No Soldier Euthanasia

Canadian soldiers serve their country and accept unlimited liability. This means they can be ordered into harm’s way, including loss of life. Soldiers can suffer moral injury, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), and physical injury as a consequence of being ordered into combat.

Canada owes a duty of care to those soldiers who have been injured physically or mentally as a consequence of being ordered into harm’s way. This duty of care extends to appropriate care and treatment for PTSD.

A recent and alarming news story by Mercedes Stephenson and Sean Boynton detailed a Canadian veteran being offered medically-assisted suicide as a “treatment” option for his PTSD by a Veterans Affairs service agent. The offer was unprompted and unsought by the veteran.

The story reports that, “Sources close to the veteran say he and his family were disgusted by the conversation, and feel betrayed by the agency mandated to assist veterans. The sources said the veteran was seeking services to recover from injuries suffered in the line of duty, and had been experiencing positive improvements in his mental and physical health. They say the unprompted offer of MAID [that is, euthanasia] disrupted his progress and has been harmful to the veteran’s progress and his family’s wellbeing.”

We are calling on the Minister of Veterans Affairs Lawrence MacAulay to enact a simple safeguard. Sign our petitioncalling on the Minister to ensure by regulation that conversations with VAC service agents about medically-assisted suicide may only be patient initiated.

 

Petition to the Minister of Veterans Affairs

Please sign this petition* now calling on Veterans Affairs Minister Lawrence MacAulay to stop Veterans Affairs service agents from suggesting euthanasia to soldiers who do not ask for it.

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*Please keep me informed about this and other campagins from Canadian Physicians for Life.

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  • By: Nicole Scheidl on April 8, 2025

    CPL hosting a Panel on Euthanasia in Canada at Civitas. Civitas is a membership-based, non-profit organization that exists “to promote and deepen understanding through the exchange of a wide range of political, economic, social, religious, cultural and philosophical ideas concerning the principles and traditions of a free and ordered society.” CPL is pleased to be

  • By: Canadian Physicians for Life on April 8, 2025

    Not MAID for this The impact of euthanasia on family members is rarely discussed. But this is precisely what we need to do to combat the hyper individualism that would suggest our consequences have no bearing on others.  Christopher Lyon watched a doctor end his father's life under Canada's medical assistance in dying (MAID) program.

  • By: Nicole Scheidl on February 19, 2025

    Remember To Love On Monday January 27th, there was a federal roundtable on Advance Requests for euthanasia. Some of your colleagues participated. While I was speaking with one of the physicians who will be participating, she passed on a great analogy about advance directives. She said:  It’s like asking your child what they want to

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