Friday, December 30, 2005

Grits without honour

winnipegsun.com - Editorial - Grits without honour

If the Liberal Party of Canada had a shred of honour or decency left in it, Finance Minister Ralph Goodale would have tendered his resignation as a cabinet minister on Wednesday night, and it would have been immediately accepted by the PM.
Goodale's department is the subject of an RCMP investigation into whether there was a leak about changes to income trusts that allegedly resulted in a spurt of insider trading on the stock market before the announcement was officially made. Prime Minister Paul Martin said yesterday that he's standing by his embattled finance minister. "He is a person of the greatest integrity, and he will not be stepping down," Martin said.
If he's a person of such great integrity, however, then it's all the more reason why he should step down. Because, unlike the Liberals, we still believe in concepts like ministerial accountability and the greater good. And there's the bigger issue of the overall integrity of the government.
Goodale simply must resign as finance minister while his department is under criminal investigation.

Thursday, December 22, 2005

winnipegsun.com - Editorial - The waiting game

winnipegsun.com - Editorial - The waiting game: "The Doer government continues to do everything in its power to try to prevent the privately-owned Maples Surgical Centre from succeeding in Manitoba.
The Maples opened its doors in Winnipeg in 2001. And from the very first day of its operations, the NDP has been trying to shut the facility down"

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

winnipegsun.com Politics again -what about the ustomers?

winnipegsun.com: "WCB pulls clinic's MRI patients
The Workers Compensation Board has stopped sending clients to the Maples Surgical Centre for MRIs, prompting accusations from the clinic's director that his facility has fallen victim to politics"

winnipegsun.com - Editorial - We're still waiting

winnipegsun.com - Editorial - We're still waiting: "Suspiciously, no benchmarks were provided for the fifth area the feds and provinces agreed to target -- access to diagnostic tests such as CAT scans and MRIs.
This is particularly disturbing because CAT scans and MRIs are vital diagnostic tools for three of the four other areas targeted for wait times reduction -- cancer treatment, cardiac disease and hip and knee replacements.
Thus, setting benchmarks for how long it should take to treat a patient after he or she is diagnosed is meaningless if the diagnosis is unduly delayed in the first place because the patient had to wait too long for a CAT scan or MRI.
Doctors have also warned that as the provinces shift around budgets to meet demands for improvement in these five targeted areas, wait times for other procedures will inevitably start to grow as they are starved for funding.
Our concern is that this so-called strategy to reduce wait times is starting to look more and more like a strategy to look busy while failing to reduce wait times. And that federal and provincial politicians will again do what they always do when it all falls apart: blame each other. "

Monday, December 19, 2005

winnipegsun.com - Tom Brodbeck - Public solidly supports private MRIs

winnipegsun.com - Tom Brodbeck - Public solidly supports private MRIs: "Canadians know that the government monopoly system isn't working well and they're beginning to accept the fact that, in some cases, taxpayers should be able to spend their own money to get care for themselves and their families.
It's no different than what every other developed country in the world has -- a mix of universal health care with private options. "

Friday, December 16, 2005

MRI choice- What is the problem?

The right of health choice debate - It comes down to service not government dictate QJ

winnipegsun.com - Manitoba - What's the problem?: "'When did we lose our freedom in this country?' said Corlett, who says he just wants to get better and return to work.

'Why do they have to control us?'

Corlett needs an MRI so his doctor can make a diagnosis and decide whether he needs surgery or not.In the meantime, he can't even lift his arm, much less work on airplanes.'I can't work because they don't have work for a one-armed person,' said Corlett.Like many patients who will use The Maples clinic, Corlett didn't have to pay out-of-pocket for his MRI. Instead, his insurance company did. Like many Manitobans, Corlett has private disability insurance and it's in his insurance company's best interest to get him an MRI as quickly as possible so he can be treated and return to work.In fact, the insurance company was planning to fly him to Calgary for an MRI until The Maples announced it would be providing MRIs.'Why do I have to go to Calgary when we've got one in Winnipeg?' said Corlett.Precisely.How can government possibly have a problem with this? Government sends Workers Compensation Board patients to clinics for preferential treatment.Why can't a private insurance company send one of its clients to a clinic, too?The Supreme Court of Canada ruled in a recent Quebec case that government cannot prevent people from buying private insurance and using it to obtain medical services if government is not providing that service in a timely fashion.Clearly, the Manitoba government is not providing elective MRIs in a timely fashion.So I'd say The Maples clinic has the blessing of Canada's top court.

Besides, if people like Corlett aren't getting their MRIs in Manitoba, they'll go out-of-province for them and they'll take their money with them"

Thursday, December 15, 2005

winnipegsun.com - Manitoba - Private clinic to do MRIs today

winnipegsun.com - Manitoba - Private clinic to do MRIs today: "The Maples Surgical Centre is planning to switch on Manitoba's first private MRI today after the clinic received word late yesterday that it has received accreditation from the College of Physicians and Surgeons.
'It's official,' Dwayne Venter, general manager of the private clinic, told the Sun. 'It's been confirmed and we are slating patients from 10 o'clock on (today).'
The Maples will be the first clinic in Manitoba to provide MRI scans outside of the government health-care system. The fee for patients is $695 a scan.
But the clinic says it will be able to provide the service within 48 hours or less.
That's in sharp contrast to the three- to four"

Wednesday, December 14, 2005

Other parties dismantling medicare 'by stealth

Other parties dismantling medicare 'by stealth: "Other parties dismantling medicare 'by stealth
' NDP: Accuses premiers, too
View Larger Image
Shirley Douglas came out in support of NDP leader Jack Layton yesterday in Regina. She said the health care debate is at a turning point.
Published: Wednesday, December 14, 2005
REGINA - Jack Layton accused Paul Martin, Stephen Harper and three provincial premiers of launching a 'stealth' campaign to foist private health care on Canada, in a fiery speech in which he positioned his party as the only defender of medicare."

Great -how can you dismantle something which does not work-hmm -more rhetoric with little substance -PR

Tuesday, December 13, 2005

Osprey Media Group Inc. - Brantford Expositor SES Health pool

Osprey Media Group Inc. - Brantford Expositor: "The SES Research/Osprey Media poll found that while a majority opposed that idea, Canadians aged 40 and older (those most likely to be health care consumers) were also more likely to support private health care insurance and services.
�It�s still a minority opinion but they were the most likely to be game for something like that,� Nanos said.
Women, on the other hand, had fairly strong objections to two-tier
health care. Full reseach results at www.sesresearch.com.

Interesting that the older the population the more willingness there is for health choice. Is it because the more you need health service ,themore choice you want and need? QJ

The poll found 71 per cent of women, compared to 61 per cent of men, thought health care should be the same for all people regardless of their ability to pay.
A detailed breakdown of poll can be obtained at www.sesresearch.com. It was conducted between Nov. 14 and Nov. 16 by telephone with 525 Ontarians and is considered accurate within 4.3 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.
"

Monday, December 12, 2005

National Health standard-a step in the right direction

The new standard wait times
Provinces set benchmarks: new hip within 6 months, cardiac bypass in 2 weeks

Tom Blackwell, National PostPublished: Monday, December 12, 2005

Canada's first-ever national standards for medical wait times will suggest patients get radiation cancer treatment within four weeks, a hip replacement in no more than six months and a non-emergency cardiac bypass in as little as 14 days, health ministers are expected to announce today.
The unveiling of so-called wait-list benchmarks by provincial and territorial ministers is being called a "revolutionary" first step in curing the backlogs that have increasingly bedevilled health care.
But critics say the new standards, which are not binding and do not have to be implemented for at least two years, will be largely meaningless, and called for more drastic action to speed up care.

Showdown over private health care expected this week in Manitoba

McDonald tried to get Manitoba's Health Department to reimburse him and his wife for her MRI in Calgary, but he was turned down.
"They said, `No, services are available here,"' McDonald said. "It's stupid. Yeah, services are available, but what is your definition of available?"
Following the MRI, a specialist determined McDonald's wife needed a knee replacement. She is now on a list for surgery and has been told she may have to wait more than two years.
The patchwork of private services in different provinces has brought more business to health-care brokers, who for a fee will help patients find private services in other provinces or the United States.
"We've had many clients from Winnipeg, from Toronto and elsewhere," said Richard Baker with Timely Medical Alternatives in Vancouver.
"In the last three weeks, we've had about 15 people fly from Winnipeg to Vancouver for MRIs, CT scans."
A health-care economist said the federal government could tackle the issue by reducing transfer payments to provinces that allow MRIs.
"This is what they have to decide. Are they the government of Canada or what are they the government of?" asked Richard Plain, a former professor at the University of Alberta.
"You've got to treat all Canadians equally regardless of where they're located ... and when you don't, you start to get this mess and you start to get this checkerboard."
Over the last 20 years, Ottawa has fined various provinces more than $10 million for violating the Canada Health Act -- usually for allowing user fees for services covered by medicare.

