Feds introduce bill dropping some restrictions on assisted dying
OTTAWA — The Liberal government has introduced legislation aimed at making it easier for intolerably ill Canadians to get medical help to end their lives.
The bill, tabled Monday in the House of Commons, would scrap a provision in the law that allows only those already near death to receive medical assistance in dying — as ordered by a Quebec court last fall.
However, the bill would also create a two-track approach to eligibility for assisted dying, based on whether a person’s natural death is reasonably foreseeable.
For those deemed to be near death, the government is proposing to drop the requirement that a person must wait 10 days after being approved for an assisted death before receiving the procedure. It would also reduce the number of witnesses required to one from two.