Category physician-assisted dying
Euthanasia and Slippery Slopes: A Reply to Chambers
March 6, 2020 · by impact ethics · in Canadian Bioethics, Death & Assisted Dying, euthanasia, Law & Policy, MAiD, physician-assisted dying
Jos VM Welie argues that the Groningen Protocol in the Netherlands presents a clear example of a slippery slope in the area of physician assistance in suicide and euthanasia.
Media promotes baseless slippery slope claims
February 13, 2020 · by impact ethics · in Canadian Bioethics, Death & Assisted Dying, Law & Policy, MAiD, physician-assisted dying
Stuart Chambers critiques the latest crop of slippery slope arguments against the expansion of eligibility for medical assistance in dying.
Progress on Advance Requests for MAiD
December 4, 2019 · by impact ethics · in Canadian Bioethics, Death & Assisted Dying, Law & Policy, MAiD, physician-assisted dying
Dawn Curran urges the new Federal Government to amend Canadian legislation on medical assistance in dying to permit advance requests.
Nurses Wrestling with the Moral Uncertainties of MAiD
October 23, 2019 · by impact ethics · in Death & Assisted Dying, Law & Policy, MAiD, physician-assisted dying
Barbara Pesut and Sally Thorne describe the experiences of nurses involved in medical assistance in dying.