Saturday, December 10, 2005

Health Care Consumerism- a novel idea

Health care expert Regina Herzlinger, a Harvard Business School professor advocates consumer choice. In summary " consumer -driven health care" means: (Source National Post)
  • create competition
  • allow providor or supplier innovation
  • provide information to consumers so that they can make informed decisions

That being said, she is the pioneer and leader in another, better solution -- one that could benefit either publicly run or privately run schemes. She calls it "consumer-driven health care" and it involves deploying market disciplines on the medical world.

In 1998, she launched a one-woman crusade, by organizing a high-level conference involving the country's most prominent health-care executives, to hoist her plan on to the public agenda. And it's starting to gain traction.
She defines the problem the same, no matter whether the system is managed by the private or public sector: The consumer is lost in the shuffle and the health care professionals have never had to fix their increasingly cumbersome, inefficient and expensive system.
In essence, she wants to do for the health care system what the big box stores have done for retailing.
She cites the fact that, between 1995 and 1999, 40% of the productivity gains in the United States were in the difficult sector of retailing due to economies of scale, specialization and other efficiencies, she said.
"This can happen in health-care services too. But it's against the grain of the health-care community to permit consumerism to flourish," she said in a recent interview. "Their mindset is they're smart and you're not."

She said there are three steps to drive down costs of any service or product: Create competition for services, which leads to innovation and productivity; allow suppliers to innovate; and provide information to consumers so they can make astute choices.

Friday, December 09, 2005

Stepping on swindlers' toes

Stepping on swindlers' toes: "As for the patients, many had no actual symptoms that would require orthotic supports or were 'prescribed' Birkenstock sandals, though the receipt indicated they had received custom-made orthotics, the College of Chiropodists' discipline decision said.
Mr. Vivekanand was stripped of his licence.
Ms. Finlay said she was contacted recently by a woman who visited a medical supplies retailer at the suggestion of a friend at the nursing home where she worked, and used a $1,600 health benefit claim to obtain new street shoes."

This is the third article on medical swindles by the national post. The question is how do we stop it? QJ

Private health firm built on tax dollars

Private health firm built on tax dollars: "n Canada, the Registered Nurses Association of Ontario was an early investor in InterHealth but sold its stake in 2002, feeling that the company's involvement in private-sector delivery of health care did not mesh with its own beliefs, said Doris Grinspun, the RNAO's executive director."

An interesting article . The point is that the Ontarion Government owns shares in a private health organization. Why not bring back the doctors and nurses to Ontario to improve our level of health here? qJ

Thursday, December 08, 2005

All the road's a stage for scams

All the road's a stage for scams: "All the road's a stage for scams"

Third of a 4 part series on Medical fraud . Check out fake auto accidents at the link.

Spending on health to hit all-time high in 2005, hitting 10.4 per cent of GDP

The more we spend on public health -the more it costs . We need to find a way to improve the effectiveness and service delivery for our money . The spending has outpaced our ability to sustain it- QJ


Helen Branswell, Canadian PressPublished: December 8, 2005
TORONTO -- Health spending in Canada is expected to hit $142 billion this year, bringing expenditures in this sector to 10.4 per cent of GDP, an all time high, the Canadian Institute for Health Information reported Wednesday.

An 11-per-cent jump in spending on prescription and non-prescribed medications fuelled the rise - prompting the head of an independent health watchdog organization to predict governments will be moved to address the issue of rising drug consumption and costs.
Michael Decter, chair of the Health Council of Canada, said the significant and ongoing increase in spending on medications is outstripping the increases in costs for other parts of the health sector, including the running of hospitals and paying of physicians.

"When I look at these numbers, I say: 'Well, (with) hospitals and doctors, there are issues, but there aren't real cost pressure issues.' (With) drugs, there's a real cost pressure issue," Decter said.
"It's made more complicated in Canada by the federal-provincial issue . . . but I would say you're going to hear a lot more about the drug issue," he said, noting a task force is to report to federal, provincial and territorial health ministers on issues of drug costs and drug plan coverage next June.

Although Decter was chair of the Canadian Institute for Health Information before taking on the role as head of the Health Council, he had no involvement in the writing of this report.
It noted health spending increased 7.7 per cent overall, though when that figure was adjusted to sift out the impact of inflation the rate of increase was five per cent this year over last, the institute's annual look at health-care expenditures revealed.
"Over the course of the last several years, health-care spending has been growing faster than our economy," institute president Glenda Yeates said in a release

Tuesday, December 06, 2005

A Call to Action on Health Reform


An old friend of the Frontier Centre flew into Winnipeg in the middle of November and left behind more than the winter’s first blizzard. Johan Hjertqvist’s seminar here laid out the basics of what his Belgium-based organization calls the EuroHealth Consumer Index. An ambitious attempt to benchmark the relative sensitivity of countries to healthcare consumers’ need for information, it may well represent the wave of the future.

The project’s relevance in Canada can be summed up with one person’s name: Jacques Chaoulli. The Québec doctor had sued his provincial government on behalf of a patient who faced long waiting times for orthopedic surgery. In June, Québec’s Supreme Court ruled that a longstanding ban on private health insurance violated the patient’s rights. Although the decision was later stayed for a year, to allow the provincial and federal governments time to respond, it threw down a gauntlet to our Medicare system. Canadians are tired of being pushed around.

Hjertqvist cited the case as one of several elements in the growing demand for
consumer empowerment in healthcare, with escalating costs and unhappiness with waiting lists high on the list. As affluent boomers near the age at which they will max out our healthcare resources, they are increasingly intolerant of the system’s demand that they suffer in silence. If Dr. Mark Godley is willing to sell a private MRI scan at the Maples Surgical Clinic for $695, what exactly gives Health Minister Tim Sale the gall to tell people they can’t spend their own money, or even buy insurance coverage, to get it? Better they should wait months and have taxpayers provide it for $300?

After providing the intellectual ammunition for the 1990s revolution in healthcare delivery in Stockholm—splitting the purchaser from the provider, and encouraging internal markets—Hjertqvist turned to consumer empowerment. He devised the Swedish Health Index, did the research to provide its content and published his first two rounds of results. After a round of carping, public officials in Sweden’s county councils—the level of government responsible for healthcare—responded positively to the rankings.

It prompted a new discussion about the inequalities in health care,” Hjertqvist explains. “Why do you have better access to certain treatments or shorter waiting lists in one county council or another? Many patient organizations took action based on this index and used it as a tool for advocacy in relation to the governments and medical profession. We noticed that regional governments are taking action now to improve the information they provide. Starting November 1, 2005, we have guaranteed national access, saying that you should not have to wait more than 12 weeks for any kind of treatment.”

That success, combined with the declining importance of national borders within the European Union, prompted the Swede to take the show on the road. He opened the Healthcare Consumer Powerhouse in Brussels and began to compare EU countries. Based on four standards that measure how well healthcare systems respond to service needs, the Index provides patients with the sort of information that magazines like Consumer Reports do for people buying cars or stereos.
Its components look like this:

Patient Rights—Are they recognized by law?

  • Do governments provide catalogues of available providers and facilities?
  • Is there direct access to specialists and the right to a second opinion?
  • Is there no-fault malpractice insurance?
  • Do patients have access to their own medical records, and can they travel to other countries for care if it’s denied at home?


Waiting Times—Much like the Fraser Institute’s work in Canada, the Index lists average wait times across a range of treatments. Unlike the Fraser, which gathers data from providers, the Index does it by sampling patients.

Outcomes—The Index compares death rates for a number of medical problems, like pediatric cardiology, maternity, and breast and colon cancer, as well as rates of infection experienced by patients.


Consumer Friendliness—Can you pay extra for extra services?

  • Is there convenience of payment?
  • Can you renew prescriptions without seeing a doctor again?
  • Is information on facilities and services available on the Internet or 24/7 by telephone?
  • Pharmaceuticals—Are they subsidized? How easily can cheaper generic varieties be substituted for expensive patented ones? How complete is access to the newest drug remedies?

