MAID applicants should have more mental health support, says Quebec coroner
MONTREAL — A Quebec coroner is calling for better mental health support and resources for people who apply for medical assistance in dying, in response to the case of a 91-year-old Montreal-area man who died by suicide last year shortly after his MAID request was refused.
Coroner Julie-Kim Godin noted in her recent report that the man had spoken to several medical professionals over the years about his struggles with grief and aging, as well as his suicidal thoughts. He requested MAID while hospitalized after a previous suicide attempt, but was refused because he did not have a serious and incurable illness. He died by suicide a few months later, in April 2025.
Godin says no structured support plan was put in place to help the man despite his repeated requests for help, his MAID application or his previous suicide attempt.
“His (death) took place in a complex context that included deep and persistent distress, complicated grief, losses associated with aging and a lack of concerted, appropriate and effective mental health care,” Godin wrote in the report dated Feb. 18.
