> What right do you have to say this woman shouldn't be allowed to end her life though?
Read the article. She really wanted appropriate housing, which was the care she needed for her condition. She tried for years, and they wouldn't give it to her.
So she chose assisted suicide instead.
That contradicts the claim "there haven't been such cases."
Her approval was based on an untreatable medical condition, and the suffering that ensued. That medical condition was made worse by the housing she had, but was not the cause of it.
You can't apply for MAID due to social conditions on their own, it has to be medically justified first and foremost.
It is an interesting case, but at the end of the day it was a medical decision made by doctors, and a completely separate housing decision made by social services. Neither can talk about the case publicly. It is entirely possible that her chemical sensitivity was so non-specific that it wasn't feasible to provide her with any housing.
The flip side of this is you don't want people to be able to use MAID as some sort of weird blackmail. This woman's stance was "I want a better place to live, or my only other option is MAID".
Read the article. She really wanted appropriate housing, which was the care she needed for her condition. She tried for years, and they wouldn't give it to her.
So she chose assisted suicide instead.
That contradicts the claim "there haven't been such cases."