Alberta seeks to set limits on use of medically assisted dying
The Canadian province of Alberta has proposed new legislation that would significantly limit medical assistance in dying (MAiD) to only end-of-life circumstances. The move would restrict the current broader eligibility criteria that allows MAiD for various medical conditions. This represents a major yuan-rally-on-fundamentals-policy-reforms.html" class="story-link" title="UBP Sees Decade‑Long Yuan Rally on Fundamentals, Policy Reforms">policy shift that could affect how assisted dying is accessed in the province.
The proposed restrictions are necessary to protect vulnerable people from making irreversible decisions during temporary crises or treatable conditions. They argue the current system is too broad and risks pressuring disabled or mentally ill individuals into choosing death when other support could help them.
Limiting MAiD to only end-of-life situations strips away personal autonomy and forces people with severe, chronic suffering to endure unbearable conditions. They view this as government overreach that ignores individual choice and the careful safeguards already built into the current system.