RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Exploring the experience of supporting a loved one through a medically assisted death in Canada JF Canadian Family Physician JO Can Fam Physician FD The College of Family Physicians of Canada SP e387 OP e393 VO 64 IS 9 A1 Sheila Holmes A1 Ellen Wiebe A1 Jessica Shaw A1 Amelia Nuhn A1 Alanna Just A1 Michaela Kelly YR 2018 UL http://www.cfp.ca/content/64/9/e387.abstract AB Objective To explore the experience of family and close friends of patients seeking medical assistance in dying (MAID) in Canada.Design Qualitative study using semistructured interviews.Setting A clinic in Vancouver, BC, that provides MAID services.Participants Eighteen support people for patients seeking MAID.Methods Clinic patients seeking MAID identified their primary support people during consultations for an assisted death evaluation. Identified support people were invited to participate in the study, and those who were interested were asked to contact the interviewers. Semistructured interviews were conducted, transcribed, coded, and subjected to content analysis to elucidate common themes.Main findings All participants were supportive of their loved one’s wish for assisted death and they provided emotional and practical support in preparation for MAID. Support persons talked about the journey they went through from their loved one’s diagnosis to the MAID request to the actual death. Some were initially opposed but changed their minds after seeing the suffering their loved ones endured. The time before the assisted death involved saying goodbye and, for some, ceremonial rituals (celebration of life, poems, singing, etc). Those interviewed after their loved one’s assisted death found the death peaceful and reported that it offered advantages compared with natural death in their loved one’s individual circumstances.Conclusion This study provides insight into experiences of support people coping with a loved one who is seeking or has sought MAID in the context of a country unfamiliar with the legal process of a planned and hastened death. Participants were supportive of their loved one’s wishes for assistance in death to end suffering and found the process to be peaceful overall.