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“Help Me!” Cries From Canadian Man in Botched Euthanasia are Haunting
Posted on 6/4/26 at 1:21 pm
Posted on 6/4/26 at 1:21 pm
LINK
An 87-year-old Canadian man was not properly sedated before his life was ended by euthanasia, as he repeatedly cried out “help me” while dying.
The man from Ontario, known only as Mr D, had congestive heart failure and met the eligibility criteria to end his life under Canada’s assisted suicide and euthanasia regime, known as Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD). Mr D was scheduled to have his life ended at home on the same day he was transferred there from the hospital.
The doctor first administered midazolam, a sedative, to relax the patient. However, the drug did not have its usual effects in Mr D’s case.
The case review stated, “During the first three minutes. Mr. D experienced signs of physical and psychological distress, including groaning, guarding (tensing muscles) and grimacing”, adding that “Mr. D did not experience expected sedation”.
“His behavioural signs of distress escalated to repeated verbalizations, including ‘help me’ that continued until sedation was achieved with propofol and a comatose state was confirmed”, the report continued.
Additionally, the report stated that Mr D’s family, who were present at the time of his euthanasia, experienced “profound distress” as they “witnessed their father suffering with physical and psychological distress”.
According to the case review, the family experienced “anguish regarding the decision to support their father through the MAID process and immense grief and sorrow regarding their final memories with their father”.
Dr Ramona Coelho, a member of the Chief Coroner of Ontario’s Medical Assistance in Dying Death Review Committee (MDRC), said that while “some MAID clinicians publicly portray MAID deaths as uniformly peaceful, beautiful and free of complications”, this “does not present an accurate picture of reality and risks influencing decisions about MAID”.
Numerous high-profile euthanasia scandals in Ontario have been reported recently
These revelations are just one of a number of controversial cases regarding Ontario’s MAiD regime that have come to light recently.
Last month, The Globe and Mail reported that euthanasia practitioner Dr James MacLean was the subject of two complaints relating to two cases involving Canada’s euthanasia and assisted suicide regime.
In one case, one of MacLean’s patients who wished to end their life resumed breathing after being declared dead due to the improper application of the fatal mix of substances. MacLean gave a 67-year-old cancer patient an anaesthetic, rather than the neuromuscular-blocking medication normally used in euthanasia cases, because he could not find where he had put it.
The doctor pronounced the patient, who has not been named, dead; however, shortly after he left the patient’s home, he resumed breathing. MacLean returned to the patient’s home, gave him additional substances, including the neuromuscular-blocking medication, and shortly thereafter pronounced him dead for the second time.
This is not the only controversial case undertaken by MacLean. The 45-year-old Thomas Dillon, who had Crohn’s disease, in addition to a history of alcohol abuse, depression and suicidal ideation, met with MacLean more than once outside of a Tim Hortons cafe for his euthanasia eligibility assessments.
After these meetings, they exchanged numerous text messages to plan the end of his life.
Two days later, they met again at the cafe, from where the doctor then drove the patient to the location where he would end his life. MacLean then ended Dillon’s life by euthanasia in an industrial unit where cadavers are prepared for transport to funeral homes.
Following these incidents, MacLean’s general conduct was reviewed by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario, and it was determined that MacLean displayed a lack of judgment in his decisions, dealt with patients in a way that “raised a risk of perceived coercion”, and kept inadequate records.
The College found that MacLean’s conduct “exposes or is likely to expose patients to harm or injury in five out of twenty [patient] charts reviewed”.
Regarding the man assessed outside of a Tim Hortons cafe, the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario found that MacLean had crossed professional boundaries with his casual approach to ending Dillon’s life, and found that the venue for the eligibility assessment was inappropriate.
Spokesperson for Right To Life UK, Catherine Robinson, said “These sorts of cases show that assisted dying is not necessarily the pain-free death it is marketed as. The reality can be far more unpleasant. Such cases are yet another side-effect of the state facilitating suicide among a portion of the population, and we ought to remain grateful that the assisted dying Bills in Britain have failed”.
An 87-year-old Canadian man was not properly sedated before his life was ended by euthanasia, as he repeatedly cried out “help me” while dying.
The man from Ontario, known only as Mr D, had congestive heart failure and met the eligibility criteria to end his life under Canada’s assisted suicide and euthanasia regime, known as Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD). Mr D was scheduled to have his life ended at home on the same day he was transferred there from the hospital.
The doctor first administered midazolam, a sedative, to relax the patient. However, the drug did not have its usual effects in Mr D’s case.
The case review stated, “During the first three minutes. Mr. D experienced signs of physical and psychological distress, including groaning, guarding (tensing muscles) and grimacing”, adding that “Mr. D did not experience expected sedation”.
“His behavioural signs of distress escalated to repeated verbalizations, including ‘help me’ that continued until sedation was achieved with propofol and a comatose state was confirmed”, the report continued.
Additionally, the report stated that Mr D’s family, who were present at the time of his euthanasia, experienced “profound distress” as they “witnessed their father suffering with physical and psychological distress”.
According to the case review, the family experienced “anguish regarding the decision to support their father through the MAID process and immense grief and sorrow regarding their final memories with their father”.
Dr Ramona Coelho, a member of the Chief Coroner of Ontario’s Medical Assistance in Dying Death Review Committee (MDRC), said that while “some MAID clinicians publicly portray MAID deaths as uniformly peaceful, beautiful and free of complications”, this “does not present an accurate picture of reality and risks influencing decisions about MAID”.
Numerous high-profile euthanasia scandals in Ontario have been reported recently
These revelations are just one of a number of controversial cases regarding Ontario’s MAiD regime that have come to light recently.
