Running head: ADVANTAGE OF ADVANCE DIRECTIVES 0 A CASE AGAINST BILL 14: The Advantages of Advance Directives for Medical Assistance in Dying Jessica Grewal Seneca College NUR403 - Development of Self as Nurse: Nursing Ethics Dr. Malini Persaud March 16, 2020 ADVANTAGES OF ADVANCE DIRECTIVES 1 A Case Against Bill 14: The Advantages of Advance Directives for Medical Assistance in Dying The Royal Society of Canada’s Expert Panel on End-of-Life Decision Making defines advanced directives as “directions given by a competent individual concerning what and/or how and/or by whom decisions should be made in the event that, at some time in the future, the individual becomes incompetent to make healthcare decisions” (Schüklenk et al., 2011, p. 5). Federal Bill 14 regarding Medical Aid in Dying decrees that individuals with degenerative disorders should not have the right to advance directives even when they are of sound mental and cognitive state to give consent. When taking into consideration the crucial role of ethics and morals in the medical field, it is clear that Bill 14 ultimately rids competent Canadian citizens of their basic rights of life and liberty. I argue that due to the increase of severe mental diseases that alter cognition at the time of diagnosis, Canadians should be permitted to prepare an advance directive for MAID before their illness begins to affect their competency and decision making. This essay will explore how the benefits of advance directives outweigh the drawbacks by examining the personal, economical and societal advantages of allowing patients to give consent to MAID before they reach a point where they are mentally incompetent to make healthcare decisions. I will first explain why denying patients the right to advance directives leads to negative consequences for the individual on a personal level. The first aspect to consider is why the person whose life is in question should not have the ability to exert control over it, especially if he or she is already aware that their future level of mental cognition will not allow for such decisions to be made after the fact. As Dr. Justine Dembo of the University of Toronto informs, “judgments about suffering, irremediability, and quality of life are closely intertwined, and capable patients rightly define these terms as they apply to their own unique situations. Because ADVANTAGES OF ADVANCE DIRECTIVES 2 suffering is a personal experience, only the affected individuals can assess whether it is intolerable” (2018, p. 453). As such, it is clear that in such a subjective situation, it would only make sense that the final decision should be in the hands of the individual who would be most affected, in the form of an instruction directive, or the individuals that he or she entrusts that right to, in the form of a proxy directive. The healthcare field, especially, is one that especially must ensure an ethical code of conduct based on the best intentions for the patient, and the best way to do so is to allow a patient to have adequate control over their end of life care. In addition, as Ronald Ingle (2012) highlights, the use of advance directives has major impacts on an individual’s sense of dignity in dying. Advance directives give patients a certain level of control that rids them of the potentially devastating impacts on self-image and dignity near the end of their life as a result of being seen at their lowest by loved ones. When they have a plan in place for their end of life care, both the patient and their family can feel more at ease with the situation; the patient may not feel as if they are a burden to their family, and the family may not feel pressure to make decisions on behalf of their suffering family member, without a clear understanding of what he or she would have wanted. As such, it is evident that just as the use advance directives would allow for the patient to better plan their own life and allow the patient’s family to better accommodate their loved one. Furthermore, the economic benefits of allowing for advance directives must be considered. In order to examine these benefits, I will first present some startling characteristics regarding the global elderly population, of individuals older 60 years of age. As Sahardi notes, “According to the WHO, the proportion of the world's population older than 60 years of age will nearly double from 962 million to 2.1 billion in 2050… Moreover, in 2050, 80% of the older population is expected to live in low- and middle-income countries” (2019, p.1). The importance ADVANTAGES OF ADVANCE DIRECTIVES 3 of these statistics to Bill 14 is backed up the majority of scholarship on the issue, including the Royal Society of Canada Expert Panel on End-of-Life Decision-Making. The World Health Organization (WHO) specifically call attention to the relevance of aging population and growth in chronic diseases to end of life discussions (Schüklenk et al, 2011, p. 8). It is also imperative to mention that the degenerative diseases being