and organ-transplant centers,
Angeline Ireland,
assisted suicide,
Big Government,
British Columbia,
Canada,
caring,
conscientious objection,
Delta Hospice Society,
dementia,
doctors,
ethics,
euthanasia,
freedom of conscience,
hospice,
hospice palliative care,
killing,
MAiD,
medical assistance in dying,
Medicine,
memory-support facilities,
minister of health,
nursing homes,
organ harvesting,
patients,
pediatric euthanasia,
pediatric hospitals,
podiatry,
psychiatric institutions,
Quebec,
religious beliefs,
socialism,
socialized medicine,
United States
Should hospice professionals be forced to assist the suicides of their patients who want to die? Not too long ago, the answer to that question would have been an emphatic “Of course not!” Hospice is not about making people dead. Rather, it seeks to help terminally ill patients live well through intensive medical, spiritual, psychological, and social treatments to alleviate the pain and emotional suffering that dying people and their families may experience. Don’t tell that to the provincial government of British Columbia. After the Supreme Court of Canada conjured a right for anyone diagnosed with a serious medical condition that causes “irremediable suffering” to receive lethal-injection euthanasia, British Columbia passed a law requiring all medical facilities that receive at least 50 percent of their funding from the government to…