    After assigning weights to these factors, the first Indexers discovered that three countries scored quite well, far above all others: The Netherlands, Switzerland and Germany. It’s worth noting, for the ideologues who believe the defining feature of a healthcare system is whether or not it resides in the public sector, that two of those countries fall into that category, while Switzerland—where healthcare is privately provided and funded—does not.

That suits Hjertqvist fine. “Competition among private and public providers is the key to success,” he believes. “The private providers inject a lot of new ideas and a lot of efficiency into the system. I would say that a reasonable mix between public and private and a reasonable share for private providers within the umbrella of public funding are speeding up efficiency and the awareness of consumer attitudes and expectations.”


It’s interesting to speculate how Canada would fare on such an Index, or where individual provinces would stand when compared with each other. We assiduously resist benchmarking of what are arguably our two most important social services, public education and healthcare. Perhaps it’s time for that to change.

If you are interested in receiving the full Frontier Centre health seminar of Hjertqvist overview and suggestions -approximately an hour and a half of provocative thinking in on demand video format- please contact us at : mailto: respondfeedbacknow@yahoo.ca

Saturday, December 03, 2005

winnipegsun.com - Election News - Target wait times

winnipegsun.com - Election News - Target wait times: "Penalizing or banning private clinics from selling diagnostic testing and other health care services is counter-productive -- if not illegal -- to the public health care system, says Conservative leader Stephen Harper.
'I don't see how it ever benefits a system -- public or private -- to start shutting down health care services,' said Harper, who was in Winnipeg yesterday morning during a stopover en route to Regina. 'People who talk like that are giving an ideological response.'
Harper said his government's solution would be to reduce wait lists for cancer treatment, diagnostic testing and other health care treatment, thereby eliminating the demand for private user-pay services.
'There will be no private, parallel system,' said Harper, noting his government will provide an acceptable publicly-funded health care system for all Canadians.
The crux of the Tory health care platform is a wait-time guarantee that ensures all patients receive treatment within a clinically-acceptable timeframe"

An honest health care system proposed -benchmarking

Sat, December 3, 2005

Honesty on health care



Conservative Leader Stephen Harper announced his party's wait time "guarantee" yesterday. It's not really a guarantee. It's more like a benchmark or a target for provinces to follow. But within the government monopoly system that we have in Canada, it's not a bad approach to take.

Harper says maximum wait times for medically necessary services should be established across Canada.

Failure to provide the service -- be it for hip surgery or MRI scans -- within that established timeframe would mean patients could demand government send them out of province to receive the treatment.

The cost of sending patients to other provinces or the U.S., Harper says, would be an incentive for provinces to meet their targets.

It's not a real guarantee because patients would have no recourse if care weren't provided within the maximum wait time

Thursday, December 01, 2005

winnipegsun.com - Editorial - How about the truth?

winnipegsun.com - Editorial - How about the truth?: "Government's monopoly health-care system is faltering in many areas. People want choice in health care and the Maples is planning to provide that choice for MRI scans.
What the public wants to know is whether the government will prevent people from having that choice and if so, why and under what statute?
Sale should stick to the facts, stop misleading Manitobans and debate the issue at hand.
We have enough fearmongering and misinformation in the health-care debate in Canada as it is. "

Saturday, November 26, 2005

winnipegsun.com - Manitoba - Think tank praises clinic

winnipegsun.com - Manitoba - Think tank praises clinic: "Sat, November 26, 2005

Think tank praises clinicPublic, private health-care best
By ROCHELLE SQUIRES, LEGISLATURE REPORTER

mix of public and private health-service offerings would draw more workers to the system, reduce costs, improve service and increase efficiencies, says a public policy analyst.

"Competition from private providers is no threat to the public system, in fact it will save the system," said Dennis Owens of the Frontier Centre for Public Policy, a privately funded think tank with offices in Winnipeg.

From his research, Owens believes a monopolized health care system de-emphasizes service and has a harder time attracting and retaining workers.

He doesn't understand why NDP Health Minister Tim Sale is opposed to the Maples Surgical Centre providing MRI scans to the public for a fee.

The clinic -- owned by Dr. Mark Godley -- is poised to begin selling MRI scans to the public for a $695 fee.


"When I hear Tim Sale tell someone he can't sell a product on the public market, I think of a dictator," said Owens. "Cuba and North Korea are the only other countries in the world that would say to a guy like Dr. Godley that he can't provide his service."





A mix of public and private health-service offerings would draw more workers to the system, reduce costs, improve service and increase efficiencies, says a public policy analyst.
'Competition from private providers is no threat to the public system, in fact it will save the system,' said Dennis Owens of the Frontier Centre for Public Policy, a privately funded think tank with offices in Winnipeg.
From his research, Owens believes a monopolized health care system de-emphasizes service and has a harder time attracting and retaining workers.
He doesn't understand why NDP Health Minister Tim Sale is opposed to the Maples Surgical Centre providing MRI scans to the public for a fee. "

winnipegsun.com - Editorial - Desperate final days

winnipegsun.com - Editorial - Desperate final days

Friday, November 25, 2005

Candidate for legal health challenge needed

Any legal means to get value for our money is encouraged . Are you the one who will make the difference? QJ


Hello friends of freedom,

Now that Quebec's health care law has been invalidated by the Supreme Court of Canada, the Canadian Constitution Foundation wants to challenge regressive health care laws in other provinces, using the Chaoulli decision as a precedent.

We are looking for a suitable plaintiff, for whom we can provide free legal representation in challenging a provincial law. The plaintiff must be unafraid of publicity, and willing to do radio, newspaper and television interviews from time to time. The plaintiff must be personally affected by the legal prohibition on buying private medical insurance, ie. someone who is suffering on a waiting list, unable to access necessary medical care.

There won't be any financial stress for the plaintiff, as legal representation will be provided without cost.

However, there will be stress in "going public" with the complaint, doing media interviews from time to time, being cross-examined by the government's lawyers, plus a few court appearances.

The battle, from start to finish, will take years, not months.

The plaintiff must be willing to stick with it, even if she or he obtains medical treatment before the court makes a ruling.

If you know of a person who is willing and able to handle the stress of being a plaintiff -- for the good cause of freedom -- please refer them to me, or pass this e-mail along to them.

Yours sincerely,

John Carpay
Executive Director
Canadian Constitution Foundation
Phone: 403-592-1731
Email: jcarpay@shaw.ca

winnipegsun.com - Manitoba - NDP all alone on punishing private MRIs

More on the right to provide basic services outside of the health monopoly. QJ

winnipegsun.com - Manitoba - NDP all alone on punishing private MRIs: "Not violating the act
In the late 1990s, when Ottawa fined provinces for allowing private clinics to charge facility fees, they fined all provinces at the same time, including Manitoba.
And all provinces fell in line and ended the practice. Not the case with MRIs and other diagnostic tests.
For starters, the Canada Health Act says diagnostic testing, unless it's provided in a hospital, is not an insured service. Which means clinics can charge for them and they're not violating the act.
Manitoba's own regulations under the Health Services Act, Sec. 17, says the same thing. The service is not insured 'unless provided in a hospital as an in-patient or out-patient service.'
So both laws say it's OK. And the feds are not going to act on it, despite their verbal warnings over the past few years. "

Tuesday, November 22, 2005

National Post Canadians want more choice and lower waiting times

National Post: "A majority of respondents to the survey believe wait times for elective surgery have become longer in the past two years -- 66% of the public, 64% of nurses and 58% of physicians.
This could translate into growing support for alternative options, he said."

Monday, November 21, 2005

Hamilton Why dont they let foreign doctors to practise?

This is in reference to the preceding post. Why does the government not create a new class of practi0nioners as a alternative to the existing crisis ? Stop gap the problem -while the existing system gets fixed. QJ

Hamilton: "OMA: shortage places system 'at risk'

By Keith Leslie
Canadian Press


Monday, November 21, 2005



CREDIT: National Post
The Ontario Medical Association says the province's health care system is 'at risk' due to a shortage of doctors.

CH HAMILTON
Back to Hamilton city page
OMA: shortage places system 'at risk'

By Keith Leslie
Canadian Press


Monday, November 21, 2005



CREDIT: National Post
The Ontario Medical Association says the province's health care system is 'at risk' due to a shortage of doctors.

ADVERTISEMENT



TORONTO -- The stability of Ontario's health-care system is "at risk'' due to the shortage of physicians -- especially family doctors -- according to a new study prepared for the Ontario Medical Association.

The Canadian Press obtained a copy of the report, prepared by the OMA's human resources committee, which said the doctor shortage in Ontario had become much worse since it first warned the problem represented a "looming crisis'' in 1999.

