Saturday, May 30, 2026
ADVT 
National

Some nurse practitioners in Canada not being paid for administering MAID

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Nov, 2023 11:20 AM
  • Some nurse practitioners in Canada not being paid for administering MAID

For the past year, Ellen Gretsinger, a nurse practitioner in Ontario's Niagara region, has been providing patients with medically assisted deaths — and not getting paid for it.

She has a full-time nursing job and a side gig offering virtual care, and in the evenings and on weekends, assesses patients for medical assistance in dying — known as MAID — and delivers the procedure. Like many provinces, Ontario does not have a mechanism for nurse practitioners to take on independent work and be paid for it, like a fee-for-service structure often in place for doctors.

And demand for MAID is growing across the country. So Gretsinger does the work for free. She believes in it, especially after watching her mother suffer before she died of cancer.

"I just feel that when people are suffering, and this is something that they've been told that they can access, then access needs to be there," Gretsinger said in a recent interview. "So that's why I have decided to do as much as I can."

The number of doctors and nurse practitioners available to administer MAID in Canada has not kept up with increasing demand. A report last month from Health Canada shows the number of MAID providers has grown by an average of 18 per cent each year, but the number of medically assisted deaths — often referred to as provisions — has grown by nearly 33 per cent each year. According to federal law, MAID provisions and assessments can be done by nurse practitioners or doctors, and each request must be assessed by at least two providers.

There are a host of reasons why medical professionals may not be taking on MAID requests, from overwork in a strained system to hesitancy about MAID itself, said Dr. Tim Holland, head of bioethics at Dalhousie University. He considers medically assisted death to be the biggest cultural shift related to medicine since abortion.

But there are nurse practitioners like Gretsinger who are eager to take on the work.

"Finding a model that will allow nurse practitioners to be able to do this, in addition to their standard practice, would go a long way to increase capacity," Holland said in an interview. "Every time we have a MAID conference, (the question) comes up every time … 'How are we all going to advocate to get nurse practitioners paid?'"

Stan Marchuk, president of the Nurse Practitioner Association of Canada, said he's aware of "a number" of nurse practitioners who are doing unpaid MAID work.

"I think it speaks to the fact that we just don't have good compensation mechanisms in Canada for nurse practitioners," he said in a recent interview. "We need more flexible models of compensation to allow nurse practitioners to be able to practice to their full scope in Canada."

Compensation models for nurse practitioners have remained largely unchanged for decades, despite significant innovations in medicine and reforms to health systems, Marchuk said. In most provinces, nurses are salaried and tethered to health authorities, with no way to be compensated for work done outside their jobs.

Doctors, meanwhile, bill health authorities for any work they do, Marchuk said, adding that his organization is pushing for more flexible compensation models that would allow nurse practitioners to offer more services — or even set up independent practices providing MAID assessments and provisions.

"I think it's really shameful that … people are providing a service for which they're not being compensated," he said.

British Columbia has made headway in offering different compensation models, and Alberta is in the process of figuring it out, Marchuk added. 

In Newfoundland and Labrador, nurse practitioners can file up to five extra hours to do a MAiD assessment or provision outside of regular work shifts. It's a new rule, part of the collective agreement between registered nurses and the provincial government, which was signed in July. Before that, nurse practitioners were doing the work for free, on their own time, just as Gretsinger is, said Yvette Coffey, president of Newfoundland and Labrador's registered nurses' union.

"They saw the need," Coffey said in a recent interview. "And at the end of the day, it's the needs of the patients that trump everything else."

Gretsinger said she'd like to see Ontario health officials offer nurse practitioners a billing code for the work she does on medically assisted death. Until then, she'll keep going. She worries that if she turns down those requests for assessments, patients would suffer longer. She said a woman had to adjust her desired day to die four times because it was hard to find providers.

"She suffered for another two months," Gretsinger said. "It breaks my heart."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Coquitlam SkyTrain station has vending machine

Coquitlam SkyTrain station has vending machine
The machine is stocked with packaged sushi rolls from nearby restaurant Sushi Mori. TransLink says the vending machine is one of nine being installed starting this summer at transit stations around the region.

Coquitlam SkyTrain station has vending machine

2 suspicious fires in Stanley Park

2 suspicious fires in Stanley Park
A fire reported near Second Beach Tuesday morning was the second suspicious fire in recent days. So far, no suspects have been identified and no arrests have been made.

2 suspicious fires in Stanley Park

Expect busy long weekend: BC Ferries

Expect busy long weekend: BC Ferries
More than 580-thousand passengers and 210-thousand vehicles are expected to travel with BC Ferries between today and Tuesday. BC Ferries says it has pulled out all the stops to ensure smoother sailing this weekend.

Expect busy long weekend: BC Ferries

Uber driver killed in Vancouver crash identified as Dilpreet Singh

Uber driver killed in Vancouver crash identified as Dilpreet Singh
A 26-year-old Uber driver who had been killed on Monday in an early morning collision in Vancouver involving three vehicles has been identified as Dilpreet Singh.  A statement from Vancouver police says a red Cadillac carrying a 17-year-old driver and three teenage passengers slammed into a taxi just before 2 a.m. on Monday at Main Street and 12th Avenue and the taxi then broadsided the Uber vehicle.

Uber driver killed in Vancouver crash identified as Dilpreet Singh

SFU's athletics director leaves university months after football controversy

SFU's athletics director leaves university months after football controversy
The departure of Theresa Hanson, the university's director of athletics and recreation, comes four months after controversy erupted over the school's elimination of its varsity football program followed by the hiring of a lawyer to investigate claims made by one of its sports teams.  

SFU's athletics director leaves university months after football controversy

Union vote begins on B.C. port deal that could end months-long dispute

Union vote begins on B.C. port deal that could end months-long dispute
A union vote among British Columbia port workers is underway to determine the fate of a deal with employers that could bring their long-running industrial dispute to an end. The International Longshore and Warehouse Union Canada is holding its vote from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. today and tomorrow to decide whether to ratify the agreement recommended by negotiators.

Union vote begins on B.C. port deal that could end months-long dispute