Canadian Journal of Bioethics (Jun 2024)

Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia: Language Lost in MAiD

  • Rafal Gromadzki,
  • Timothy Christie

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7202/1112287ar
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2-3

Abstract

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For most of Canada’s approximately 40-year debate on medically assisted death, euthanasia and assisted suicide were considered distinct issues. Yet in 2016 their ethical, psychological, and practical differences were effectively disregarded when the two acts were grouped together in the legislation under the umbrella term, “Medical Assistance in Dying” (MAiD). Although the term was fitting when the act was first legalized, expansion of eligibility has drastically changed the program from end-of-life care into life-ending intervention. As a result the term, “MAiD,” has lost its meaning and become a euphemism and a brand name, of sorts. Moreover, concealed behind the MAiD brand are a host of social issues which have developed since legalization. A re-evaluation of the decision to discard the distinction between assisted suicide and euthanasia is necessary to allow for clear communications and truly patient-centered approaches for tackling these issues. Providing a one-size-fits-all remedy by conflating assisted suicide and euthanasia ignores the goal of Canada’s original prohibition on assisted suicide, positioning the medical system to offer a painless means for the most vulnerable in our society to end their own lives.

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