Anonymous ID: be16ab April 2, 2024, 2:53 p.m. No.20668304   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8310 >>8320 >>8337

Canada now allows people to request medical suicide for AUTISM –

 

NaturalNews.com

 

naturalnews.com/2024-04-01-canada-now-allows-medical-suicide-for-autism.html

 

April 1, 2024

 

The concept of medical suicide has long been controversial given the potential for it to go to some very dark and questionable places – and that is exactly what is happening right now in Calgary, Alberta thanks to Canada’s broken “medical assistance in dying”(MAID) program.

 

A Calgary judge recently issued a ruling that will allow a 27-year-old woman identified as “M.V.” to receive medical suicide for autism. He lifted an injunction that her father was granted just one day before her assisted death was scheduled to take place in their home.

 

Justice Colin Feasby of the Calgary Court of King's Bench acknowledged the “profound grief” the woman’s father would suffer when his daughter dies, but he felt that her autonomy was more important. (Related: Autistic and intellectually handicapped individuals are now being EUTHANIZED in the Netherlands.)

 

"M.V.'s dignity and right to self-determination outweigh the important matters raised by W.V. [M.V.'s father] and the harm that he will suffer in losing M.V.," wrote Feasby in his 34-page decision.

 

He added that blocking her medically assisted suicide from moving forward poses a risk that she could try to end her life on her own, writing: “An injunction would deny M.V. the right to choose between living or dying with dignity. Further, an injunction would put M.V. in a position where she would be forced to choose between living a life she has decided is intolerable and ending her life without medical assistance."

 

“This is a terrible choice that should not be forced on M.V., as attempting to end her life without medical assistance would put her at increased risk of pain, suffering, and lasting injury," Feasby added.

 

Thanks to your generous support, we are building the infrastructure of human freedom and actively donating our technology to independent publishers, authors, and home-schooling organizations. Learn about our game-changing non-commercial AI project here. Support our ongoing efforts to preserve and enhance human knowledge by shopping at HealthRangerStore.com.

 

The 30-day stay was issued to give the woman’s father time to appeal

However, Feasby also issued a 30-day stay to give the woman's father time to take the case to an appeals court if he desires.

 

The woman's father believes that she is “vulnerable and is not competent to make the decision to take her own life.” He has said that she is generally healthy and her only known diagnoses are ADHD and autism. He asked for a judicial review to be carried out looking into how his daughter was approved for MAID in the first place.

 

Currently, two doctors or nurse practitioners need to grant a patient approval for MAID in Canada. Two doctors had been approached by the patient, and while one somehow agreed that autism was an acceptable reason for someone to end their life, the other doctor denied the application. Then, she was offered a third “tie-breaker” doctor, who did sign off on the approval. It is this doctor that her father is taking issue with because he believes that he is “not independent or objective”.

 

This case has also shed light on the shortcomings of the Canadian law in this area. An attorney for the girl's father, Sarah Miller, said the situation was a “novel issue for Alberta” because the province uses a system that does not have any type of appeals process or review process of people's approvals in place.

 

Feasby said that the court can't review the doctor's clinical judgment, but it can examine the actions of the patient’s “MAID navigator”, which is a person who works for the health department and helps to coordinate people's assessments for MAID eligibility.

 

He also explained that although his decision upholds M.V.'s right to choose a MAID, it does not require her to do so; in other words, she can still change her mind before the procedure takes place.

 

The fact that the court system and health authorities are putting so much effort into helping this woman die instead of finding ways to help people like her to better deal with the challenges they face demonstrates everything that is wrong with Canada’s system, and people who could have had fulfilling lives if only they got the help they needed are paying the ultimate price for the government’s failings.

Anonymous ID: be16ab April 2, 2024, 2:58 p.m. No.20668337   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20668304

>A Calgary judge recently issued a ruling that will allow a 27-year-old woman identified as “M.V.” to receive medical suicide for autism.

