Medical assistance in dying in Canada: A scoping review on the concept of suffering

Author:

Henry Melissa123ORCID,Alias Ali1ORCID,Bisson‐Gervais Vanessa1,Liu Jun Yang1,Dargis Luc4,Gauthier Lynn5,Tapp Diane5,Greenfield Brian16,Mishara Brian4

Affiliation:

1. McGill University Montreal Quebec Canada

2. Lady‐Davis Institute for Medical Research Montreal Quebec Canada

3. Jewish General Hospital Montreal Quebec Canada

4. Université du Quebec à Montreal Montreal Quebec Canada

5. Université Laval Quebec City Quebec Canada

6. Montreal Children's Hospital Montreal Quebec Canada

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesMedical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) has been legal in Canada since June 2016. A person can receive MAiD if their suffering cannot be relieved under conditions that they consider acceptable. Informed consent requires that the person requesting MAiD has received all the information needed to make their decision; that is, medical diagnosis and prognosis, available treatments including palliative care. The evaluation of unbearable suffering is known to be challenging as suffering is often psychological, existential, and social in nature. While interventions to relieve suffering exist, it is unclear how suffering is assessed and addressed in the literature on MAiD practice. No scoping review exists on the topic in Canada. The aim of this study was to understand how the concept of suffering was approached within the Canadian MAiD grey (GL) and scientific (peer‐reviewed) literature (SL), specifically: 1‐ How suffering is defined and assessed in the context of MAiD in Canada and 2‐ Which interventions in response to suffering are recommended within the process of obtaining informed consent for MAiD and throughout the process of MAiD itself.MethodsA scoping review was conducted based on PRISMA‐SR guidelines. SL articles (N = 1027) were identified from a review of 6 databases and GL documents (N = 537) were obtained from the provinces of Quebec, Ontario and British Columbia. Documents were analyzed using NVivo with coding by two‐raters and continuous team discussions.ResultsA multidimensional definition of suffering, akin to the concept of total pain, is used. The assessment of suffering is based upon patients' reports. Tools to aid in the assessment are not comprehensively covered. Specific interventions to address suffering were often focused on active listening and the management of physical symptoms. No specific interventions were mentioned and there was no reference to clinical practice guidelines in the grey literature to address other components of suffering. The use of a multidisciplinary approach is suggested without specifying the nature of involvement.ConclusionsOur review indicates that published guidelines of MAID assessments could include clearer structure around the assessment and management of suffering, with suggestions of tools that may help clarify types of suffering and reference to clinical practice guidelines and interventions to holistically attend to patient suffering with an attention on non‐physical symptoms. Guidelines would benefit from clearer explanations of how members of an interdisciplinary teams could be coherently coordinated.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Oncology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology

Reference53 articles.

1. Government of Canada.Medical Assistance in Dying;2018. Retrieved April 2 2022.https://www.canada.ca/en/health‐canada/services/medical‐assistance‐dying.html

2. Recent Trends in Euthanasia and Other End-of-Life Practices in Belgium

3. Health Canada.Third Annual Report on Medical Assistance in Dying in Canada 2021;2022. Retrieved October 1 2022.https://www.canada.ca/en/health‐canada/services/medical‐assistance‐dying/annual‐report‐2021.html

4. Depression and explicit requests for euthanasia in end-of-life cancer patients in primary care in the Netherlands: a longitudinal, prospective study

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