"The year 2005 finds the province in the midst of a deepening physician resources crisis,'' it concludes.

"Family medicine in particular has deteriorated into a dying specialty and requires urgent resuscitation.''

Last Thursday, Health Minister George Smitherman announced an additional $33 million in government funding for medical schools to create 141 new family residency positions in the province next year. Smitherman said that means there will be 337 more family doctors ready to practise by 2008.

The OMA's report acknowledged the Liberal government's efforts to address the doctor shortage, but gave the province an overall grade of C, and said much more must be done.

"The government has taken a number of steps to increase the number of doctors trained in Ontario, and certifying those who trained abroad...(and) to make Ontario more competitive with other jurisdictions,'' OMA President Dr. Greg Flynn said in an e-mail exchange with The Canadian Press.

"Unfortunately there remains more to do before we will see real improvements in the ability of patients to access the necessary care that doctors provide in our communities.''

The OMA report said the province needs at least 2,100 physicians. It estimated there are 1.2 million Ontario residents without a family doctor -- 10 per cent of the population -- and warned that number would grow to 1.4 million in 2006.

Ontario now is seventh in Canada for the population per physician ratio, ahead of only the much less populous provinces of New Brunswick, Saskatchewan and Prince Edward Island.

The report also warned the number of physicians working in specialties with long waiting lists -- such as diagnostic services, oncology, orthopedics and ophthalmology -- is also declining.

"Even worse, OMA projections indicate a further deterioration of the physician supply over the next five years, despite the efforts taken to ease the shortage.''

Writing from Sault Ste. Marie, Flynn said he heard about the problem in every one of the 22 Ontario communities he's visited in the last few months to meet with municipal leaders, health-care workers and patients.

"The number one concern in each of those communities remains the doctor shortage,'' he said.

The report warned that statistics alone "don't adequately describe the depth of the problem,'' noting that while the population is aging and putting more demands on the health-care system, doctors are getting older too. It found 19 per cent of practising MDs -- about 4,100 Ontario doctors -- are over age 60, and 11 per cent -- or 2,300 doctors -- are over age 65.

"Retirement alone will greatly impact physician supply over the next five years, while many other older MDs will be scaling back their practices, adding to the overall shortage of physician services,'' it said.

The report provides a lengthy list of recommendations to address the shortage, and said the government should make it easier for doctors from other provinces to work in Ontario and for the more than 10,000 Canadian-trained physicians working in the United States to return and work here.

"Much more can be done to successfully and quickly recruit excellent physicians from this pool,'' it said.

The OMA also wants the province to make family medicine a much more attractive option for students, with better financial incentives, and also give the students more opportunities to re-certify in another specialty.


© Canadian Press 2005




TORONTO -- The stability of Ontario's health-care system is 'at risk'' due to the shortage of physicians -- especially family doctors -- according to a new study prepared for the Ontario Medical Association. "

Sunday, November 20, 2005

www.notcanada.com

Unbelievable - these people are resources that are misused. QJ It is tradgic that Canada has so many options and yet cannot mobilize them for the common good . Lets do something to change the situation . Q-J We should all be getting tired of the non performance.

www.notcanada.com: "Why Is Canada Shutting Out Doctors?
While millions of Canadians can�t find a doctor, thousands of foreign physicians can�t get a licence to practise
"

winnipegsun.com - Tom Brodbeck - Don't blame NDP gov't for everything

More voices for choice and a good review of why MRI's should not be apublic monopoly.
The key is that the monopoly cannot keep up with the demand. "Some monopoly and only in Canada "-huh! Q-J
winnipegsun.com - Tom Brodbeck - Don't blame NDP gov't for everything

But there isn't.

You can blame the NDP government in Manitoba for screwing up a lot of things in health care since it took office in 1999.

But on diagnostic services, they've done about as much as any government could be expected to do without raising taxes any further than they already have.

You can accuse them of breaking their election promises on reducing these wait times, because they have broken their promise.

But the truth is, there's not a whole lot more they could have done on diagnostics.

In the 1990s, it was fashionable to blame health care woes on government cut-backs.

The federal Liberals slashed transfer payments to the provinces by some $6 billion a year, making it very difficult for provinces such as Manitoba to increase funding for health care.

Despite the federal cuts, the former Filmon government was able to make small increases to its health budget in the mid-1990s, followed by several years of healthy increases until they were defeated in 1999.

The Doer government inherited a strong set of books and revenue streams when it came to office and dumped billions into the health-care budget, some of which did some good, much of which got lost in a growing, bloated bureaucracy.

Diagnostic services -- MRIs, CT scans and ultrasounds -- were the beneficiaries of some of those riches.

In Winnipeg, the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority was able to substantially increase its capacity for diagnostic services.

Trouble is, the demand is so gargantuan for MRIs and CT scans, it's almost impossible for any government to keep pace with it.

In 1999, the WRHA was doing about 1,000 scans a month. There were about 1,500 people on the waiting list at that time, which stood at around three to four months.

Fast-forward six years. The WRHA is now doing twice as many scans to try to eliminate the backlog.

But the demand is too great.

MRIs are very popular and useful tools for doctors to diagnose all kinds of ailments and the government monopoly system simply can't keep up with the volume.

The more capacity they add, the greater the demand grows.

Health Minister Tim Sale said recently that the government has enough MRIs in the province to provide the volume of scans it can afford.

And that's the key -- what it can afford.

The government recently added another MRI at the nationalized Pan Am Clinic which is expected to add more volume to the system, although a good chunk of that volume has been purchased by the Workers Compensation Board for priority access.

(If you're an injured worker covered by WCB and require an MRI, you will get speedier access to an MRI at Pan Am than the average guy on the street. Two-tier? Of course it is.)

But even with all the added capacity, the wait list for MRIs has still not come down and even if it does, it will still likely be an eight- to 10-week waiting period.

Which is why people should have the right to use their own money to buy an MRI scan privately if they choose.

And that's why the Maples Surgical Centre in Winnipeg plans to provide MRI services to the public for $695 a scan.

It's not because the government has necessarily done a poor job in providing MRI services. It's just that at some point you have to give your head a shake and realize that government can't be the sole provider of all health care services. There should be alternative options to access care.

We do it with schools. Government provides a universally accessible public school system. And much of it is excellent.

Nevertheless, people have the right to buy education services privately if they choose, many paying thousands of dollars a year to put their children into schools of their choice.

The government can't be the sole provider of K-12 schooling. It can ensure that basic schooling is available to all. But it can't be all things to all people.

Nor can health care.

It's time we stopped fooling ourselves that it can.

( It is also time to allow others to offer the needed services QJ)

winnipegsun.com - Editorial - Just what the doctor ordered

Good news some people support health choice. It is time that the major media take action and hold the public health authorities to account. QJ

winnipegsun.com - Editorial - Just what the doctor ordered

The Maples Surgical Centre is planning to sell MRI scans directly to the public. It's good news for health care in Manitoba. And it's exactly the kind of alternatives people need to get the best available care for them and their families.

Canadians have for years relied on a government monopoly health-care system to access care. It's given us mixed results.

While we have some of the best medical practitioners in the world in Canada and we receive excellent medical care in many situations, there are also serious shortcomings in the system.

One of the biggest ones is the unacceptably long waiting lists for services such as surgery and diagnostic imaging.

Governments have been unable to bring these waiting lists down over the years. And it hasn't been for a lack of money.



In Manitoba, the provincial health care budget has soared to $3.4 billion from $2.4 billion just five years ago. Despite that, the typical wait for hip replacement surgery is two years. And the wait for an elective MRI is three to four months.

The Maples Surgical Centre says it will be able to book an MRI within 48 hours.

There's a fee, of course. It's $695. But for those whose priority it is to get an MRI scan as quickly as possible, they will now have the option of using their own money for expedited service.

We think that's a right people deserve.

Eventually, these types of services may be covered under private health insurance plans, which many people already buy.

There will be some who criticize this free-market approach to health care, claiming it's the slippery slope to the end of medicare.

Nothing could be further from the truth.

When a clinic like The Maples sells MRIs to the public directly, it does nothing to erode the quality or quantity of MRI scans the government provides.

In fact, people who buy the scans privately take themselves off the public queue and make that list shorter for others.

Besides, a recent Supreme Court of Canada ruling on private health insurance is clear. The top court ruled recently in a Quebec case that government can't deny people the right to buy private medical services if government is not providing those services in a timely manner.

Clearly, government is not providing MRIs in a timely manner.

