Assisted-death lawsuit adjourned, government evidence widens eligibility: lawyer
VANCOUVER — The British Columbia Civil Liberties Association and a woman with a degenerative illness have adjourned their lawsuit challenging the federal assisted-dying law after they say government evidence expanded eligibility for the procedure.
The law says that only people who have a “reasonably foreseeable” natural death qualify, but a government expert has filed a report that states some doctors are now interpreting this category to include people who refuse care that would prolong their lives.
Lead plaintiff Julia Lamb, who has spinal muscular atrophy but isn’t facing an imminent death, said the relief she feels is “indescribable.”
“For years a shadow loomed over me. I feared a future where I was trapped in pain and in forceful suffering as my disease would continuously progress but not kill me,” the 28-year-old said at a news conference Wednesday.