Participate in the expert panel’s consultation

The website for the expert panel on assisted suicide and euthanasia is now public. They announce several upcoming consultation methods which will be made available soon. We urge you to go on the site and leave your details to receive the relevant information once these consultation methods are made available.

Important links:

The site advises that the consultations will target 4 fundamental questions:

  • Different forms ...
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Living with Dignity and the Physicians’ Alliance against Euthanasia welcome the consultation on legislative options for assisted dying

Vivre dans la Dignité and the Physicians’ Alliance against Euthanasia welcome the creation by the Canadian government, on July 17, of an external expert panel to study the questions of euthanasia and assisted suicide in the wake of the Supreme Court’s Carter decision, and to make recommendations to the government. The committee report is due at the end of the autumn.

Of the three panel members, two are prominent academics who have contributed greatly to ...

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Campaign “Give us time”

A new campaign was launched to ask the federal government to invoke the notwithstanding clause to give Parliament more than a year to develop effective physician-assisted suicide legislation. See the campaign on the Give Us Time site.

The Physicians’ Alliance fully supports this campaign and encourages you to participate.

All you have to do is print, sign and mail the postcard. If you aren’t in a position to print the card, we can send you ...

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Lawsuit – Update

As you know, in July 2014 Living with Dignity and the Physicians’ Alliance against Euthanasia filed a motion in the Superior Court, District of Montreal, to seek to have declared invalid all the provisions of An Act concerning end-of-life care dealing with "medical aid in dying".

Following the catastrophic decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in Carter legalising physician-assisted suicide, and as we do not know how the federal government will react, we ...

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Carter decision in Canadian medical journals

Dear colleagues,

Not surprising that several Canadian medical journals are talking about the Carter decision and end of life care in general. From many points of view.

Please add your voice to the conversation.

If you see pertinent articles in other publications please send them to me.

Catherine Ferrier


This is what I have seen:

CMAJ April 21, 2015:

Carter v. Canada: What’s next for physicians? by Jocelyn Downie (pdf attached)
The author is one of the most outspoken academic proponents of euthanasia ...

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Lawsuit to protect physicians’ freedom of conscience in Ontario

The Christian Medical and Dental Society of Canada (CMDS) filed a lawsuit against a new College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO) policy which infringes upon Ontario doctors’ freedom of conscience. The Physicians’ Alliance against Euthanasia supports the CMDS’ efforts in this matter. The issue of freedom of conscience is an important factor in assisted suicide and euthanasia.

The new CPSO policy would require a physician to make formal referrals or ...

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Protect the freedom of conscience of physicians to protect patients

For the Physicians’ Alliance against Euthanasia, it is particularly important in the current context to ensure the right of physicians not only to refuse to commit acts of euthanasia or assisted suicide themselves, but also to ensure the right to refuse to become actors in a chain leading to such acts, if they consider them harmful both to patients directly affected and to vulnerable populations.

On the one hand, the committing an indirect act ...

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Assisted death: Time to act

Once more, it is time to act on the issue of assisted suicide. Write to Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Justice Minister Peter MacKay, as well as to your MP, to ask them to use the notwithstanding clause of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms to counter the recent decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in the Carter case.

As you probably know, the Supreme Court of Canada unanimously decided that in certain circumstances physiacian-assisted ...

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Confusion abounds

In the United States, just as in Canada, there has been a flare up of discussion about physician assisted suicide. The latest episode South of our borders is due to the story of Brittany Maynard, a 28-year-old with an inoperable brain tumour who chose to move to Oregon to have access to physician assisted suicide.

In yesterday’s online edition of Time magazine, a cardiologist published an article that appears to be pro-assisted suicide. But the message is not really clear. ...

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