We want to have faith in our doctors, to whom we entrust our health and happiness. But we want someone to watch over them, as well, because one can never be too careful in matters of life and death. So we enact rules to regulate what they do, and trust our doctors to do the right thing.

But who makes the rules our doctors follow? Recently, Alexander Raikin, a Canadian who now lives in the United States, discovered a cache of internal training material produced by an obscure charity called the Canadian Association of MAID Assessors and Providers (CAMAP). The National Post has independently reviewed and authenticated the documents. A spokesperson for CAMAP said in an email that the material “are only available to CAMAP members.”

“You cannot access MAID in this country because you can’t get housing. That is clickbait. These stories have not been reported fully,”

Yet, behind closed doors, at CAMAP seminars for MAID providers, the tune is rather different. In the privacy of Zoom chat rooms, MAID professionals give PowerPoint presentations that ask questions such as, “What is the role of the MAID assessor when resources are inadequate?” In them, they freely discuss cases of patients who seek to die because they have no access to housing, to medical treatment or to food — things the Canadian public were told did not happen.

https://www.msn.com/en-ca/news/canada/yuan-yi-zhu-the-assisted-suicide-doctors-who-freely-admit-their-patients-are-driven-by-poverty/ar-AA15wjrY?