 

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/calgary-maid-father-daughter-court-injunction-judicial-review-decision-1.7154794

 

https://calgaryherald.com/news/local-news/calgary-judge-woman-with-autism-medical-assistance-in-dying

 

https://ici.radio-canada.ca/rci/en/news/2060081/calgary-judge-rules-27-year-old-can-go-ahead-with-maid-death-despite-fathers-concerns

 

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/calgary-maid-father-daughter-court-injunction-judicial-review-1.7140782

Anonymous ID: be16ab April 2, 2024, 3:04 p.m. No.20668375   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8400 >>8404

https://calgaryherald.com/news/local-news/father-appeals-ruling-that-allows-woman-with-autism-to-seek-medical-assistance-in-dying

 

Exterior of the Calgary Courts Centre in downtown Calgary, as seen on Monday, March 11, 2024. Jim Wells/Postmedia

 

Father appeals ruling that allows woman with autism to seek Medical Assistance in Dying

calgaryherald.com/news/local-news/father-appeals-ruling-that-allows-woman-with-autism-to-seek-medical-assistance-in-dying

Kevin Martin

Published Apr 02, 2024 • Last updated 2 hours ago • 2 minute read

 

The judicial ruling that lifted an injunction blocking the assisted suicide of a Calgary woman has been appealed by her father.

 

Lawyers Sarah Miller and Emily Amirkhari filed two separate notices in the Alberta Court of Appeal on Tuesday appealing rulings by Justice Colin Feasby of applications made by their client, who can only be identified by the initials W.V.

 

On March 25, Feasby ruled a temporary injunction blocking W.V.’s daughter’s access to Medical Assistance In Dying (MAID) had to be lifted, paving the way for the woman, M.V., to seek the life-ending medical procedure.

 

Feasby stayed his ruling for 30 days to allow the father an opportunity to appeal it.

 

The Court of King’s Bench also denied an application on March 1 to compel the daughter to answer certain questions about an affidavit she had filed in support of her application to have the injunction lifted.

 

“W.V. filed an application to compel further questioning and answers,” their appeal notice says.

 

“The decision to dismiss the application to compel was based on an error of law as to the legal test for directing answers to questions posed during examination,” the appeal states.

 

The lawyers are asking the appeal court to overturn the ruling and permit them to question their client’s 27-year-old daughter on her MAID application.

 

In their second notice, they also ask the province’s top court to overturn Feasby’s decision to lift the temporary injunction pending an application for a judicial review of the decision to grant M.V. access to MAID.

 

The father wants to know how his daughter, who has autism and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), qualifies for the life-ending procedure, which has been approved by two doctors.

 

Among the errors the lawyers say Feasby made in his ruling was finding the father does not have a private interest to seek a judicial review.

 

“The pain of losing a child, even an adult child, is not something that any parent should experience,” Feasby said in his written decision.

 

“(The parents) have devoted their lives to raising M.V. from birth and have continued to support her since she has come of age.

 

“They will understandably be devastated by her death,” he said.

 

But the judge said the injunction was preventing what amounted to a medical decision between the daughter and her doctors, and “the right to choose between living or dying with dignity.”

 

“An injunction would put M.V. in a position where she would be forced to choose between living a life she has decided is intolerable and ending life without medical assistance.

 

“This is a terrible choice that should not be forced on M.V., as attempting to end her life without medical assistance would put her at increased risk of pain, suffering and lasting injury.”

 

No date has been set for an appeal hearing, but Miller and Amirkhari have indicated the case should be dealt with as a fast-track appeal.

 

KMartin@postmedia.com

 

X: @KMartinCourts

Anonymous ID: be16ab April 2, 2024, 3:07 p.m. No.20668400   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20668375

 

https://twitter.com/KMartinCourts/status/1775262388901875736

 

Father appeals ruling that allows woman with autism to seek Medical Assistance in Dying https://calgarysun.com/news/local-news/father-appeals-ruling-that-allows-woman-with-autism-to-seek-medical-assistance-in-dying/wcm/3f42ddf6-7ca0-42eb-9dd2-eab09417ccef via @

From calgarysun.com

4:41 PM · Apr 2, 2024

·

199

Views