Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

New Video Shows Late Activist Pleading For Change To Assisted Dying Rules

The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2019 08:37 PM

    HALIFAX — A new national campaign is honouring a Halifax woman who ended her life with medical assistance — and lobbying the federal government to amend Canada's assisted dying rules.


    Audrey Parker died with medical assistance on Nov. 1, two years after she had been diagnosed with terminal breast cancer.


    On Wednesday, Dying With Dignity Canada released a video message that Parker recorded just three days before she died.


    In the three-minute clip, Parker urges Canadians to speak out for the rights of suffering Canadians who have been approved for medical assistance in dying.


    "I'm grateful to live in Canada, a country where I can choose my death. But the law has forced me to play a cruel game of chicken," Parker said.


    "I would like nothing more than to make it to Christmas, but if I become incompetent along the way, I will lose out on my choice of a beautiful, peaceful and, best of all, pain-free death."


    The group is calling on federal lawmakers to change a provision requiring people to confirm their wish for assisted dying immediately before the procedure is provided.


    The group's CEO, Shanaaz Gokool, said the late consent rule leads some people to end their lives before they are ready, out of fear they will lose capacity to give permission.


    She said others refuse proper pain care at end of life to ensure they're alert enough to confirm their request for medical assistance in dying.


    "No one should ever have to choose between spending a few more days or weeks with their loved ones and their right to a peaceful, assisted death," Gokool said.


    "Without the ability to waive the late-stage consent requirement, vulnerable Canadians face a clear, grave threat to their rights. We call on the government to pass Audrey's Amendment and correct this injustice without delay."


    The group has launched a petition to lobby the government for changes.


    Last month, newly appointed Justice Minister David Lametti, said he's interested in hearing proposals concerning late-stage consent.


    "I'm interested in watching what happens and what is proposed but I won't commit the government to doing anything more than that," he said.


    Still, Lametti's stance is much different than the previous justice minister, Jody Wilson-Raybould, who ruled out any changes to the law.


    The law is currently facing two constitutional challenges, one in Quebec and the other in British Columbia, from Canadians with degenerative diseases who contend the foreseeable-death requirement unfairly excludes them.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Otter Dines On More Prized Koi In Vancouver Garden; Continues To Evade Capture

    VANCOUVER — An opportunistic otter that is preying on koi in a unique downtown Vancouver garden has eaten at least three more of the large fish and continues to evade efforts to trap and remove it.

    Otter Dines On More Prized Koi In Vancouver Garden; Continues To Evade Capture

    Tentative Deal Reached For 44,000 Nurses Across British Columbia

    Tentative Deal Reached For 44,000 Nurses Across British Columbia
    VICTORIA — The Health Employers Association and The B.C. Nurses' Union bargaining group have announced a tentative agreement for the province's 44,000 nurses.

    Tentative Deal Reached For 44,000 Nurses Across British Columbia

    Top Two B.C. Legislature Officials Deny Wrongdoing, Want To Go Back To Work

    Top Two B.C. Legislature Officials Deny Wrongdoing, Want To Go Back To Work
    VANCOUVER — The two top officials in British Columbia's legislature say they're humiliated after being placed on administrative leave and don't know what they've done to provoke a police investigation, but they want their jobs and their reputations back.

    Top Two B.C. Legislature Officials Deny Wrongdoing, Want To Go Back To Work

    Police Say 87-Year-Old Woman Victim Of Homicide In Vancouver

    VANCOUVER — Police say the death of an 87-year-old woman whose body was found in her apartment in Vancouver is being investigated as a homicide.

    Police Say 87-Year-Old Woman Victim Of Homicide In Vancouver

    Documentary Highlights Parents' Struggles With Opioid-Addicted Kids

    Documentary Highlights Parents' Struggles With Opioid-Addicted Kids
    VANCOUVER — Watching paramedics revive their son from near death six times for the same condition that had him in the emergency room 13 times exhausted Jill and David Cory, but they kept hoping he'd get the help he needed to survive.

    Documentary Highlights Parents' Struggles With Opioid-Addicted Kids

    The Cannabis Act: 6 Things You need to Know

    The Cannabis Act: 6 Things You need to Know
    You must be of legal age (as defined by your province or territory) to buy, use or possess cannabis.

    The Cannabis Act: 6 Things You need to Know