CBS News
As Canada delays medically assisted dying in mental illness cases, some find relief, others fear consequences
When Savannah Meadows had lunch last October with her mother, Sharon Turcott, Meadows was “all smiles,” the mother told CBS News.
“Maybe she’s turned a corner,” Turcott recalled thinking about her daughter, who had been struggling with serious mental illness.
The next morning, she received a scheduled email: “Mom, if you’re reading this, I’m probably on my way to heaven,” it said. Her daughter had taken her own life at the age of 44.
“She did not want to die by suicide. She did not want to die alone,” Turcott said.
Instead, Meadows had been seeking a medically assisted death — something Canada legalized in 2016. It had been set to expand last year to patients who were suffering solely from mental illness, but that expansion was delayed, and Meadows ultimately died by suicide.
The delay has been welcomed by some, but condemned by others.
The history of Canada’s, still evolving MAID law
In 2016, Canada enacted a law allowing medical assistance in dying, known as MAID, for people whose natural death is reasonably foreseeable. Under the law, following a process establishing that all eligibility criteria have been met, a physician or nurse either directly administers a substance that induces death or prescribes a drug that the person takes themselves.
Five years later, the law was expanded, no longer requiring a person’s death to be reasonably foreseeable as an eligibility criterion for adults with a grievous and irremediable medical condition. Under the changes, individuals suffering solely from mental illness were temporarily excluded for eligibility until March 2023.
Meadows, described by her mother as a proud trans woman, had picked a date and began preparations for the end of her life.
“It gave me time to accept the fact that my daughter was going to die,” Turcott said.
A few days before Meadows would potentially have been eligible to seek a medically assisted death, however, the government announced a yearlong delay for the consideration of cases of mental illness. Seven months later, Meadows died by suicide.
The delayed inclusion of patients seeking MAID on the basis of mental illness has been met with apprehension from the start.
Canada’s Expert Panel on MAID and Mental Illness, established to assist in developing the government’s approach to the expansion of the law, outlined concerns in a 2022 report, including the daunting task for clinicians asked to make predictions about individual patients and establish incurability and irreversibility despite the difficulties of predicting the evolution of mental disorders.
Another factor was what the report referred to as structural vulnerability, or the risk of factors such as unstable housing or lack of employment opportunities resulting in individuals viewing death as an only option.
The panel offered a number of recommendations in its report for establishing an expanded MAID regime.
The future of the MAID law’s expansion, however, is also dependent to some degree on domestic politics, which appear set to shift. Pierre Poilievre, whose Conservative Party is up by a significant margin in polls ahead of national elections set to take place within a year, has vowed to “revoke entirely” the expansion of the law to include solely mental health cases, arguing that it blurred a line “between suicide prevention and suicide assistance.”
“She would have died the way she wanted to.”
Since her daughter’s death, meanwhile, Turcott has become an advocate for MAID access for those whose sole underlying condition is mental illness.
“She would have died the way she wanted to, and because that’s what she wanted, that would have been fine with me,” Turcott said. “Suicide was not fine with me.”
In February, the government further postponed MAID eligibility for patients whose sole condition is mental illness until March 2027 — four years after it was initially slated to go into effect.
Mark Holland, Canada’s Minister of Health, said that while “significant progress has been made in supporting practitioners in assessing MAID eligibility in complex cases,” the country’s health system was “not yet ready for MAID where the sole underlying condition is mental illness.”
The delay has been condemned by some MAID advocates. Dying With Dignity Canada, an organization that advocates for end-of-life rights, filed a lawsuit in August alleging discriminatory exclusion in the law against people with mental illness.
An ongoing debate over access to MAID
Others, however, view the delay as a step to ensure necessary safeguards are in place and health care providers are prepared to handle relevant cases. The Canada Mental Health Association said in a January statement that it supported the postponement, citing what it called insufficient time and resources allocated to ensure that people with mental illnesses can access the necessary care.
Some groups oppose the law’s expansion outright. In September, Inclusion Canada, a nonprofit group that advocates for Canadians with intellectual disabilities, filed a lawsuit challenging MAID for people with a disability who are not dying or whose death is not “reasonably foreseeable.”
The lawsuit argues that MAID Track 2, the 2021 expansion of the law to include patients whose deaths are not reasonably foreseeable, had already resulted in premature deaths.
“People are dying. We are witnessing an alarming trend where people with disabilities are seeking assisted suicide due to social deprivation, poverty and lack of essential supports,” Krista Carr, executive vice-president of Inclusion Canada, said in September.
Compounding CMHA and Inclusion Canada’s concerns, an expert committee of professionals from disciplines including ethics, social work and medicine that reviewed MAID deaths in Ontario identified cases in which it said isolation and unmet social needs, such as housing, had fueled several euthanasia recipient’s requests.
The committee also found that patients seeking eligibility under the expanded Track 2 criteria were about 8% more likely to reside in areas of the province with high levels of social marginalization than MAID Track 1 recipients.
The committee’s report acknowledged that while the deaths discussed were not necessarily representative of frequent reasons for accessing MAID Track 2, or even the majority of MAID Track 2 deaths, the themes identified were “not uncommon within the MAID review process.”
Out of 4,644 medically assisted deaths carried out during 2023 under Canada’s MAID law, only 116 deaths were Track 2 patients, according to the committee.
But the report’s findings don’t resonate with everyone, and opposition to the law’s proposed inclusion of patients who suffer from only mental illness has been deeply frustrating for some people seeking MAID.
Jason, a Toronto resident who didn’t want to be fully identified over concerns that his future MAID review process could be affected, is one of those people.
“When I first heard that it was delayed, my world came crashing down,” he said.
