B.C. challenge to Catholic hospital’s ‘traumatic’ denial of MAID enters closing phase
VANCOUVER — Allowing publicly funded faith-based health-care providers to impose religious beliefs on patients, including those seeking medical assistance in dying, is a breach of the British Columbia government’s “basic duty” to remain religiously neutral, the B.C. Supreme Court heard Monday.
Closing arguments in a legal challenge brought by the mother of a woman who was denied the procedure at the Catholic-run St. Paul’s Hospital began Monday morning.
The hospital is prohibited by Providence Health Care from offering MAID because of a decision by the Archbishop of Vancouver that it is “morally wrong” under Catholic beliefs.
The legal challenge was filed by the family of 34-year-old Samantha O’Neill, who was denied the procedure at St. Paul’s in 2023 and forced to be transferred by ambulance to another hospital. She was sedated and taken to another facility in an ambulance, but never regained consciousness.











