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Doctors, patients call for death with dignity

A woman who watched her husband die a gruesome death, only to discover she too had lung cancer is one of several patients and physicians asking the court to strike down Canada’s assisted-suicide laws.

VANCOUVER — A woman who watched her husband die a gruesome death, only to discover she too had lung cancer is one of several patients and physicians asking the court to strike down Canada’s assisted-suicide laws.

Susan Bracken of Barrie, Ont., filed an affidavit with the B.C. Supreme Court, saying she strongly believes that a person should have the right to choose to die.

“I have seen how horrible disease and the dying process can be, and that is why I am seeking deliverance from that type of suffering for myself and why I’m pushing for change,” she said in the sworn statement.

Bracken’s emotional odyssey is among a large stack of affidavits prepared for a summary trial next month in B.C. Supreme Court.

Justice Lynn Smith agreed to hear a speedy trial for Gloria Taylor, one of the plaintiffs who is dying of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, known as Lou Gehrig’s disease.

A consistent theme in the affidavits from patients and doctors is quality of life and dying with dignity.

Marlene Reisler of Richmond, B.C., said she and her husband Isadore had several conversations about assisted suicide after he was diagnosed with Lou Gehrig’s disease.

“We felt very strongly that the laws in this country allow far more compassion to dogs, cats and horses who are in distress than toward human beings.”

Retired Quebec physician Marcel Boisvert said he has seen situations where physician-assisted dying was justified.

He singled out one case where a man in his 40s had locked-in syndrome and could do nothing but wink and make sounds. All consulting physicians agreed there was no hope for improvement.

He became agitated one day while watching a wounded horse on TV about to be euthanized and his wife asked him if that’s what he wanted. He indicated it was, Boisvert said.

After new consultations, the man was sedated and “allowed to die from inanition” — exhaustion due to lack of food and water.

“It proved most stressful for his wife and all the health-care team, including myself,” Boisvert said.

The Attorney General of Canada has not filed affidavits in its arguments, but said in a statement of defence the laws banning assisted suicide are necessary to protect vulnerable people from feeling pressure to end their lives.