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Canada has crossed an ethical rubicon by harvesting organs from assisted suicides.
Recently, the first heart from an assisted suicide was transplanted into a 59-year-old American man with heart failure. This is not the first organ harvested from Canada’s euthanasia program, but it is the first heart. According to the National Post, “at least 155 people in Canada have donated their organs and tissues after receiving a doctor-administered lethal injection” since 2016, although a “number of doctors are concerned that some Canadians receiving medical assisted death don’t actually meet Health Canada’s criteria for the procedure.”
Even people who support Canada’s MAiD program have objected to this trend. They warn it risks creating a kind of death coercion.
There is even an acronym for this: ODE, which stands for organ donation after euthanasia. Canada is the global leader in ODE. A Dutch study indicated that of 286 instances of ODE leading up to 2021, 136 were Canadian.
Indeed, there is evidence that MAiD has been presented to people who are depressed or poor but not terminally ill. Imagine a system where vulnerable people are talked into dying so that their healthy organs can be passed on to the wealthy. It’s a dystopic reality we are now living with.
This raises a disturbing question: was Canada’s euthanasia regime ever purely about compassion, or was it always destined to serve institutional convenience, namely, a pipeline for organs, budgets, and bureaucratic efficiency disguised as mercy?