by Brenda Baletti, Ph.D., Childrens Health Defense:
An Ontario, Canada man in his late 40s whose health declined after receiving three COVID-19 shots and who also had a mental health condition was euthanized in Canada as part of its Medical Assistance in Dying program, Dr. Aaron Kheriaty reported.
An Ontario, Canada man in his late 40s whose health declined after receiving three COVID-19 shots and who also had a mental health condition was euthanized in Canada as part of its Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) program, Dr. Aaron Kheriaty reported.
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The program assessors concluded that his clinical presentation was a post-COVID-19 “vaccination syndrome” known as myalgic encephalomyelitis, or chronic fatigue syndrome.
The case is one of several highlighted in an expert review of MAiD deaths in Ontario that caused concerns. The report, which did not reveal the man’s name, is intended to identify and prompt improvements that need to be made to Canada’s legalized euthanasia program.
“This case report shows how the Canadian healthcare system abandoned a suicidal patient in need of real medical and psychiatric care,” Kheriaty wrote. “If it had not come from a government report I would have had difficulty believing this horrifying case history.”
According to the brief case report, the patient went through extensive specialist consultations and clinical testing but “without determinate diagnostic results.” He also suffered from depression and post-traumatic stress disorder.
While he was “navigating his physical symptoms,” the man was admitted to the hospital with suicidal ideation. Psychiatrists raised concerns about mental illness, the report said. During a second incidence of suicidal ideation, he was involuntarily hospitalized and received in-patient psychiatric treatment.
“The MAiD assessors opined that the most reasonable diagnosis for Mr. A’s clinical presentation (severe functional decline) was a post-vaccine syndrome,” the report said.
His cause of death was listed as “post-COVID-19 vaccination somatic symptom disorder with post-traumatic stress disorder and depressive disorder.” MAiD is not listed as the cause of death on death certificates in Ontario.
In their report, experts raised concerns about whether the man’s mental illnesses should have rendered him ineligible for MAiD and whether the duration of the psychiatric treatment he underwent was adequate to evaluate if more treatment might help him.
Other members of the panel questioned whether a condition “previously unrecognized in medicine” — his “post-vaccine somatic syndrome” — could be considered incurable, given limited available clinical knowledge and research.
Dr. Joel Wallskog, a Wisconsin orthopedic surgeon who stopped practicing medicine after being injured by Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine, told The Defender, “I am truly shocked by the trend of offering active euthanasia to those injured by the COVID-19 vaccines.”
Wallskog, co-chair of the vaccine-injured patient advocacy group React19 added:
“This program ignores the basic principle in medicine of ‘first do no harm.’
“Second, … this program highlights the gaslighting and the sheer abandonment of the COVID-19 vaccine-injured community. We need research, providers that acknowledge these injuries, and effective diagnostics and treatments. We don’t need to be sent off to slaughter.
“Third, this program is a sad reflection on the course of humanity in general. The COVID-19-injured community needs hope and support. They don’t need active euthanasia.”
MAiD expert Alexander Raikin, visiting fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, who has been documenting and analyzing the program for years, told The Defender the case captures the worst of the problems with MAiD and MAiD oversight.
“It shows that certain people with depression, with disabilities and other illnesses are not equally protected under Canadian law as healthy Canadians,” he added. “If this man did not also have an illness caused by taking a vaccine, then he would still be alive today.”
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