Quebecers no longer seeing doctor-assisted deaths as exceptional, says oversight body

Michel Bureau, president of the commission on end-of-life care, attends a news conference in Quebec City on Wednesday, April 3, 2019. As the number of people receiving medical assistance in dying in Quebec rises, the head of the provincial commission that monitors the practice says he worries it's no longer being seen as a last resort. Bureau said he worries the public has stopped seeing MAID as an exceptional practice for people with incurable illnesses whose suffering is unbearable. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jacques Boissinot

MONTREAL - As the frequency of medical aid in dying continues to rise in Quebec, the head of the independent body that monitors the practice in the province says he worries doctor-assisted deaths are no longer being seen as a last resort.

Quebecers have stopped appreciating MAID as an exceptional procedure for people with incurable illnesses whose suffering is unbearable, Dr. Michel Bureau said in a recent interview.

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