Thursday, November 17, 2005

Has Canadian health progressed from MEDIEVAL TIMES-HUMOUR

What knowledge did medieval people have in the way of health?


There were many myths and superstitions about health and hygiene in medieval Europe, as there still are today. People believed, for example, that disease was spread by bad odors. It was also assumed that diseases of the body resulted from sins of the soul. Many people sought relief from their ills through meditation, prayer, pilgrimages, and other nonmedical methods.
And in Canada today

The health myths continue. The bad odor –of having the best health system in the world –is spread by Ottawa and the health priest cast-along with the message that it is sinful to use health services not provided by their public health temples- that are seemingly self- serving and , overstaffed with high paid health temple workers. Many people make pilgrimages to other lands and places to seek treatment.

Did they really think that all illness was the result of sin?


Sin was regarded by early medieval authors as the cause of sickness in the sense that without sin there would have been no material evil. This obviously does not imply that a sinful individual would become sick. One's own general sinfulness was often given as the cause of one's own sickness. This was more a result of a kind of a "guilt trip" rather than actual cause and effect occurrence.

And in Canada today

It is a sin to use remedies or services that are not sanctioned by Ottawa’s National Health Act or the directives of the provincial Health Temple authorities. In a convoluted way, the message is that if you use the public health system there will
be no sickness.

What was their view on the body and its 'humors?'

The body was viewed as a part of the universe, a concept derived from the Greeks and Romans. Four humors, or body fluids, were directly related to the four elements: fire=yellow bile or choler; water=phlegm; earth=black bile; air=blood. These four humors had to be balanced. Too much of one was thought to cause a change in personality--for example, too much black bile could create melancholy.
And in Canada today

The four elements have been changed to defend the current status quo. fire=campaigns against other health delivery options, Water= the need and right for obscene amounts of public money, earth= the right to legislate laws for the health monopoly, Air= the right to keep health customers waiting and needy .
Many people today think the existing health system is out of balance and needs fixing.

What did they use in the form of medicine?


Medieval remedies were often herbal in nature, but also included ground earthworms, urine, and animal excrement. Many medieval medical manuscripts contained recipes for remedies that called for hundreds of therapeutic substances--the notion that every substance in nature held some sort of power accounts for the enormous variety of substances.
And in Canada today

Major remedies are made from the same ingredient but are sold by major drug companies -often as a adjunct to the “authorized” health temple authority. The cost of the remedy has increased as the supply is artificially limited, and the demand increased through legislation. Many remedies that work are not allowed because that would reduce the need for more expensive legislated alternatives produced by friends of the health temple authority.

The health authorities are trying to control and legislate any alternative healing source ingredients. Fortunately –they have not always been successful. More people are taking control of their own health, taking preventive measures, as they become more cynical of the “expensive” free public health delivery system. The internet and the instant knowledge available have made this personal act of empowerment and defiance of the given monopoly authorities easier.

Did everyone have access to a doctor?

In medieval times, medical treatment was available mainly to the wealthy, and those living in villages rarely had the help of doctors, who practiced mostly in the cities and courts. Many treatments were administered by people outside the medical tradition. Coroners' rolls from the time reveal how lay persons often made sophisticated medical judgments without the aid of medical experts.

And in Canada today

The myth that everyone gets treated equally, whatever the location or class, is propagated- but unfortunately not true. In reality, those who are wealthy can get service by escaping the existing monopoly jurisdiction and avoid the fatal waiting lines- which are free. The world has healthy alternatives that you can choose if you have the means, will and brains to do so.

Lay persons still make sophisticated judgments without the aid of medical experts. These lay persons consume a disproportionate amount of the health budget. There are a lot of these non health productive people in the “health temple system. The list, by no means exhaustive, includes the temple administrators, federal and provincial health bureaucracies, and all the gatekeepers of the status quo.

Fortunately, there are people and organizations, who are feed up with current medieval system of health delivery in Canada. Help them to help you be healthy.
Health Choice is a wonderful right that must be nourished
.

Good news -providing a needed service is not illegal in Canada

Health fight aheadTories fret 'Americanization' with paid MRIs
By TOM BRODBECK




Health Minister Tim Sale has not shut the door on Manitobans' right to buy MRI scans from a private clinic in Winnipeg.

But the Opposition Tories have, calling the new service proposed by the Maples Surgical Centre the "Americanization" of health care.

Go figure.

The privately owned clinic is planning to sell the diagnostic scans to patients directly for $695.

They're promising a 48-hour turnaround on the service, a far cry from the three to four months patients in Winnipeg have to wait for an elective MRI at a government-run hospital.


Charging patients directly for an MRI at a private clinic is legal under the federal Canada Health Act because it's performed outside a hospital.

But provinces have the power to shut the practice down through provincial legislation if they wish. They would have to prosecute the clinic to do it, though.

When asked about the Maples' proposal yesterday, Sale was noncommittal.

"Well let's wait and see until their machine gets licensed," said Sale. "As far as we know it hasn't been licensed and no approvals have been given for what it can do."

So he hasn't said no and he hasn't said yes.

Private clinics in Nova Scotia, Quebec, Alberta and British Columbia already sell MRI scans, CT scans and ultrasounds directly to patients.

Manitoba would be the fifth province added to the list.

It would give patients the choice to buy an MRI directly from the clinic by paying out of pocket for the cost.

I asked Tory Opposition health critic Heather Stefanson what her party's position is on the private MRIs. She said the Tories are against allowing people to buy an MRI scan with their own money.

"At this point in time, we would not support that," said Stefanson. "I think it's something that we are going to have to discuss further as a party."

She also slammed the Doer government for letting the health-care system get to this point.

Tired old buzz words

"Ironically what's happening here is that the NDP is forcing the Americanization of our system," said Stefanson. "If the NDP properly managed the system and utilized public-private partnerships to help deliver services, I don't think we'd be in the situation we're in right now."

Funny, I would have thought a Conservative party would have been more in favour of patient choice. I expect NDP politicians to trot out tired old buzz words like the "Americanization" of health care. But I didn't expect it from the Tories.

Maybe it's just part of the identity crisis they're going through.

The issue of whether patients should be allowed to pay directly for diagnostic scans will eventually be before government.

Premier Gary Doer and his cabinet will have to decide at some point whether they're going to accept this or not.

When patients are forced to wait 12 to 16 weeks for an MRI in the government monopoly system, isn't it time to break up that monopoly?

Government can, and should, continue to cover MRIs for whoever needs them under the province's health insurance system.

But they should also allow people to use their own money to buy the scans directly if they choose.

You would think in a free and democratic society that government wouldn't deprive people of that choice.

This one could be a big battle, folks.

Reach Tom at 632-2742 or by e-mail at tbrodbeck@wpgsun.com.

Special rules for the special people

"Health-care hypocrisy



Why is Prime Minister Paul Martin silent on the growing moves to privatize health care in Quebec, which even his own party in that province now supports?
Quebec already has more private medical clinics than any other province in Canada -- including Martin's favourite whipping boy when it comes to medicare, Alberta.
Martin can't plead ignorance about the huge number of private clinics in Quebec. His own doctor runs one.
Last weekend, the Quebec wing of the federal Liberal party endorsed a resolution calling for the expansion of private health care in that province as a way of combating unacceptably long waiting lists for medical treatment. "

Saturday, November 12, 2005

winnipegsun.com - Editorial - This is dead wrong

In Holland, where euthanasia has been practised since the 1980s and legalized in 2002 and where thousands of ill or infirm men and women have been put to death -- many without their consent -- the Dutch government is now going to expand its euthanasia policy to allow doctors to kill not only supposedly terminally ill newborn babies, but children with mild deformities such as spina bifida, cerebral palsy and symptoms of possible retardation.

Though the Liberals plan to oppose the Bloc Quebecois bill -- as will the Conservatives -- it has apparently spurred Cotler to ponder whether prohibitions in the Criminal Code against euthanasia are "in step" with the times.

Cotler plans to look at "what is being done" in other countries and see if his Liberal government can come up with "the kind of law that might enjoy a consensus."

How fittingly macabre -- a bill about death that people can live with.

This bill -- and any future move towards euthanasia -- must be killed.

