rvallee
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
(Be warned: difficult topic)
Discussion in Canadian media over assisted suicide of a fibromyalgia patient. From her own words it appears she does not want to die but wants to communicate the fact that the status quo is so bad it leaves her no choice unless options change. Familiar theme, unfortunately.
Assisted suicide is strict and limited, enacted by provinces. As it should be, but the lack of any meaningful support and research essentially creates impossible circumstances for some. This is a similar debate to what is happening in... Sweden? Where the same right is being discussed and the same platitudes offered in response.
https://www.ctvnews.ca/health/this-...r-life-but-can-t-get-assisted-death-1.4720730
Discussion in Canadian media over assisted suicide of a fibromyalgia patient. From her own words it appears she does not want to die but wants to communicate the fact that the status quo is so bad it leaves her no choice unless options change. Familiar theme, unfortunately.
Assisted suicide is strict and limited, enacted by provinces. As it should be, but the lack of any meaningful support and research essentially creates impossible circumstances for some. This is a similar debate to what is happening in... Sweden? Where the same right is being discussed and the same platitudes offered in response.
An Ontario woman is sharing her story of living with an incurable disorder to help explain why she and others want the federal government to make medically assisted death easier to access.
Justine Noel wants to see the law changed so she can legally end her life. Fibromyalgia has left her bedridden for most of the day, as something as simple as standing up can cause her significant pain. It is not fatal, but it is resistant to treatment. It's also "unbearable," she told CTV News.
"Every single doctor you go to, you're told there is no cure, there's barely a treatment, you're not going to get any better, you just have to learn to live with it – and some people can't learn to live with it," the 27-year-old woman said in an interview at her townhouse in Niagara Falls, Ont.
Noel has applied for assisted death twice, but was turned down both times. Ontario's laws require not only intolerable suffering, but also a foreseeable death in order for assisted death to be granted.
https://www.ctvnews.ca/health/this-...r-life-but-can-t-get-assisted-death-1.4720730