Doctor-assisted death obtained by Sherbrooke man who starved himself to qualify - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 02:48 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
MontrealExclusive

Doctor-assisted death obtained by Sherbrooke man who starved himself to qualify

Jean Brault's long search to get help to die ended last week but only after he went 53 days without food and eight days without water to meet the criteria under Quebec's end-of-life care law.

48 hours before his physician-assisted death, Jean Brault pleaded for review of criteria for help in dying

Right to die 'an elixir,' Jean Brault says

8 years ago
Duration 0:53
The Sherbrooke man died with medical assistance on April 7, 2016, after starving himself for 53 days.

A 61-year-old Sherbrooke, Que., man ended his life legally last week.

But Jean Braultgot a doctor's help to die only after starving himself for 53 days and refusing water foreight days at last arriving ata point so close to death he satisfied his doctors that he'd met all the criteriaunder Quebec's assisted-dying law.

Brault spoke to CBC/Radio-Canada on April 5, when he made a pleafor looseningthe rules to qualify for adoctor-assisted death.

Askedhow he feltafter learning he'd been pronounced eligible to get medical help to die, his voice choked with emotion.

"I felt liberated,"Braultsaid."It is as simple as that."

"It's as if a heavy weight has been lifted off [my] chest."

Braultdied with medical assistance two days later, on April 7.

A long decline

Braultlived a full life, despite adebilitating handicapfor most of the last 42 years.

He was an athletic 19-year-old when a blood clot near his brain stem left him partially paralyzed.

At the time, doctors told him he would never againwalk or speak.

He proved them wrong. He regained some movementand learned how to speak again.
Jean Brault (middle) was an athlete before suffering a blood clot on his brain stem at age 19. (Radio-Canada)

But when he lost the ability to move his legs after a prolonged hospital stay a decade agoandslowly began losing the ability to talk he started to lookfor a way to die.

Brault said the loss of independence was a devastating blow to his sense of self.

"It was like Chinese water torture," he said.

"You take it, you take it, but then at some point bang, it's over. That's what it was like for me. That's when I tried to take my own life two times."

Suicideattemptsthwarted

Five years ago, Braultstopped eating.

He refused food for close to two months,long enough that when he landed in hospital, doctorsthreatened to transfer him to the psychiatric ward.

So he agreed to resume eating.

When that first attempt failed, he decided to go to Switzerland to seek a doctor-assisted death.

But thatplan was thwarted because he couldn't manage to get all of the required medical documents.
In the years leading up to his death, Brault lost the use of his legs. (Radio-Canada)

SoBrault staked his hopes on Quebec's landmarkend-of-life care law, which came into effect last December.

He was told hemet all criteria except one hewas not dying.

In February, Braultlaunched anotherhunger strike.

"I self-mutilated," he said."I had to push things to the limit,so that they'd listen to me."

After 53 days without food and eight without water, Brault'sbody had deteriorated to the point of no return, and hewas told he was eligible for doctor-assisted death.

The news "was like total and absolute freedom," he said. "As soon as it's done, it'll be over, finished."

"My heart is happy," he said, 48 hours before his death.

Law needs to change, sayadvocates

In some of his last words, Brault criticized Quebec's rules for doctor-assisted dying.

"The way government works, it doesn't bend," he said. "It needs to be more flexible."
The head of Dying with Dignity, Shanaaz Gokool, believes Quebec's end-of-life care law is at odds with the 2015 Supreme Court decision on access to doctor-assisted dying. (CBC)

The end-of-life care advocacy group Dying with Dignity acknowledges that Quebec'send-of-life-care lawwas pioneering legislation in Canada.

However, the group says the law's rules are more restrictive than what the Supreme Court justices set out in their2015 rulingknown as Carter vs. Canada.

"The Carter decision doesn't restrict to people who have a terminal illness. It looks at people who have a grievous and irremediable medical condition," said Dying with Dignity CEO Shanaaz Gokool.

"From our perspective, the Quebec law is not in compliance with the Carter decisionand should be amended."

In order to comply with the Carter decision, the federal government is facing a strict deadline to create its own law allowing for doctor-assisted death. It's expected to be tabled in Parliament this week.

Quebec government not budging

QuebecHealth MinisterGatan Barrettesaid on Monday that amending the law is not a priority for the PhilippeCouillardgovernment.

"We have our law, our boundaries, our parameters, our limitations," he said.

"I believe right now that Quebec's population is satisfied with it."

Quebec Health Minister Gatan Barrette says there are no plans to amend the province's assisted-death law. (CBC)

With files from Radio-Canada's Michel Bherer