Friday, November 11, 2005

Doctors Wielding Data

Doctors Wielding Data: "Doctors Wielding Data
Helping patients and cutting costs

If you told most people when they walked into a hospital that the care they were going to get would be as strictly regimented as production in a factory, they'd probably turn around and walk out the door. Americans tend to think quality medicine means customized medicine. For care to be good, it has to be tailored just for them. "

Thursday, November 10, 2005

No consequences for deadly care

winnipegsun.com - Manitoba - Hospital admits mistakes made

winnipegsun.com - Manitoba - Hospital admits mistakes made: "We need to have a health-care system that is held accountable,' said Gerrard, adding the bill would ensure measurable outcomes are in place and agreed-upon recommendations are implemented.
Another bereaved daughter was in the legislature gallery yesterday afternoon, also asking for accountability from the health minister.
Mimi Raglan's mom -- Frances Raglan -- was mistreated at Riverview Health Centre and died after being discharged in October 2001.
'It's outrageous there has been no apology to us. My mother was clearly put on the wrong treatment plan,' said Raglan.
Health Minister Tim Sale acknowledged the error and apologized for the family's grief but wouldn't commit to remedial action. "

Wednesday, November 02, 2005

Relieving The Pressure

So much for health choice and more money is not the answer- it is broken lets fix it. Article from the Frontier centre make good sense QJ


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


In September 1997, a new health clinic opened in Grafton, North Dakota. It offers highly technical services such as CT scans, magnetic resonance imaging, and ultrasounds.

Grafton, a sleepy farm town, population 5,000, has little need for the well-equipped clinic, called DMS Imaging. But the hamlet lies just 100 miles from the Manitoba border. Early last summer, the clinic's founders conducted market research in our province to gauge the demand for services. According to one of the principals, "We felt there was a need but we weren't really sure what to expect."

Since "non-urgent" waiting lists for such marvels in our country are long and arguably dangerous -- four to five months for a MRI, six months for a CT scan, and eight months to a year for an ultrasound -- it is no surprise that the clinic was constructed quickly. On some days its customers are all from Manitoba. These people know that early detection of cancerous tumours means a much higher survival rate. Their choice is bleak, to wait for a "free" service and take a huge risk, or to head for the border.

What would happen if the clinic were built closer to its target patients, i.e. right in Canada? Six eye clinics and the Pan Am Sports Medicine Centre in Winnipeg now offer service for fees. But such arrangements break the law, specifically the Canada Health Act. The federal government dings the province of Manitoba $49,000 a month in fines for allowing the infractions to continue, about $1.2 million over the last two years. The Grafton clinic would never be built in Canada because it contravenes a silly statute.

Half a million dollars a year in our province's healthcare budget therefore buys nothing except relief from bean counters in Ottawa. And that's the least of it. Thirty years of central planning in medicine has created enormous distortions in the allocation of resources.

If you live in Winnipeg and your kidneys have failed, you may find yourself in a taxi heading to Morden, where a dialysis machine is running six days a week. The ride costs $350 return, and each patient has to make the trip three times a week. But Manitoba Health picks up the tab, because it falls within the complex and arcane list of rules devised by enforcers of the law.

If the Canada Health Act allowed citizens to choose and pay for homegrown alternatives, the construction of the Grafton clinic, the purchase of its equipment, and the tax revenues generated from its income would have stayed here. At no cost to the public purse.

Think of the system as an enormous pressure cooker. We've set up an unsustainable combination in our officious healthcare kitchen - zero prices, which encourage unlimited demand, and constant centralization in decision-making, which means response to the demand is further and further removed from the public need. The Grafton clinic creates the tiny vent at the top, which prevents the whole stew from blowing up.

We created this pressure cooker out of good intentions because we wanted equity in our healthcare system. We wanted nobody to be denied medical service because they lacked the means to pay for it. But a sour dose of unintended consequences has been the outcome. Now everybody waits for service, and only those with healthy bank balances get quick access. Those who can afford to travel and pay the fees to foreign clinics.

It's a public policy disaster that makes last year's flood of the century look cheap in comparison. It will never work.

We all lose because Canada's recipe for healthcare was long on good intentions but ultimately impractical. It's time to add a few more ingredients.

Saturday, October 29, 2005

Ontario Wait Times Strategy : Introduction

see how long it takes for you to get critical health service . The waiting list web site is finally up and running. Check it out and find out how your money is being spent.

http://www.health.gov.on.ca/transformation/wait_times/wait_mn.html#

Tuesday, October 11, 2005

winnipegsun.com - Canada - Project fizzles

What a bad use of public funds - would you write a letter for 833.33. Sure if you got the money and not the beaureucracy

winnipegsun.com - Canada - Project fizzles: "OTTAWA -- A Health Canada pilot project launched seven months ago that urged patients and consumers to give input to the department on drug safety yielded only 24 letters, Sun Media has learned. "

National Post

National Post: "These little hookworms want to suck your blood
Doctor's orders!

Tom Spears
CanWest News Service


Tuesday, October 11, 2005








First British doctors reintroduced live maggots to clear away infected flesh (a last resort when antibiotics fail). Now they are testing intestinal, bloodsucking hookworms to fight asthma.
These are ugly little parasites that latch on to the inner wall of the intestine and feed on human blood."

National Post Tech makes a difference

National Post: "Why relief agencies love the Internet
It has created a young & generous generation

Siri Agrell
National Post


October 11, 2005








The greatest friend to international relief efforts this year is an online advancement known as PayPal."

Thursday, September 29, 2005

Is there a future for our status quo?

News | canada.com network: "Private health care growing, study finds

Tom Blackwell
National Post


Thursday, September 29, 2005


As debate swirls about the role of private medicine in Canada, the private sector already covers a bigger chunk of health care costs here than in many Western nations -- and its share is growing, a new report released yesterday reveals.
About 70% of Canada's $130-billion health tab is covered by governments, compared with 83% in Britain, 76% in France and 78% in Germany, according to the Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI) review."

Monday, September 26, 2005

winnipegsun.com - Canada - Doctors support wait-time travel

CHARLOTTETOWN -- The president of the Canadian Medical Association is continuing her organization's call for a government-funded program that would allow patients to travel to other regions if wait times were too long at home.

The idea was first floated last year and renewed in the release of a report in August by the Wait Time Alliance, a coalition of groups including the CMA.

'System at a crossroads'

The proposed program, dubbed the Health Access Fund, would allow patients to travel for services when a set of maximum wait times are exceeded.

"Our system is at a crossroads and needs immediate attention," Dr. Ruth Collins-Nakai told the Medical Society of P.E.I.'s annual meeting in Charlottetown this weekend.



Thursday, September 01, 2005

winnipegsun.com - Editorial - Remove the blindfold

The phrase "Justice is blind" isn't supposed to refer to the justice minister -- but in Irwin Cotler's case, we fear it fits all too well.
Cotler, Prime Minister Paul Martin's go-to guy for all things law-related, visited Toronto this week for what was supposed to be a first-hand look at that city's gun-violence problem. Yet apparently he managed not to see it.

Even as Toronto Mayor David Miller stressed to Cotler the need for our revolving-door justice system to stop being so lenient on gun-toting gangsters, the Liberal minister clung to his mantra that tougher sentences aren't the answer.

He insisted the four-year minimum sentence for gun crimes already on the books is more than tough enough.

But he failed to acknowledge the real problem -- that judges rarely, if ever, impose such sentences. So what good are they?


DVD PlayersiPods & Accessories



"The Supreme Court has already said that it appears four years is the maximum for a mandatory minimum," he told reporters, sounding like the law professor he is.

Rather than face the reality of an ineffectual justice system that releases suspects on bail often the day after they are arrested in possession of loaded handguns, Cotler focused on things like "diversion" programs to help accused youths get counselling and jobs and stay out of jail. The feds may help fund more of them, he said.

A well-intentioned idea, we're sure (and a typical Liberal approach to crime), but it does absolutely nothing for Torontonians right now who are being terrorized by duelling gangs and random gunfire in their neighbourhoods. How can Cotler not see this?

The problem is not, repeat not, that we are sending too many young people to jail who don't belong there (heaven forbid). The problem is that judges are not locking up enough dangerous criminals!

The 20-something gangsters shooting each other and innocent bystanders grew up laughing at flaccid laws that coddled them as youths and shrug as our courts fail to deliver on so-called tough sentences.

They need to be taken off the streets, period. Only then will more witnesses feel safe enough to come forward.

No doubt some kids could be saved from a life of crime by the type of programs Cotler touts. But not if they get shot first.

He needs to get rid of the Liberal blindfold -- better yet, Canadian voters need to get rid of him.

Thursday, August 25, 2005

Osprey Media Group Inc. - Brantford Expositor

Osprey Media Group Inc. - Brantford Expositor: "�We have no openness, no transparency,� Powell said. �That�s why we have the problems we have today.

