Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Nearly 7,000 Canadians have died with medical assistance: Health Canada

WATCH ABOVE: Religious hospitals do not have to offer assisted dying (Jan. 9) – Jan 9, 2019

OTTAWA — Almost 7,000 Canadians have received medical help to end their lives since Canada legalized assisted dying three years ago.

Story continues below advertisement

According to the latest interim report compiled by Health Canada, 6,749 people have received medically assisted deaths

That amounts to roughly one per cent of all deaths in Canada.

Health Canada says assisted deaths were provided primarily by physicians, with less than 10 per cent provided by nurse practitioners.

WATCH: Giving the gift of life after a medically assisted death

Only six people have opted to self-administer drugs to end their lives.

Story continues below advertisement

The setting for assisted deaths has been divided primarily between hospitals and patients’ homes, with cancer-related illness the most frequently cited reason for seeking the service.

The report does not include any country-wide statistics on how many Canadians have been denied medical assistance in dying because only a handful of provinces report that information. However, the report says the most commonly cited reasons for denying a request for assisted death were “loss of competency” and that the patient’s natural death was not “reasonably foreseeable,” as required by law.

The daily email you need for 's top news stories.

The law requires a person to prove mental competency when they first request an assisted death and again just before it is administered. The federal government has come under pressure to drop the second competency requirement, which has resulted in some people, who’d previously been approved for assisted death, ultimately being denied the service because they lost the ability to give last-minute consent as their conditions worsened.

Story continues below advertisement

This is the fourth and final interim report to be issued by Health Canada, which has been compiling available data provided by provincial governments. As of last November, a mandatory national reporting system went into effect, which is expected to provide more detailed and reliable statistics in future.

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article