referred to in Bill 14 such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and atherosclerosis are directly related to ageing through the deterioration of organ functions and mental competency (Sahardi, Makpol 2019, p.1). Taking into consideration the fact that the number of individuals at risk to these diseases is gradually increasing, it is worth discussing how this could affect the future of healthcare costs. It logically follows that more patients in palliative care require more financial resources and thus increasing expenses within health care as a whole. These expenses not only take away more from the taxpayers’ pockets but might also result in funding cuts to other deserving areas of the healthcare field. Advanced directives can take away at least a portion of these expenses by permitting the wishes of patients who do not want to remain in palliative care for an extended period of time, thereby helping reduce lower health care costs as a whole. As a result, the economic incentives against Bill 14 are clearly evident and given the economic benefits assist in lowering healthcare costs for the majority, it is a moral win as well. This leads to the final advantage of advance directives that I will discuss in this paper which has to do with the societal and ideological impacts of Bill 14. The decisions an individual makes in regard to their end of life care rely heavily on the Canadian Constitution’s core value of autonomy which has historically been protected through legal rights in Canada (Schüklenk, et al, 2011, p. 8). As such, one must question why the federal government would propose such a bill that limits the legal status of individuals and directly contradicts the principle of autonomy that is ADVANTAGES OF ADVANCE DIRECTIVES 4 central to the Canadian Charter. I believe it is also necessary to examine a popular argument in favour of Bill 14 in order to prove that it is not a justifiable criticism of advance directives. Dr. Merril Pauls among others, informs that autonomy is tricky to situate in this situation because of the responsibility of healthcare professionals in acknowledging that the patient’s wishes and state of mind might differ following the time after he or she writes an advanced directive. However, Dr. Pauls, Larkin and Schears also iterate that “in most situations, an AD matches what our clinical judgment would support (i.e., the terminally ill patients who do not want life-sustaining treatments) or we are able to verify the wishes with a substitute decision-maker” (2015, p. 563). Thus, it is clear that this criticism, though valid to a certain point, rarely takes effect and speaks more to the fact that advanced directives are more helpful than they are detrimental. On the other hand, using this criticism as enough justification to keep Bill 14 begins to speak to the larger idea of what we as a society stand for in terms of personal rights and liberties, and how Bill 14 rids Canadians of these basic rights. I have demonstrated why it is imperative that Canadians with degenerative diseases be given back their right to prepare an advance directive for MAID for a plethora of reasons. Based on individual, economic and ideological justifications, I have illustrated that the benefits of advance directives are far too consequential in the moral and ethical code of the healthcare field to be ignored. Refusing individuals their basic rights of liberty not only undervalues the patient’s right to choose and control their own life, but it also violates the Constitutional Order that Canada was built upon. It is clear that Bill 14 must be put to a stop. 5 ADVANTAGES OF ADVANCE DIRECTIVES References J., Schuklenk, U., & Roggler, J. et al. (2018). “For their own good”: A response to popular arguments against permitting medical assistance in dying (MAID) where mental illness is the sole underlying condition. The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 63(7). 451-456. Doi: 10.1177/07067437118766055 Ingle, R. Dying with dignity--advance directives. (2012). SAMJ South African Medical Journal, 102(1), 10. Retrieved from Academic OneFile database. Pauls, M., Larkin, G. L., & Schears, R. M. (2015). Advance directives and suicide attempts--ethical considerations in light of Carter v. Canada, SCC 5. CJEM : Journal of the Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians, 17(5), 562-564. Doi: 10.1017/cem.2015.64 Sahardi, N. F. N. M., & Makpol, S. (2019). Ginger (Zingiber officinale Roscoe) in the prevention of ageing and degenerative diseases: Review of current evidence. Evidence - Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 2019. Retrieved from https!//doi: 10.1155/2019/5054395 Schüklenk, U., van Delden, J. J., Downie, J., McLean, S. A., Upshur, R., & Weinstock, D. (2011). End-of-life decision-making in Canada: the report by the Royal Society of Canada expert panel on end-of-life decision-making. Bioethics, 25 Suppl 1(Suppl 1), 1–73. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8519.2011.01939