Showing posts with label Doctor assisted suicide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Doctor assisted suicide. Show all posts

Thursday, September 22, 2016

Getting rid of Christian or conscientious Doctors in Canada...

I heard on my radio news this morning that Prof Udo Schuklenk (a Cdn bioethicist) said that "Doctors have a professional obligation to put their morals aside and provide you with any legal medical service you need." (whether that is abortion or Dr assisted suicide) He also said “Traditionally we have accepted that there is something honourable about respecting doctors who object on grounds of conscience to the provision of certain professional services and we think we ought to accommodate them,” says Schuklenk, the Ontario research chair in Bioethics at Queen’s University in Kingston. “My problem with this attitude is that I think it is abusive behaviour. When you think about conscientious objection, you’ll find that it’s never a professional decision.”
I found this online:
Many doctors and religious groups oppose his views, calling them an intolerant attack on conscientious objection but Schuklenk says no one is forcing anyone to enter the profession. “When we take up a job, we know perfectly well what we have to deliver in terms of the scope of the job description,” he argues. “All of these doctors knew when they joined the profession that it would include the provision of abortion and it will also soon include the provision of medically aided dying. They also knew that job descriptions can change. Society ultimately decides the scope of the profession. If you don’t like it, do not join the profession.”
This report on the radio, and what I found above online, made me feel really ill. This professor also states that no one forces anyone to become a Dr and if you have conscientious objections due to morals or religious beliefs you should not become a doctor. 
I heard the above this morning on the radio news on News1130, a station I always listen to. I was shocked and appalled. So now we must get rid of all Christian thought, belief, all morals, all kindness to humanity, deny our Christian heritage and teaching, and think like this professor? Suddenly I desire to live in a different country, one with compassion and belief in God; I desire a heavenly country as I don't belong here on earth. But I can't let my light hide under a bushel. I totally disagree with this man. I believe there is a difficult fight ahead of us. I hope we can remain firm and steadfast and true above all to God and His righteousness.
By Loretta Houben

Friday, January 22, 2016

Doctor assisted suicide in Canada



On Wed Jan 20, the Vancouver Courier newspaper landed on our doorstep as it does each week. As usual I opened it and looked through the flyers, and read the articles. I've enjoyed this paper for many years. 
On this evening, my face blanched of all colour, and my heart palpitations were extreme as I read Allen Garr's article on doctor assisted suicide here in Canada. I've included it below. Please read and please respond in all ways you know how. I disagree 100% with the views posted as I believe the vulnerable and ill should be protected and taken care of, and not snuffed out like the family dog. I believe in the sanctity of LIFE.
By Loretta Houben


Just in case the article disappears over time, as is often the case with online newspapers, I will also include it here in its entirety so I won't forget what's at stake in our beloved country: 

I suspect that, following the most recent Supreme Court of Canada decision, a law legalizing physician-assisted death is a done deal in this country.
The court granted the new Liberal federal government a four-month extension to come up with legislation effectively making that practice no longer a crime.
And, as such, it will bring about one of the biggest cultural changes we have seen in our country since Dr. Henry Morgentaler finally won his decades-long battle and abortion became a legal right back in 1988.
Both of these historic shifts in our country’s ethical perspective came about with the aid of the federal Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Ironically, while it was Pierre Trudeau’s Liberals that brought in that piece of legislation, his government actively upheld the law that made Morgentaler’s work illegal.
That was until the courts, considering the Charter, finally weighed in.
But like the issue of doctor-assisted death, the general public was way ahead of the government and the courts of that day. In Quebec in particular, where Morgentaler was repeatedly charged and tried for providing abortions, in spite of the very clear prohibition under federal criminal law, successive juries chose to acquit him rather than find him guilty.
It led to the extraordinary situation of higher courts overturning jury decisions. But in the end, the Quebec government simply threw up its hands and declared that, in spite of the law, abortions could take place in free-standing clinics.
Quebec, having thrown off the yolk of Premier Maurice Duplessis and the Catholic church back in the ’60s in its “Quiet Revolution,” has become among the most socially progressive jurisdictions in the country. While cases were making their way up to the Supreme Court of Canada, Quebec legislators spent years considering the issue of physician-assisted death.
And while we awaited a response from Stephen Harper’s Tories to follow the Supreme Court’s demand to rewrite the law and legalize that practice, Quebec passed its own legislation in December. (There has been at least one sanctioned death in that province since.)
This issue, which ultimately can touch us all either personally or through a family member, had its most recent history more than a quarter of a century ago in the case of Sue Rodriguez.
She was a Victoria resident suffering with the fatal neurodegenerative disease ALS. Her case ended up in the Supreme Court of Canada but led to a split decision of 5-4 against her in 1993. She would die a few months later, it was suspected, with the assistance of an anonymous physician.
It would be another 20 years before we finally saw a victory on the issue. It was where the case of another woman, Gloria Taylor also suffering with ALS, along with four other plaintiffs, all represented by the B.C. Civil Liberties Association (BCCLA) and its lead litigator Grace Pastine, was brought before the Supreme Court of Canada. And this time they won.
That was almost a year ago, and the court ordered the Tories to come up with a new law within 12 months.
Among the Tories’ first acts under Justice Minister Peter MacKay was to set up a panel of three doctors to consider the matter. As evidence that the Tories were simply dragging their feet, the BCCLA pointed out two of the three doctors had previously testified in court cases against doctor-assisted deaths. It seemed unlikely Harper’s crew would do anything before the October election, which proved accurate.
As for Justin Trudeau’s Liberals, they are on the record supporting legalization and one can assume they will meet the extended deadline.
Meanwhile, the court granted an exemption to the government of Quebec, allowing them to carry on under their legislation. They also, in an extraordinary move, granted an exemption to individuals who, in the meantime, could meet the criteria set out in the court’s original ruling to seek a superior court judge’s permission for a doctor-assisted death.
As Pastine notes, the technical legislative task before the Liberals “is very simple.” As for the politics, well, they did promise, and the most recent poll I could find shows that 77 per cent of Canadians, including all ages and political persuasions, would welcome this most profound change.
agarr@vancourier.com
@allengarr
- See more at: http://www.vancourier.com/opinion/doctor-assisted-death-a-welcome-development-in-canada-1.2155399#sthash.xnmw4moN.dpuf