What's New
Off Topix: Embrace the Unexpected in Every Discussion

Off Topix is a well established general discussion forum that originally opened to the public way back in 2009! We provide a laid back atmosphere and our members are down to earth. We have a ton of content and fresh stuff is constantly being added. We cover all sorts of topics, so there's bound to be something inside to pique your interest. We welcome anyone and everyone to register & become a member of our awesome community.

Canada's Years-Long Assault on Disabled Individual...

Webster

Retired Snark Master
Administrator
Joined
May 11, 2013
Posts
25,364
OT Bucks
68,538
American Family News: Years-long guilt trip didn't work on God-fearing patient
A Christian author in Canada says she's personally been targeted by the Trudeau administration's active promotion of assisted suicide.

Heather Hancock, a Christian author and an editor who was born with cerebral palsy, says she has lived with her condition her entire life, and "as you get older, it starts to take a toll."

Her bout with the health system started years ago as she dealt a series of muscle spasms that essentially paralyzed her. In 2017 and again in 2018, she was hospitalized at the same facility in Victoria, Canada, where the first to mention assisted suicide to her was an emergency room doctor who had unsuccessfully tried to treat her uncontrolled, severe pain from these spasms. "I, of course, refused," she tells AFN.

The second pitch came from a neurologist who told her the ward had nothing to offer in the way of treatment.

And then in 2019, there was a third instance at Medicine Hat Regional Hospital in Alberta "I had a nurse caring for me, or she was supposed to be caring for me, but she had quite the attitude," Hancock recalls.

After she had struggled – unassisted – to get to the restroom and back to her bed, the nurse told her, "You should really consider MAID."

Canada presents Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID), or assisted suicide, as a health benefit/service. It has been legal in Canada since 2016, when the Canadian Supreme Court legalized it for the terminally ill. It was expanded in 2022 to welcome the disabled, the mentally ill, and even healthy people living with a chronic disease. Children seemed to be the next target. "I looked at her, and I said, 'God put me in this world, and He's the only one that's taking me out of this world.'" Hancock accounts. "And then she looked at me and said, 'You're being utterly selfish. This isn't living. This is existing,' which just completely flabbergasted me."

When the exchange was reported to a "mortified" head nurse, the MAID-pushing nurse was removed from Hancock's care, and the subject was not brought up again.

She has since been in and out of hospitals in Saskatchewan, where she currently resides in an assisted living facility, and she hopes and prays that no one else tries to guilt trip her into going through with the procedure. Meanwhile, she remains an active writer and activist against Canada's growing euthanasia program. [/quotee]
 
MAID was never intended for this and the legislation needs stronger provisions against it. I support MAID for terminal patients with clear consent and no further. Medical staff should be responding to requests from patients, not actively pushing it as an option.

Unfortunately, the courts did not agree that it should be limited that way and the government, for whatever reason, did not challenge those decisions to the Supreme Court and instead tried to extend MAID to non-terminal disabled patients. At least MAID for mental health is temporarily off the table, though the government is really just putting off the inevitable since, again, a court ruling has come down enabling it for mentally ill persons under certain conditions. The government just keeps getting stays of the ruling to avoid having to deal with it. I think they should be appealing that ruling to the Supreme Court so they can argue against it. Not doing so suggests to me that they actually support the decision.
 
MAID was never intended for this
Unfortunately we live in a quasi-Ultilitarian/Malthusian world where we no longer care about the dignity of the individual and only seem to care about the individual's worth to the greater society. Its' a "Needs of the Many" argument that frankly has poisoned the medical profession.

Now, if someone who is in a terminal state wants to end their life on their terms, I've got no problem with it. The medical profession, however, should not be in the business of assisting others in dying.
 
Back
Top Bottom