�What happened to democracy? We have thousands of people and the board is not listening.�

Powell said Watch Action has the best interests of the Paris community at heart in trying to keep in-patient beds and palliative care at the Willett. "

Tuesday, August 23, 2005

winnipegsun.com - Editorial - Starved for leadership

What can we say as we survey the political landscape? Canadian voters are a perplexed bunch, and who can blame them? They look at our prime minister and see a man who has trouble sticking to the truth, doesn't have a firm grasp on how to run the country and has considerable difficulty keeping his public and private lives separate.

And yet should another election be called anytime soon, they'd be willing to turn a blind eye to all the shortcomings mentioned above. It's better, apparently, in their minds to vote for the blundering opportunist you know than to take a chance on the alternative.

Sunday, August 21, 2005

winnipegsun.com - Editorial - Patients should have rights

winnipegsun.com - Editorial - Patients should have rights: "Well, the doctors are in a mood to fight. One doctor at the conference summed it up quite well: 'Forgive us for being cynical about the government fixing the system. They've had 30 years to do that.' "

Thursday, July 21, 2005

MRI needed for Brantford - the citizen's initiative

Osprey Media Group Inc. - Brantford Expositor: "Family of Sam Rizzo raising funds for MRI

By Susan Gamble
Local News - Thursday, July 21, 2005 @ 01:00

The family of Sam Rizzo is determined to create a meaningful legacy to the businessman who championed city causes.

Rizzo, who died one year ago next week, suffered through almost a year of esophageal cancer that required a number of magnetic resonance imaging scans or MRIs.

Now, his children want to ensure that other families don�t have to endure the difficult trips to Hamilton, London or even Buffalo to get MRIs.

The Rizzos have organized the Sam Rizzo 2005 Memorial Gala, an invitation-only, $150-a-ticket event at the Brantford Golf and Country Club to raise money for an MRI machine at Brantford General Hospital.

�You don�t realize what you need until you actually need it,� said Rizzo�s daughter, Michelle Fergus.

�When you have to watch a loved one as sick as our father was, you�d do anything to help them and, because of our loss, we don�t want other families to go through what we did."

Wednesday, July 20, 2005

Hamilton

Hamilton: "The cash is part of the government's $1.9-billion overall investment in the home care and community services sector this year.
By helping seniors and others receive greater care in their home and communities, the government can relieve stress placed on hospitals and long-term facilities where treatment is more expensive, Health Minister George Smitherman said Tuesday. "

Monday, July 18, 2005

Macleans - Breaking the health taboo

Sympatico / MSN - Partner content
Breaking the taboo

A landmark Supreme Court ruling challenges Canada's long-held health care assumptions

JOHN GEDDES

The Supreme Court of Canada just wasn't buying the familiar old case in favour of a public health care monopoly. In rulings that stunned Canadian politicians last week, judges on the top court looked hard at some well-worn arguments against allowing private care -- and tore that threadbare thinking apart. In key passages, the outrage of some judges seemed to be showing through their cool, deliberate prose, as they described how intolerably long waiting times for public treatment put individual Canadians through pain and psychological torment, or even allowed them to die because their names fell too far down some specialist's list. "Delays in the public system are widespread and have serious, sometimes grave, consequences," wrote Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin and Justice John Major. "Inevitably where patients have life-threatening conditions, some will die because of undue delay in awaiting surgery."

Saturday, July 16, 2005

Hamilton Defends private clinic

Hamilton: "'There's no violation of any (rules); we're offering a service that is in keeping with the delivery of health-care services outside of a hospital,' Anglin said Friday.
'This is something that's complementary to the public system. We're not competing in any way with the public system.'
The Provis Clinic, set to open in mid-August, will offer cancer patients access to expensive, cutting-edge cancer medications that are approved by Health Canada but not yet covered by Ontario's health plan. Patients would have to be referred to the clinic by their oncologist.
Health Minister George Smitherman said earlier this week he doesn't have enough information about the clinic yet to judge whether it might contravene any of Ontario's health laws.
But Smitherman said he doesn't want the result to be 'pocketbook medicine,' where patients pay for faster access and for services already covered by the health system. "

Friday, July 15, 2005

Smitherman defends private clinic?

Hamilton: "Ontario's drug plan covers more than 3,400 treatments and the province in spending about $3 billion a year on drugs, up from $1 billion only a few years ago, with $319 million more added to the budget this year, he noted.
Smitherman said the province doesn't yet have enough information about the clinic to know whether it might contravene any of Ontario's health laws.
Although private clinics are allowed to offer drugs not covered by the province, an issue can arise when services and consultations associated with getting the drugs are otherwise covered under the provincial health plan, he added. "

Osprey Media Group Inc. - Haldimand Review

Osprey Media Group Inc. - Haldimand Review: "Hospital ready to roll with recommendations "

Wednesday, July 13, 2005

Medical Bills Go Public

Medical Bills Go Public

CANOE -- CNEWS - Canada: Alberta allows health upgrades

CANOE -- CNEWS - Canada: Alberta allows health upgrades: "Alberta allows health upgrades

By BILL GRAVELAND





Alberta Premier Ralph Klein. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)
CALGARY (CP) - Alberta Premier Ralph Klein opened the door Tuesday to Cadillac health care for those willing to pay, but denied claims he has put the province on the road to a two-tiered system. "

Tuesday, July 12, 2005

Winnipeg Sun: NEWS - Feds back delay in ending ban on private medicare

Winnipeg Sun: NEWS - Feds back delay in ending ban on private medicare: "Feds back delay in ending ban on private medicare



By CP




OTTAWA -- The federal government has joined Quebec to ask for an 18-month stay in a Supreme Court judgment striking down a ban on private health insurance in the province.
But a group of private medical clinics in British Columbia say the ban should be lifted immediately, suggesting Quebecers and perhaps all Canadians could be seriously harmed by a delay.
'APPROPRIATE SOLUTION' "

Monday, July 04, 2005

National post - premiiers competing for business

Hamilton: "HOSPITAL BATTLE: Premier Dalton McGuinty talks with Shriner members John Ball and Eddie Elcombe of Toronto. A bitter turf battle over an $85 million Canadian children's hospital is brewing at this year's Shriners convention"

Sunday, July 03, 2005

Winnipeg Sun Editorial: Medicare monopoly on the ropes

No more excuses on this vital issue QJ
Winnipeg Sun Editorial: Medicare monopoly on the ropes: "Medicare monopoly on the ropes
The great thing about the recent Supreme Court of Canada ruling striking down Quebec's laws banning private medical insurance, is how it has put the defenders of the unacceptable status quo in medicare completely on the defensive. "

Thursday, June 30, 2005

FCPP Publications :: Supreme Court Strikes Down Public Foodcare

Humour and satire with a bit - thank god for section 7 . Line ups changed the system of government in the USSR -why not here-chuckle. QJ

FCPP Publications :: Supreme Court Strikes Down Public Foodcare: "Supreme Court Strikes Down Public Foodcare

Mark Milke, Times Colonist (Victoria), Page: A6, June 20, 2005





In a landmark decision, the Supreme Court has ruled that a law that mandated most food purchases be restricted to government stores violated the Quebec Charter of Rights. In a narrow 4-3 split, the court ruled that the Quebec prohibition on private spending on most grocery items was unconstitutional.
'The evidence in this case shows that delays in the public provision of food are widespread, and that, in some serious cases, consumers die as a result of waiting lists for unique but rarely available items,' wrote Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin. She noted examples of cases in which rare foods, necessary for those with certain intolerances, were unavailable in the public system and as such negatively affected the health of many Canadians. "

Tuesday, June 28, 2005

National Post Canada Adrift -what to do

Common sense - strategic or tactical government? PR
National Post: "THE BIG SIX
The six elements the Canadian Council of Chief Executives believe are needed to improve Canada's standing in the world are:
GOOD GOVERNANCE Implement public-sector reforms that strengthen transparency and accountability. Public officials should be required to do what is required of corporate officers -- sign off on financial statements to verify that everything contained in the document is true. Moreover, there is a need to end the so-called one-off financial deals with provinces, which have boosted public spending while, at the same time, reduced taxpayer accountability. There also needs to be a review of which level of government is best suited to deliver certain services.
PUBLIC SERVICE & INFRASTRUCTURE Governments should ensure their activities contribute to future economic growth, rather than redistributing wealth for current consumption. Also, they should explore partnerships with the private sector in terms of delivering services -- if the joint venture makes economic sense.
TAXATION & REGULATION There is a need to review the tax regime, given that Canada is among the highest in terms of taxes on business investments. Other countries that compete with Canada are moving to higher consumption taxes (like the GST) and lower corporate and personal tax rates.
PRODUCTIVITY Need to review the country's restrictions on foreign investment, among the most stringent of the industrialized world. Such restrictions reduce competition and the need for domestic companies to innovate. Also, need to eliminate regulatory overlap, such as the need for 13 securities regulators as opposed to one national watchdog.
EXPERTISE Canada needs to increase the pace of commercialization, or the ability to bring technology developed as the result of research to the commercial market. Th"