Jason told CBS News that he’s struggled with depression, anxiety and panic attacks for decades, and has attempted suicide twice. He said he’s tried inpatient programs, medication, electroconvulsive therapy and ketamine treatment, among other remedies, to little avail.
“I would not be alive today if there wasn’t the possibility of MAID going through in 2027,” he said, saying the chance of MAID’s expansion was the only reason he hadn’t attempted suicide a third time.
The current safeguards for those seeking MAID whose death is not reasonably foreseeable include two independent practitioners — one of whom must have expertise in the condition affecting the patient — confirming that all eligibility criteria are met, a minimum period of 90 days for eligibility assessments to be made, and the opportunity for the patient to withdraw consent at any point up until the procedure is carried out.
The patient must also be informed of counseling and palliative care options, support for disabilities and mental health, and be offered consultation with relevant professionals in addition to having discussed with their practitioner “reasonable and available means to relieve the person’s suffering, and agree [with the practitioner] that the person has seriously considered these means.”
In a poll conducted in 2023 by Dying with Dignity Canada, 78% of respondents said they supported the removal of the “reasonably foreseeable” natural death requirement from the MAID law, indicating strong support for the Track 2 expansion. But a 2017 survey gauging the attitudes of Canadian psychiatrists toward medical assistance in death found only a minority of 29.4% supported MAID on the basis of mental illness alone, compared to 71.8% who said other factors should also be present to determine eligibility.
Jason said he understood some doctors’ opposition to MAID for mental illness.
“Doctors are there to make you better,” he said. But he added that as mental illness isn’t something that “shows up on a screen,” it can be difficult for people without direct experience to understand the extent of someone else’s pain.
“I don’t have the physical pain that someone else has, but the psychological pain is just as bad,” he said.
In 2022, MAID deaths accounted for 4.1% of overall deaths in Canada, with the average age of MAID patients being 77, according to Canada’s fourth and most recent annual report on Medical Assistance in Dying. Since the law was introduced in 2016 there have been a total of 44,958 medically assisted deaths in the country.
Jason said he didn’t want to put his family through the trauma of another suicide attempt, and that his brother and mother were helping him explore options abroad. Those options, especially for people suffering mental illness, are limited, and often complicated by varying domestic laws around the world.
Jason said that, like Turcott, his own mother is supportive of his choice to seek MAID.
“As much as she doesn’t want me to do this again, she would rather I die properly with the assistance of a doctor than have it done by suicide,” he said.
Turcott said she was concerned that the postponement of MAID on the basis of mental health would result in more suicides, leaving families to mourn unexpectedly.
“I don’t want anybody to experience the loss of their child through suicide, and their child being so desperate that they saw no other choice but to take their life,” she said.
CBS News
H&R Block and Intuit drop on a report that Elon Musk’s DOGE may develop a new tax-filing app
H&R Block and Intuit shares dropped on Tuesday after the Washington Post reported that President-elect Donald Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency, which is run by billionaires Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, is looking at developing a free app for people to file their taxes.
The publication cited two people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, in reporting that the leaders of the incoming administration’s DOGE discussed the idea of crafting a mobile app to file income tax returns with the Internal Revenue Service.
H&R Block shares tumbled 8.2%, while Intuit shed 5.1% on Tuesday. As the dominant players in tax preparation, H&R Block and Intuit, the maker of TurboTax, generate billions in revenue annually by offering online and in-person services.
The Biden Administration in March rolled out a pilot Direct File program through the IRS in 12 states. It allows qualified taxpayers file directly through a federal portal. Additionally, the IRS provides services through its Free File program for those who made an adjusted gross income of $79,000 or less.
More than 100,000 taxpayers used the new Direct File program to file their taxes this year, which marked the first time the system was in operation, according to the Treasury Department.
The DOGE, which has been directed by Trump to slash government spending and cut federal regulations, criticized the complexity of the U.S tax code in a Nov. 16 post on X, the social media service owned by Musk.
“In 1955, there were less than 1.5 million words in the U.S. Tax Code. Today, there are more than 16 million words,” its X account wrote. “Because of this complexity, Americans collectively spend 6.5 billion hours preparing and filing their taxes each year.”
Intuit and H&R Block also have free filing options.
That said, the Federal Trade Commission earlier in the year barred Intuit from advertising its popular TurboTax product as free when most people have to pay to use it. The FTC in February filed an administrative complaint against H&R Block, alleging it marketed its tax-prep products as free yet deleted the data as a way to pressure them to pay for pricier services. Both companies said they’d appeal.
CBS News
Trump “hush money” sentencing could hang in limbo for years
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CBS News
Trump taps television personality Dr. Mehmet Oz to lead key Medicare and Medicaid agency
Washington — President-elect Donald Trump announced Tuesday that he has selected Dr. Mehmet Oz — a celebrity heart surgeon who hosted a daytime television show — to lead the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
The agency falls under the Department of Health and Human Services and oversees Medicare, the federal portion of the Medicaid program, the Children’s Health Insurance Program and the federal health insurance marketplace. Trump has selected Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for secretary of Health and Human Services. Both positions require Senate confirmation.
“America is facing a health care crisis, and there may be no physician more qualified and capable than Dr. Oz to make America healthy again,” Trump said in a statement. “He is an eminent physician, heart surgeon, inventor, and world-class communicator, who has been at the forefront of healthy living for decades.”
The president-elect said Oz will work with Kennedy, if he is confirmed, “to take on the illness industrial complex, and all the horrible chronic diseases left in its wake.” He also indicated there may be cuts to CMS, writing that Oz “will also cut waste and fraud within our country’s most expensive government agency, which is a third of our nation’s healthcare spend, and a quarter of our entire national budget.”
Oz was defeated by Democratic Sen. John Fetterman in the 2022 Senate race in Pennsylvania after receiving Trump’s endorsement.
This is a developing story and will be updated.