Canada’s assisted suicide crisis: The sinister culture of death in Canadian healthcare

Canada’s assisted suicide regime was established by legislation in 2016, following its decriminalization by Carter v. Canada in 2015. It was originally justified as a narrow exception grounded in contemporaneous, voluntary, and informed consent. Expansions of eligibility, existing and contemplated, now threaten that foundation. Proposals for “advance requests” and emerging professional discourse around “involuntary (non-consensual) euthanasia,” risk shifting end-of-life decision-making from personal autonomy to third-party judgment. As assisted suicide becomes increasingly routine, the erosion of informed consent threatens Charter protections and human dignity. True end-of-life freedom requires strict safeguards, rejection of non-consensual death, and vastly improved access to quality palliative care.

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