www.fgks.org   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

ENCYCLOPINE | OPINION ENCYCLOPEDIA (Wikipedia Plus Subjective Opinions)

Gloria Taylor (patient)

Read on WikipediaTR

Click to disable ads for 1 month.

Gloria Taylor (c. 1948 - October 4, 2012) was a Canadian who was an advocate of medically-assisted dying and suffered from Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig's disease. Taylor began to experience the early symptoms of ALS in 2003. A neurologist diagnosed her with the disease in 2009.

On June 29, 2011, Taylor filed an application with the Supreme Court of British Columbia asking to be added as a plaintiff in the BC Civil Liberties Association’s (BCCLA) death with dignity lawsuit. The BCCLA had filed the lawsuit in April 2011 to challenge the laws that make it a criminal offense to assist seriously and incurably ill individuals to die with dignity. The legal challenge seeks to allow seriously and incurably ill, mentally competent adults the right to receive medical assistance to hasten death under certain specific safeguards. This case is known as Carter et al. v. Attorney General of Canada.

Your Subjective Opinions

General Attitude(Positive or Negative)

Do you think/feel generally positive or negative about Gloria Taylor (patient)?
Click for partially positive
overall0
Click for partially negative
Which adjectives are appropriate for Gloria Taylor (patient)?
I think that
Gloria Taylor (patient) is .
important0
precious0
successful0
powerful0
attractive0
beautiful0
cute0
dark0
elegant0
gorgeous0
magnificent0
plain0
ugly0
annoying0
crazy0
odd0
awful0
evil0
calm0
enchanting0
funny0
gentle0
lively0
lovely0
perfect0
wonderful0
warm0
interesting0

Please do not hesitate to write your subjective opinions which can not be in wikipedia but may be useful for other visitors of this article.
Do you have anything to say about Gloria Taylor (patient)? (You don't have to register to write a comment, you can write as anonymous.)


EDIT

Click to disable ads for 1 month.

Click to disable ads for 1 month.

Life[edit]

Taylor was a postal worker, residential care worker, motorbike enthusiast and health advocate. She was born and raised in Castlegar, British Columbia and lived most of her life in Westbank, British Columbia. Her mother was a former hospice coordinator and volunteer.

After Taylor was diagnosed with ALS, Taylor founded a Kelowna support group for people living with ALS and she was actively involved in raising money for groups that support people who are living with ALS and their caregivers.

Dying with Dignity Charter Challenge[edit]

Taylor, the BCCLA, and the co-plaintiffs in the case argue that Criminal Code provisions against physician assisted-dying are unconstitutional because they deny individuals the right to have control over choices that are fundamental to their physical, emotional and psychological dignity and restrict the liberty of physicians to deliver end of life care to incurably ill patients.

The plaintiffs believe that every Canadian should have the choice to have what they consider to be a good death, including the option of a medically assisted death for seriously and incurably ill, mentally competent adults. Without a change in the law, seriously ill individuals will continue to suffer against their wishes at the end of life, without the choice and dignity that they deserve. The group argues that the prohibition of assisted dying violates Section 15 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms because it discriminates against people with degenerative diseases who have no physical means to end their lives without assistance. They also argued the ban violates their Section 7 right to life because, if they do want to end their suffering, they would have to do so earlier than they might otherwise want, before they lose the capacity to act.

Justice Lynn Smith suspended her decision for one year, to allow the federal government to change the law to exempt physicians from criminal prosecution; but explicitly exempted Taylor from that suspension. The Harper government appealed the decision.[1]

Taylor’s dream of legal change for herself and all Canadians was realized in June when the B.C. Supreme Court ruled that the right to die with dignity is protected by the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and granted Taylor a personal exemption allowing her the right to seek a physician-assisted death. The case was a major victory for choice and individual rights at the end of life.

Mme Justice Jo-Ann Prowse of the BC Court of Appeal on 2012 08 10 ruled against the federal government, and in favour of Taylor's personal exemption, saying that revoking Taylor's exemption would cause irreparable harm to Taylor, which outweighs the federal government's interests.[2] This exemption allows Taylor to seek doctor-assisted suicide under certain conditions. The decision can be found here.

Death[edit]

On October 4, 2012, Taylor died as a result of a severe infection resulting from a perforated colon.[3] Due to the acute nature and brief course of her illness from the infection, Taylor did not need to seek the assistance of a physician to end her life. In the end, Gloria’s death was quick and peaceful. Taylor died in hospital, with her mother and a close friend by her side.

The Case Continues[edit]

The B.C. Civil Liberties Association will be continuing with the death with dignity lawsuit, fighting to protect Taylor’s victory against government appeals. The federal government appealed the B.C. Supreme Court decision and a hearing for the B.C. Court of Appeal is scheduled for March 2013. The BCCLA and individual plaintiffs are represented by lawyers Sheila Tucker of Davis LLP and Joseph Arvay, Q.C. and Alison Latimer of Arvay Finlay.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Assisted-suicide ruling to be appealed by Ottawa". CBC.ca. Retrieved 2012-07-13. 
  2. ^ "B.C. woman keeps exemption from doctor-assisted suicide ban". CBC.ca. Retrieved 2012-08-20. 
  3. ^ "Assisted-suicide crusader Gloria Taylor dies in B.C.". CBC.ca. Retrieved 2012-10-05. 

Related[edit]

*Carter v. Attorney General of Canada


Click to disable ads for 1 month.
web analytics
Quantcast