Hospice’s refusal to provide assisted death causes ‘anxiety,’ says B.C. mayor
DELTA, B.C. — A hospice that has a long history of helping people near death but denies them medical assistance in dying is drawing criticism from the city’s mayor in a clash of ideologies that has split its board and raised questions about its future.
The head of the society that operates the facility says she is trying to strengthen its position to only provide end-of-life palliative care.
Angelina Ireland, who heads the Delta Hospice Society, said politicians at the municipal, provincial and federal level who disagree with the Christian basis of its stance against medically assisted death should build another facility to provide the service.
“It’s a separate stream of end-of-life care and what we have is a government that wants to destroy palliative care for their own ideological reasons or economic reasons,” Ireland said in an interview.