In the 1990s, the term medical assistance in dying was not used prominently to discuss the possibility of individuals requesting help to end their life due to specific circumstances. We were more likely to be exposed to descriptions such as physician-assisted suicide or euthanasia, particularly after the highly publicized incarceration of Dr. Jack Kevorkian in the United States.
Since June 2016, Canada has had federal regulations to allow for medical assistance in dying. Nine years later, Canadians do not appear to be particularly upset about the guidelines ...
... the issue becomes more polarizing when the “on demand” element is introduced. While almost three in five Canadians (58 per cent, unchanged) think medical assistance in dying should be permitted, but only under specific circumstances, there are sizeable shifts in the two more extreme views ...
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Since June 2016, Canada has had federal regulations to allow for medical assistance in dying. Nine years later, Canadians do not appear to be particularly upset about the guidelines ...
... the issue becomes more polarizing when the “on demand” element is introduced. While almost three in five Canadians (58 per cent, unchanged) think medical assistance in dying should be permitted, but only under specific circumstances, there are sizeable shifts in the two more extreme views ...
CLICK HERE for the full story

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