Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Judge-Approved Assisted Death Didn't Clear Hurdles For Calgary Woman

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 May, 2016 12:45 PM
    OTTAWA — The first person to obtain a legally sanctioned, medically assisted death in Canada, outside Quebec, still didn't get her wish to die peacefully at home.
     
    Even though she had a judge's approval, Hanne Schafer could not find a doctor in her hometown of Calgary to help her die.
     
    Consequently, her husband, Daniel Laurin, says they had to fly to Vancouver, where two doctors agreed to help Schafer end her suffering from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, which had robbed her of mobility, speech and the ability to do anything for herself, including eat.
     
    Moreover, Laurin says the lethal drug combination injected into Schafer had to be ordered from Switzerland because a local pharmacist could not be found who would provide the drugs.
     
    Schafer's experience underscores the difficulty in ensuring that Canadians who are legally eligible for medical assistance in dying will actually be able to get it.
     
    The federal government has proposed a new law governing assisted dying which does not compel medical practitioners to participate; the government intends to work with the provinces to set up a network of those who are willing to help people die.
     
    "(Hanne) shouldn't have had to go through all that stuff," Laurin said Monday in an interview.
     
    "She wanted to die here in her own house ... She was comfortable here. She was happy here."
     
    The Supreme Court struck down the ban on medically assisted dying last year but gave the federal government a year — later extended to June 6 — to craft a new law that recognizes the right to assisted death for clearly consenting adults with "grievous and irremediable" medical conditions who are enduring physical or mental suffering that they find intolerable.
     
    Until a new law is in place, the top court decided in January to allow court-ordered exemptions for people who met its criteria.
     
    Schafer, a 56-year-old psychologist, died in early March after receiving the first exemption outside Quebec, the only province with its own law on assisted dying.
     
    The federal government last month introduced a bill that takes a more restrictive approach than the Supreme Court. It would require a person to be a consenting adult, at least 18 years of age, in "an advanced stage of irreversible decline" from a serious and incurable disease, illness or disability and for whom a natural death is "reasonably foreseeable."
     
    Laurin said he's not sure whether his wife would have qualified for an assisted death under the proposed new law since it was not clear how close she was to death. Her doctors thought she had six months but she could have lived another five years, he said.
     
    Gary Bauslaugh, author of a book on 42 Canadians who've sought the right to a medically assisted death since 1941, has analysed the circumstances of each of those individual's medical condition. Of the 35 for whom he had enough information to make a realistic assessment, Bauslaugh said he believes 28 of them — 80 per cent — would not have been eligible for an assisted death under the new law.
     
     
    In his opinion, that includes ALS sufferer Sue Rodriguez, who unsuccessfully took her fight for an assisted death all the way to the Supreme Court in 1993.
     
    "Her death wasn't imminent," Bauslaugh said in an interview. "She was just about to be paralysed and trapped in her body."
     
    The proposed law would help those who are near death but he said it does nothing for those who need it most: the people who face years of intolerable suffering.
     
    In testimony Monday before the House of Commons justice committee, Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould acknowledged that the reasonably foreseeable death provision has sparked considerable controversy. She defended the provision, saying it "provides a fair way to restrict eligibility without making assisted dying available to almost everyone."
     
    She ruled out allowing each individual to choose when their life becomes intolerable.
     
    "Our government firmly believes that medical assistance in dying should not be available for any and all types of suffering," Wilson-Raybould told the committee. "If that was the case, the risk to vulnerable peoples would be greatly increased and frankly would be unacceptable."
     
    Health Minister Jane Philpott told the committee that the bill would make assisted dying a medically necessary service that all provinces would be obliged to provide.  She said she'll work with the provinces to figure out exactly how they are to ensure access to the service while allowing medical practitioners to opt out for conscience reasons.
     
    The bill would also allow nurse practitioners, as well as doctors, to provide assisted dying, which Philpott said would help ensure access in remote areas.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    MPAC Starts Mailing Out Property Assessments; Up 18 Per Cent Across Ontario

    MPAC Starts Mailing Out Property Assessments; Up 18 Per Cent Across Ontario
    TORONTO — Ontario homeowners can expect the value of their property to have risen an average of 18 per cent when they get their new assessments.

    MPAC Starts Mailing Out Property Assessments; Up 18 Per Cent Across Ontario

    Alberta Asks B.C. Conflicts Commissioner To Look Into Redford Ethics Probe

    EDMONTON — Alberta's ethics commissioner is asking her counterpart in British Columbia to decide if there should be a renewed conflict-of-interest investigation of former premier Alison Redford.

    Alberta Asks B.C. Conflicts Commissioner To Look Into Redford Ethics Probe

    Almost 300 People Nominated Under New, Less Partisan Senate Appointment Process

    Almost 300 People Nominated Under New, Less Partisan Senate Appointment Process
      Trudeau named seven new senators last month, all chosen from a short list of 25 recommended by a newly created, arm's length advisory board.

    Almost 300 People Nominated Under New, Less Partisan Senate Appointment Process

    Email From Manitoba Liberal Account Asks People Not To Abandon Leader

    WINNIPEG — The Manitoba Liberal Party's communications director on Tuesday openly asked members to unite and not to criticize leader Rana Bokhari as she campaigns for the provincial election.

    Email From Manitoba Liberal Account Asks People Not To Abandon Leader

    Manitoba Progressive Conservatives Promise $28Million For Tourism Funding

    Manitoba Progressive Conservatives Promise $28Million For Tourism Funding
    WINNIPEG — Manitoba's Progressive Conservatives are promising to spend more money to promote tourism if they form the next provincial government.

    Manitoba Progressive Conservatives Promise $28Million For Tourism Funding

    Prince Harry Will Launch Countdown On May 2 For Invictus Games In Toronto

    Prince Harry Will Launch Countdown On May 2 For Invictus Games In Toronto
    Prince Harry will visit Toronto on May 2 to launch the countdown for the third edition of the Invictus Games to be held in the city in September 2017.

    Prince Harry Will Launch Countdown On May 2 For Invictus Games In Toronto