
About this Episode
Anytime that doctor-assisted death is legalized, what begins as a so-called "right" to die soon devolves into a duty to die. For example, defenders of Canada's expansive policy of Medical Aid in Dying frequently claim that its supposed safeguards will prevent a simple cost-benefit analysis when it comes to deciding who should live and who should die.
However, the truth has slipped out a few times now. Back in 2017, the publicly funded Canadian Broadcasting Corporation cited a report that Medical Aid in Dying could result in "substantial savings across Canada's health-care system" to the tune of $136.8 million a year. Those "savings" happen when high-cost patients are put to death.
Aaron Trachtenberg, author of the report, said it frankly: "In a resource-limited health care system, anytime we roll out a large intervention …. cost has to be a part of that discussion. It's just the reality of working in a system of finite resources."
And that's why decisions about life and death should never be put into "systems of finite resources." Putting a price tag on what is priceless cheapens it. And human lives are priceless.
Teachers
Topics
From this Show

Breakpoint
Colson Center
Selah for iOS
Follow teachers, explore topics, and listen with personalized recommendations and background playback.
Coming soon to the App Store