Patients, not doctors, should initiate conversations on assisted dying: Qualtrough
OTTAWA — Disability Inclusion Minister Carla Qualtrough says health practitioners should not be allowed to discuss the issue of assisted dying until a patient asks about it — and she’s open to amending the law to make that clear.
Her comment is not likely to sit well with some health care practitioners who have argued that talking about all options available to patients is part of their duty to ensure informed consent.
Indeed, the Canadian Nurses Association has urged the government to specifically clarify in the law that medical practitioners can initiate discussions on assisted dying.
Qualtrough made the comment Thursday during testimony at the Senate’s legal affairs committee, which is studying a bill that would expand access to medical assistance in dying (MAID) to people who are not already near-death.

