To describe clinicians' experiences with assessing patients making track 2 requests for medical assistance in dying (maid) and providing maid to such patients in the first 6 months after canada amended relevant legislation in march 2021 to expand access to maid. Research index > archives medical assistance in dying when natural death is not reasonably foreseeable To describe clinicians’ experiences with assessing patients making track 2 requests for medical assistance in dying (maid) and providing maid to such patients in the first 6 months after canada amended relevant legislation in march 2021 to expand access to maid.
Hustler (Best Of Barely Legal) Nº 53 - Bibliocarlos
The revised law has new safeguards that now apply to patients whose natural death is not reasonably foreseeable
These safeguards seek to address the many sources of suffering and vulnerability that could potentially lead a patient who is not nearing death to ask for maid.
Unlike previously reported experiences of maid applicants whose natural deaths were reasonably foreseeable, many survey participants reported having unmet health care needs. In this study, 20 medical assistance in dying (maid) providers were interviewed about their experience when assessing patients with unmet needs, including medical, financial or social needs. To explore the experiences, wishes, fears, and beliefs of people who requested and were eligible for medical assistance in dying (maid) in canada in the first year after legalization. Objective to describe clinicians’ experiences with assessing patients making track 2 requests for medical assistance in dying (maid) and providing maid to such patients in the first 6 months after canada amended relevant legislation in march 2021 to expand access to maid.