Canadian man offered euthanasia ‘multiple times’: ‘I don’t want to give up my life’

 

Roger Foley enjoys taste-testing three different kinds of hummus, his favourite food, on the day of a video shoot with Amanda Achtman of the Dying to Meet You project in Canada. The two spoke about Foley’s difficulty accessing quality care for his needs and being offered Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID) “several times.” / Courtesy of Amanda Achtman

CNA Staff, Jun 23, 2024 / 06:00 am (CNA).

Amid ongoing efforts to expand euthanasia in Canada under the name of “medical aid in dying” (MAID), one Ottawa man says he has been offered euthanasia “multiple times” as he struggles with lifelong disabilities and chronic pain from a disease called cerebellar ataxia.

Roger Foley, 49, shared some of his story in a recent video interview with Amanda Achtman of the Dying to Meet You project, which was created to “humanize our conversation on suffering, death, meaning, and hope.” The project seeks to “[restore] our cultural health when it comes to our experiences of death and dying” through speaking engagements and video campaigns.

In the video, the fourth of a series, Foley said he has struggled with subpar medical help in his own home, where he is supposed to be getting quality care. Canada has a nationalized health care system but Foley said that individuals with illnesses are “worked at … not worked with.” He spoke out against being devalued as he fights for the support he needs to live.

In one case, he said, a home worker helped him into his bathtub and then fell asleep in the other room; Foley was left to crawl out of the bathroom on his own. “I reported to the agency, and then he confessed, and the agency, they really didn’t care,” he said.

Asked by Achtman if he has ever been offered euthanasia, Foley said: “Yeah, multiple times.”

“One time, [a doctor] asked me, ‘Do you have any thoughts of self-harm?’ I’m honest with them and tell them I do think about ending my life because of what I’m going through, being prevented from the resources that I need to live safely back at home.”

“From out of nowhere, he just pulls out, ‘Well, if you don’t get self-directing funding, you can always apply for an assisted.’”

Foley said the offers from doctors to help end his life have “completely traumatized me.”

“Now it’s this overlying option where in my situation, when I say I’m suicidal, I’m met with, ‘Well, the hospital has a program to help you with that if you want to end your life.’”

“That didn’t exist before [MAID] was legalized, but now it’s there,” he said. “There is not going to be a second within the rest of my life that I’m not going to have flashbacks to [being offered suicide]. The devaluing of me and all that I am.”

Noting that he’s “not religious,” Foley said: “Saying that it’s just religious persons who oppose euthanasia in society is completely wrong.”

“These people who usually say it, they have an ableist mindset,” he said. “And they look at persons with disabilities and see us as just better off dead and a waste of resources.”

Achtman told CNA there is a need for euthanasia-free health care spaces, not only for protecting the integrity of Catholic institutions but also because many patients — including nonreligious patients like Foley — want to be treated in facilities that do not raise euthanasia with patients.

“Having euthanasia suggested, in a sense, already kills the person. It deflates a person’s sense of confidence that doctors and nurses are going to truly fight for them,” Achtman told CNA. “When euthanasia is suggested ostensibly as one ‘treatment’ option among others, there are all-too-frequently no other real options provided.

She continued: “This is why I always say that a request for euthanasia is not so much an expression of a desire to die as it is an expression of disappointment. Responding to such disappointment with real interventions that are adequate to the person is demanding, but that’s what people deserve. It is wrong to concede or capitulate to a person’s suicidal ideation — instead, every person deserves suicide prevention rather than suicide assistance.”

Roger Foley enjoys taste-testing three different kinds of hummus, his favorite food, on the day of a video shoot with Amanda Achtman of the Dying to Meet You project. The two spoke about Foley's difficulty accessing quality care for his needs and being offered Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID) "several times.". Courtesy of Amanda Achtman
Roger Foley enjoys taste-testing three different kinds of hummus, his favorite food, on the day of a video shoot with Amanda Achtman of the Dying to Meet You project. The two spoke about Foley’s difficulty accessing quality care for his needs and being offered Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID) “several times.”. Courtesy of Amanda Achtman

Canada has become one of the most permissive countries in the world when it comes to euthanasia. The country first began allowing doctors to help kill terminally ill patients nearing death in 2016; the law was then expanded in 2021 to include patients whose death is not imminent.

In February the country paused a proposal to allow mentally ill individuals access to MAID, with the proposal set to be reconsidered in 2027. Earlier this year, Canadian health researchers alleged that MAID will “save” the Canadian health care system between $34.7 and $136.8 million per year.

A couple in British Columbia is currently suing the provincial government, as well as a Catholic health care provider, after their daughter was denied euthanasia while suffering from a terminal illness. The suit demands that the government remove the religious exemption from the Catholic hospital that protects them from having to offer MAID.

A judge in March, meanwhile, ruled that a woman with autism could be granted her request to die by MAID, overruling efforts by the woman’s father to halt the deadly procedure.

Asked what gives him hope, Foley told Achtman that he aspires one day to “be able to break through [the health care system] and get access to the resources that I need and to live at home with workers who want to work with me and I want to work with them and that we can work as a team.”

“I have a passion to live,” he said. “I don’t want to give up my life.”

Zoe Romanowsky contributed to this story.


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7 Comments

  1. Between euthanasia and free abortion, Canada has become a culture of death and a non-Christian country. What else could go wrong?

  2. I used to think of Canada as a last ditch refuge if the US went so off the rails that it became necessary to leave. It was a sort of “America-lite” option. Sadly under the “leadership” of little Justin, it has become “Soviet-lite”. I would not go there if they paid me. With covid and over the last several years there has been a total erosion of civil rights. They have jailed pastors for the “crime” of preaching, forced people into covid vaccines, confiscated the bank accounts of truckers protesting conditions there, and now we have not just death available to the terminal and in pain, but “offered” multiple times to those their health system finds annoyingly expensive to care for. No doubt the next step will be to order their deaths, like the Nazis would have. How very charming. A total abdication of morality on the part of the govt there. Just disgusting.

    • I believe it was Sarah Palin that coined the term “death panels” in reference to nationalized health care whereby the patient is not allowed to live because they are a financial drain on resources, and the government decides who gets to live and who doesn’t. Gulag-esque for sure.

    • In the USSR (where I was born) people were never killed on the pretext of “medical help”. They could be killed via sending to forced labor or execution i.e. in a straightforward brutal way but we never had such a thing as “let a doctor kill you for your dignity’s sake”. This is the invention of the West.

      Canada took after Nazi’s extermination of mentally ill, handicapped, etc. The only difference is that Nazi Germany did not ask them whether they wished to exterminate themselves.

      As for the nationalized health system, the USSR had it as well. What makes a difference is humanistic slogans (USSR) and zero such (Canada). The USSR could not euthanize its citizens “for their own good” because it would clash with its ideology. It could kill its “enemies” though.

  3. LJ above – To be fair, although PM Justin Trudeau has shown an odd keenness on euthanasia, Canada’s culture of death didn’t start with him. We’ve had a series of PM’s, many of them Catholic, who used the “personally opposed but . . .” line on abortion. The arguments for euthanasia are eerily reminiscent of the arguments for abortion – it will only be for a small number of extreme cases, yadda, yadda, yadda.
    P.S. Allow me to put in my usual plug for the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition. Some good things also come out of Canada.

  4. Canadian culture has come under the power and control of Satan and his ministers. The Canadian people themselves have only themselves to blame.

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