Last month, The Globe and Mail reported that euthanasia practitioner Dr James MacLean was the subject of two complaints relating to two cases involving Canada’s euthanasia and assisted suicide regime.
In one case, one of MacLean’s patients who wished to end their life resumed breathing after being declared dead due to the improper application of the fatal mix of substances. MacLean gave a 67-year-old cancer patient an anaesthetic, rather than the neuromuscular-blocking medication normally used in euthanasia cases, because he could not find where he had put it.
The doctor pronounced the patient, who has not been named, dead; however, shortly after he left the patient’s home, he resumed breathing. MacLean returned to the patient’s home, gave him additional substances, including the neuromuscular-blocking medication, and shortly thereafter pronounced him dead for the second time.
This is not the only controversial case undertaken by MacLean. The 45-year-old Thomas Dillon, who had Crohn’s disease, in addition to a history of alcohol abuse, depression and suicidal ideation, met with MacLean more than once outside of a Tim Hortons cafe for his euthanasia eligibility assessments.
After these meetings, they exchanged numerous text messages to plan the end of his life.
Two days later, they met again at the cafe, from where the doctor then drove the patient to the location where he would end his life. MacLean then ended Dillon’s life by euthanasia in an industrial unit where cadavers are prepared for transport to funeral homes.
Following these incidents, MacLean’s general conduct was reviewed by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario, and it was determined that MacLean displayed a lack of judgment in his decisions, dealt with patients in a way that “raised a risk of perceived coercion”, and kept inadequate records.
The College found that MacLean’s conduct “exposes or is likely to expose patients to harm or injury in five out of twenty [patient] charts reviewed”.
Regarding the man assessed outside of a Tim Hortons cafe, the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario found that MacLean had crossed professional boundaries with his casual approach to ending Dillon’s life, and found that the venue for the eligibility assessment was inappropriate.
Spokesperson for Right To Life UK, Catherine Robinson, said “These sorts of cases show that assisted dying is not necessarily the pain-free death it is marketed as. The reality can be far more unpleasant. Such cases are yet another side-effect of the state facilitating suicide among a portion of the population, and we ought to remain grateful that the assisted dying Bills in Britain have failed”.
Posted on 6/4/26 at 1:24 pm to Night Vision
Meh, hes dead, right?
Just give people the strongest sedative possible, to start.
Why is this so hard?
Just give people the strongest sedative possible, to start.
Why is this so hard?
Posted on 6/4/26 at 1:25 pm to Night Vision
Who would have thought, that there could be consequences to state sponsored murder?
Posted on 6/4/26 at 1:26 pm to Night Vision
Progressives will defend this while also condemning capital punishment as inhumane.
Posted on 6/4/26 at 1:28 pm to the808bass
quote:
Progressives will defend this while also condemning capital punishment as inhumane.
And celebrate mechanical dismemberment of a fetus in utero as "healthcare".
They're all over the place.
Posted on 6/4/26 at 1:28 pm to Night Vision
quote:
the report stated that Mr D’s family, who were present at the time of his euthanasia, experienced “profound distress” as they “witnessed their father suffering with physical and psychological distress”.
Even if this went off without a hitch, having your family there to watch that seems kinda morbid. I wouldn’t want my family watching that if that was me
This post was edited on 6/4/26 at 1:29 pm
Posted on 6/4/26 at 1:30 pm to Night Vision
It's murder. Such a sad, sinful world we live in.
Posted on 6/4/26 at 1:30 pm to ChatGPT of LA
quote:
Why is this so hard?
Because people FRICK THINGS UP, even the simplest of things.
Posted on 6/4/26 at 1:32 pm to ChatGPT of LA
quote:
Just give people the strongest sedative possible, to start. Why is this so hard?
I am staunchly against MAiD... but yeah- how is it even possible to eff this up?
Posted on 6/4/26 at 1:35 pm to Victor R Franko
quote:
Because people FRICK THINGS UP, even the simplest of things.
No..it's because they are ALLOWED to frick things up.
Give them the hardest drug available
Posted on 6/4/26 at 1:42 pm to Night Vision
My dad recently died of CHF. His quality of life was at least tolerable most of the time but the last three or four days were pretty grim. I wouldn't have minded the option to relieve him of his suffering at that point. I may not have used it, but knowing it was there if things got too bad would have been helpful.
As for me, if I get to the point where I can't live independently, give me the shot.
As for me, if I get to the point where I can't live independently, give me the shot.
Posted on 6/4/26 at 1:43 pm to Night Vision
So what you’re saying is, if I am ever in a situation where I want to put myself out of incurable, constant pain and suffering (grateful I am not) try something different than the Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) program in Canada.
Got it.
Got it.
Posted on 6/4/26 at 1:43 pm to Night Vision
The devil has Canada by the throat.
Posted on 6/4/26 at 1:45 pm to ChatGPT of LA
quote:
No..it's because they are ALLOWED to frick things up.
Give them the hardest drug available
Doesn't matter boss, they'll still FRICK THAT UP. Doesn't matter how many check lists there are, how many times they go over and recheck, sometime, some way, they'll inevitably frick up.
Posted on 6/4/26 at 1:48 pm to Night Vision
Canada.
Showing real compassion and enlightenment for the world to see.
Showing real compassion and enlightenment for the world to see.
Posted on 6/4/26 at 1:49 pm to Victor R Franko
Oklahoma has botched a couple of "lethal injection" executions.
Posted on 6/4/26 at 1:51 pm to TulsaSooner78
And especially in Oklahoma will they frick things up!

Posted on 6/4/26 at 1:52 pm to Night Vision
I had to administer the comfort cocktail for my father to pass. It was tough but necessary. Not sure why this procedure is hard
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