Explore, inform of alternative options (including palliative care), support
Assure that you will continue to provide care they want
Clarify that wishes can change at any time
Refer if required
Federal Eligibility for MAiD
Insured under Health Insurance Act
18 years of age and capable of making decisions with respect to their health;
Grievous and irremediable medical condition;
Serious and incurable illness, disease or disability;
Advanced state of irreversible decline in capability;
As a result, they suffer enduring physical or psychological suffering that is intolerable to them and that cannot be relieved under conditions that they consider acceptable;
Their natural death has become reasonably foreseeable, taking into account all of their medical circumstances, without a prognosis necessarily having been made as to the specific length of time that they have remaining.
Voluntary request for medical assistance in dying that was not made as a result of external pressure;
Informed consent to receive medical assistance in dying after having been informed of the means that are available to relieve their suffering, including palliative care
MAiD Process
Request of information
First contact with health professional (may be physician)
Explore motives of the MAiD request
Provide information on
Illness
Medical diagnosis
Life expectancy (prognososis)
Possible alternative treatment options including curative and palliative
Discuss criteria for MAiD
Assess capacity to consent to care
Request for MAiD
Patient must sign form in front of health professional and countersigned by health professional (MD, RN, SW, PT/OT, Psychotherapist)
Two witnesses are required
Must not be a beneficiary or part of the patient's health care team or establishment
Treating physician must be notified (if not yet)
Medical decision by first physician must be made
Explore motives of the MAiD request, provide information (including palliative care) once again
Assess criteria for MAiD
Discussion with interdisciplinary team, patient, family
Support
May ask for GIS (Groupe interdisciplinaire de soutien)
Team includes physician, nurse, ethicist, spiritual services, social worker, coordinator, psychologist
Guides throughout the steps of MAiD
Useful in difficult cases
Decision
If physician has conscientious objections, must communicate to DSP to refer to another physician
If the physician has no conscientious objections
Explain they are allowed to change their mind at any moment, even before injection
Patient must repeatedly state their desire for MAiD over multiple visits within a "reasonable" interval
Must have independent second opinion from another physician
Non-admissible Request by First or Second physician
Inform the patient of the refusal and the reasons for refusal
Consider GIS
Ensure that the patient is aware about recourse for "Commissaire local aux plaintes"
Ensure that the patient is aware they they may submit another request
Admissible Request
Determine location (eg. home, hospital)
Determine moment
Determine who the patient would want with them
Contact pharmacist, discuss when to pick-up medication and protocol
Discuss organ donation or tissue donation (referral to organ donation organization)
Pharmacological Considerations
Good IV access is an absolute prerequisite
Consider central line if poor peripheral access
Step 1: Anxiolysis
Midazolam 2.5-10mg IV over 2 minutes
Step 2: Artificial Coma Induction
Lidocaine 2% (without epinephrine) 2mL IV over 30 seconds (or magnesium sulfate if allergy to lidocaine)
Propofol 1000mg IV over 5 minutes (or phenobarbital if allergy to propofol)
Coma confirmed prior to step 3
Step 3: Neuromuscular blocker injection
NS 0.9% 10mL IV flush
Cisatracurium 30mg rapid IV injection (or rocuronium)
Repeat flush
Declaration of MAiD
Death certificate (note: MAiD is NOT a cause of death)
Send all documentation to CMDP/CMQ and Commission sur les soins en fin de vie