in a very similar situation, and was given treatment immediately and is very happy with the results, those wait times are not normal.

A lot of this seems to come down to whether you view this as a matter of individual freedom. To me what matters is the capacity to make the choice – and depression may be disqualifying then! But I don't understand why I should be forced to live a life of suffering, however I perceive it, just because some other people have terrible arguments about euthanasia being good for the country. You seem to believe that suicide is ALWAYS the wrong choice, except it truly terminal/painful cases, which is a widespread belief but to me, it's a choice you're making for me. When theories came out that abortion causes crime reduction, did you think to ban abortion because that's a perverse incentive?

The concerns I do share are a) using it as an excuse not to fix the health care system at all, which in Canada is facing problems and b) not screening/counseling for capacity to consent.

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Richard Gadsden's avatar

It's worth quickly flagging that it's not just governments and governmental health care systems that have these incentives. American private insurers would have exactly the same incentives for their most expensive patients to die and stop costing them money. Before the ACA, they would try to kick them off their books and then deny them insurance on the grounds of a pre-existing condition, but since they can't do that any more, trying to get them to die in a way that they can't be sued for malpractice would suit them very nicely thank you very much.

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