Navigating End-of-Life Choices: Perspectives of Individuals Living with Multiple Sclerosis on Medical Assistance in Dying in Various Hypothetical Situations

Authors

  • Janine Brown, PhD
  • Katherine B. Knox
  • Lilian Thorpe
  • Loralee Herter
  • Mir Nabila Ashraf
  • Michael C. Levin
  • Ilia Poliakov

Abstract

Background

Saskatchewan’s multiple sclerosis (MS) prevalence rate is among the highest in the world. Although quantitative research has demonstrated a high hypothetical interest in assisted dying among individuals living with MS (ILMS), the underlying reasons potentially influencing their consideration of medical assistance in dying (MAiD) have not been explored qualitatively.

Methods

An Interpretive Description methodology was used for this project. The dataset included 27 interviews (22 ILMS, five key informants), demographic data, interviewer field notes, and reflective content. Participants discussed their perspectives on MAiD across a range of hypothetical situations. Inductive reflexive thematic analysis and content analysis were completed.

Results

When presented with hypothetical disease trajectory scenarios, participants indicated they would or may consider MAiD if experiencing unbearable pain (n=21), the need for continuous care (n=16), or perceptions of being a burden to others (n=14). Fewer participants reported that loss of pleasurable activities (n=6) or changes in living arrangements alone (n=8) would or may prompt consideration of MAiD. Four interconnected themes characterized participants’ reasoning: 1) a shifting identity, 2) navigating resource disparities, 3) the weight of guilt, and 4) care concerns for family.

Discussion

ILMS may consider MAiD for various reasons. Decision-making at the end-of-life exists within a complex matrix of individual guilt and concern for family members while reappraising quality of life and accessing support through disease progression. 

Author Biographies

Janine Brown, PhD

Janine Brown is a Registered Nurse and Associate Professor at the University of Regina with a PhD in Health Sciences from the University of Saskatchewan. Her research focuses on medical assistance in dying (MAiD), ethically complex care, and end-of-life decision-making. Her work is published in journals such as Qualitative Health Research, Journal of Loss and Trauma, Journal of Palliative Medicine, BMC Medical Ethics, and Healthcare Policy, contributing to national and international conversations on MAiD policy, practitioner participation, and patient- and family-centred care.

Katherine B. Knox

Katherine B. Knox is the provincial department head and an Associate Professor at the University of Saskatchewan, Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. She is a primary investigator with the Cameco MS Neurosciences Research Center at the University of Saskatchewan, and her clinical research focuses on long-term outcomes and quality of life for people with multiple sclerosis.

Lilian Thorpe

Lilian Thorpe is a geriatric psychiatrist providing consultation liaison services in the Saskatoon area. She has been extensively involved with medical assistance in dying since 2016, has assessed over 1,400 patients since then, and is a Professor in the College of Medicine at the University of Saskatchewan.

Loralee Herter

Loralee Herter is a proud mom to three children, a grandma to four, and lives with her husband, Arlen, on their family farm in southwest Saskatchewan. Loralee has been living with MS since 2005.

Mir Nabila Ashraf

Mir Nabila Ashraf completed her Master's in Aging Studies at the University of Regina, with a research focus on digital health, chronic disease self-management, and end-of-life care among older adults. Her community-engaged work emphasizes equitable, patient-centred approaches to improving access to health information and quality of life.

Michael C. Levin

Michael C. Levin is the Saskatchewan Multiple Sclerosis Clinical Research Chair and Professor of Neurology and Anatomy, Physiology and Pharmacology. Actively caring for persons living with multiple Sclerosis, Dr. Levin’s research interests include developing novel small molecules to treat progressive forms of MS, for which there are marginal treatments.

Ilia Poliakov

Ilia Poliakov completed medical school at the University of Calgary (2010) and a neurology residency at the University of Saskatchewan (2015). He later completed a fellowship in Multiple Sclerosis and Neuroimmunology and is now the Director of the Saskatoon Multiple Sclerosis Clinic while contributing to medical education and multiple sclerosis research.

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Published

2026-05-20

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Articles