Those requesting medically assisted death should be able to access it in an equitable, respectful and expedient way, says Craig Goldie
Tag Archives: assisted suicide
While we still can: The case for advance directives
A proposed law on assisted death will not allow patients to choose death while they remain able. Should it?
Assisted death is the new pro-choice
When does life—and a doctor’s duty—begin and end? Assisted dying is dredging up the big questions of the abortion debate, for better or worse.
At ground zero of assisted death
Nino Sekopet, an extraordinary end-of-life counsellor, on the questions he most often faces
Grappling with the hardest questions on assisted dying
An interview with Sen. Kelvin Ogilvie, co-chair of Parliament’s committee on physician-assisted dying
What comes after the Supreme Court’s assisted suicide ruling?
Editorial: The Supreme Court has ruled it is not criminal to assist suicide. Now what? Anarchy, perhaps. Certainly the battles are not over.
Assisted suicide: What will Parliament do now?
Svend Robinson: “I hope that they can rise to the challenge”
Interview: The CMA’s president on assisted dying
Dr. Chris Simpson calls for a process to set new rules
On assisted suicide, the Supreme Court confronts Parliament’s cowardice
The Court has done its job. Now it is up to legislators.
Top court allows ‘physician-assisted death’
John Geddes on the legal and ethical conundrum handed to the federal government by the Supreme Court’s historic decision