U.S. Health Official Criticizes Canada’s Assisted Suicide–Organ Donation Link
A senior U.S. health official warns that Canada’s assisted-suicide program has created troubling ethical conflicts by linking euthanasia with organ donation.
WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Deputy Health and Human Services Secretary Jim O’Neill has sharply criticized Canada’s physician-assisted suicide regime, warning that it has crossed ethical lines by becoming linked to increased organ donation from deceased patients. In an exclusive interview with the Washington Examiner, O’Neill said Canada’s Medical Aid in Dying (MAID) program has produced “perverse incentives” by contributing to the country’s rise as a leading source of organs from deceased donors.
Citing studies published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal and the American Journal of Transplantation, O’Neill noted a significant increase in organ donations from patients who died through assisted suicide, particularly in Quebec. While the overall number of such donors remains relatively small, he said the trend raises serious moral concerns.
O’Neill contrasted Canada’s policies with stricter U.S. safeguards and said HHS remains focused on protecting patients and maintaining public trust in the organ-donation system.
Previously, the UOJ reported that Illinois legalized physician-assisted suicide.