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  2. Suicide of Sophia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suicide_of_Sophia

    Sophia died on February 22, 2022, making use of new legal rights to obtain medical assistance in dying that existed in Canada since March 17, 2021. [1]Rohini Peris, President of the Environmental Health Association of Québec said, after her death: "This person begged for help for years, two years, wrote everywhere, called everywhere, asking for healthy housing."

  3. Euthanasia in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euthanasia_in_Canada

    Canada (Attorney General) decision was broader, including desperately ill individuals and not only those who are terminally ill or near death. The House of Commons did accept a few Senate amendments, such as requiring that patients be counseled about alternatives including palliative care and barring beneficiaries from acting in the euthanasia.

  4. Post-mortem chemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-mortem_chemistry

    Post-mortem diagnosis is the use of post-mortem chemistry analysis tests to diagnose a disease after someone has died. Some diseases are unknown until death, or were not correctly diagnosed earlier. One way that diseases can be diagnosed is by examining the concentrations of certain substances in the blood or other sample types.

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  6. Choosing Wisely Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choosing_Wisely_Canada

    Choosing Wisely Canada stems from worldwide concern around providing unnecessary treatment when the risk of harm exceeds its potential benefit ("medical overuse"). [5] A number of studies have highlighted the prevalence of medical overuse in Canada, which include findings that approximately 50% of prescriptions for respiratory infections in Saskatchewan are inappropriate, [6] 28% of lumbar ...

  7. Unethical human experimentation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unethical_human...

    Canada has historically carried out unethical medical experiments on indigenous populations in concert with its policies of forced cultural assimilation. In 1933, about 600 Native children from the reserves near Qu'Appelle, Saskatchewan, were enrolled in a trial to test the tuberculosis vaccine. During the course of the trial, in both the ...

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  9. Killing of Robert Dziekański - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killing_of_Robert_Dziekański

    Toxicology tests found no drugs or alcohol in Dziekański's system. [52] An autopsy for the British Columbia Coroner's Service did not determine the cause of death, citing no trauma or disease, but noted that Dziekański had signs of chronic alcohol abuse such as atrophy of a portion of the brain, cardiomyopathy and fatty liver.