Osprey Media Group Inc. - Dunnville Chronicle

How to get medical services -buy them ? -Communities are open to new options. QJ

Osprey Media Group Inc. - Dunnville Chronicle: "A 14000 square foot clinic is proposed by the Dunnville hospital board. The Dunnville hospital foundation has already accumulated $750,000 toward the project. "

Monday, June 27, 2005

National Post

National Post: "In an interview, Dr. Schumacher stressed the CMA strongly supports the publicly funded system, but said it also has a responsibility to examine all options -- including privatization -- to strengthen the entire health system for patients.
He said the recent Supreme Court of Canada ruling that allows patients to purchase private insurance so they can get speedier private medical care has increased the need for such a debate.
''Doctors have a role in this debate. They maybe even have a leadership role because we're probably going to be out first in an organized fashion to talk about it.'"

Sunday, June 26, 2005

Hamilton

Hamilton: "Kim Craitor, Liberal MPP for Niagara Falls, said it's important for the government to listen to what the people want.
'The government hasn't indicated they're going into privatization,' he said. 'But I think it's still important that the government hears what people believe and what they're concerned with when it comes to hospitals.'
In May, the Ontario government introduced a five-year infrastructure plan that included private financing of public infrastructure, including up to 23 new hospitals. "

Wednesday, June 22, 2005

Longer waits in private system: Dosanjh

This from the people who have mismanged our health system for too long. Why not see if this is correct by testing the customer choice option. Q-J . Why do we have to be like Albania and Cuba - why the fear?

News | canada.com network

Hamilton

Hamilton: "The funding is tailored for each hospital according to its needs and specialties, and will account for growth in demand for certain procedures and services, Smitherman said.
It will also be flexible to accommodate the government goals of reducing wait times for MRI exams and hip and knee joint replacement surgeries, he added. "

Breaking the taboo

Sympatico / MSN - Partner content

That cry of denial rang especially hollow on the day the court delivered its much more rigorous reasoning. Justice Deschamps left little doubt Martin's claim that Canada will not have a two-tier system is nonsense -- if only because multiple tiers already exist. Most provinces, she said, allow their citizens some access to private care, with important conditions. Quebec, Alberta, British Columbia and Prince Edward Island all allow doctors to set their fees and function outside medicare, but don't permit private insurance to cover any services offered under the public plan. Ontario and Manitoba also outlaw private insurance, but will refund amounts paid by patients to doctors who opt out of the public plan. Nova Scotia allows private insurance for private services.

Monday, June 13, 2005

News | canada.com network

News | canada.com network: "Despite talk of accountability, Ottawa and the provinces haven't even agreed on how to measure waiting lists. They are trying to work out 'benchmarks' but currently there's no way to know whether wait times are being reduced. "

Saturday, June 11, 2005

Winnipeg Sun: NEWS - Liberals claim effort on health status quo

Winnipeg Sun: NEWS - Liberals claim effort on health status quo: "MacKay said all Canadians will seek alternatives to a failing public system.
'If they are in a state of health where they may die or they may be suffering, I think that is consistent with what the Supreme Court has said, that they should have that option,' he said. 'And if that means going to the United States, if it means going to a private health care clinic to avoid death, that's what Canadians are going to do. "

Hamilton

Hamilton: "McGuinty won't speculate on medicare
"

Friday, June 10, 2005

Winnipeg Sun: NEWS - Ruling a dose of logic for medicare debate

Winnipeg Sun: NEWS - Ruling a dose of logic for medicare debate: "Ruling a dose of logic for medicare debate"

Winnipeg Sun: NEWS - Prognosis: two-tier

Winnipeg Sun: NEWS - Prognosis: two-tier

Winnipeg Sun Editorial: Court guts medicare myths

Winnipeg Sun Editorial: Court guts medicare myths

National Post Vindication by the Supreme Court of Canada for Canadians

National Post: "''Access to a waiting list is not access to health care,'' Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin and Justices Jack Major and Michel Bastarache wrote in one of the two majority opinions.
''There is unchallenged evidence that in some serious cases patients die as a result of waiting lists for public health care.''
Legal experts said the high court's voluminous, complex 4-3 ruling yesterday opens the courtroom door to a flood of legal challenges to government restrictions in all provinces that outlaw private health care in various ways, and to the immediate purchase and sale of private medical services and insurance in Quebec.
''It fundamentally reshapes the landscape of medicare in Canada by forcing governments either to guarantee timely care, or if they are not prepared to do so, they must allow Canadians to spend their own money to take care of themselves when they are sick,'' said Osgoode Hall law dean Patrick Monahan, who represented an intervener in the case, Senator Michael Kirby, chairman of a Senate committee that studied medicare."

Wednesday, June 08, 2005

National Post Medicare future at stake

National Post: "OTTAWA - The Supreme Court of Canada will render judgment tomorrow in a case that could have far-reaching implications for the future of medicare.
At the heart of the controversial case -- heard in court one year ago -- is whether it is unconstitutional to outlaw private health care for patients who can pay.
A Montreal doctor and a patient, who waited almost a year for a hip replacement, argued that waiting lists in the publicly funded system have become so long, they violate the Charter of Rights' guarantee to life, liberty and security of the person."

Thursday, June 02, 2005

Osprey Media Group Inc. - Brantford Expositor

Thats a lot of Taxes -$10000 a month

Osprey Media Group Inc. - Brantford Expositor: "Hotel deal for downtown scuttled by lack of city funding: developer
Expositor Staff

By Michelle Ruby
Local News - Thursday, June 02, 2005 @ 01:00 "

Thursday, May 19, 2005

Winnipeg Sun Letters: Letters

Winnipeg Sun Letters: Letters: "Winning by treachery
Canada now has its very own Benedict Arnold in Belinda Stronach.
Stephen Harper is right when he says that this has nothing to do with principles. She walked right into a high-profile cabinet position, in spite of her relative inexperience. Essentially, she was bought off. She's a traitor to the fight against corruption in Canada and, ironically enough, she's been put in charge of sorting through the Gomery commission's findings when they are released.
Reg Alcock should be eating his words, since he claimed that Conservatives were not being enticed to cross the floor with plum positions in the Liberal party. He has shown himself either comically ignorant or a bald-faced liar. Knowing the Liberals, I'd say the latter is true. Here's hoping electoral justice is served on him as well.
Liberals have indeed been actively enticing Conservative party members in yet another underhanded attempt to manipulate the balance of power in their favour. They'll win through all this treachery and then proudly proclaim that this was 'what Canadians wanted.' If this rape of democracy is what Canadians want, then I'm on the side of western separation.
Kevin Ranville
Winnipeg "

Wednesday, May 18, 2005

Winnipeg Sun: NEWS - Grit gives refreshing health-care reality

Winnipeg Sun: NEWS - Grit gives refreshing health-care reality: "Kirby, chairman of a 2002 Senate report on reforming health care, said what really ails Canada's medicare system is that it operates as a monopoly, producing inefficient and over-priced patient services.
His prescription for change is for procedures such as hip replacements and cataract surgeries to be tendered out to a marketplace of health-care providers, usually free-standing clinics that offer greater 'productivity' than large, bureaucratic-heavy hospitals. "

Saturday, May 07, 2005

National Post Medical Vacations

Why stand in line -with all the alternatives that are out there? OJ

National Post: "NATIONAL POST
Latest News


Getting a knee up
Where can you get a luxurious beach holiday and a surgical procedure all for under $20,000? India"

Wednesday, April 27, 2005

Winnipeg Sun: NEWS - 'Ideological' roadblock

We wanted the government to get off its rear end and talk to us," Copeman told The Sun yesterday. "We have some very honest concerns about the waiting lists here. We thought this would be one way to help them clear away any ideological differences."
Winnipeg Sun: NEWS - 'Ideological' roadblock: "'Ideological' roadblock"

Tuesday, April 26, 2005

National Post The health Care debate

Is Canada a democracy? If the 53% majority want private care options why are they not allowed to have them? The Noblese oblige public health care systemor monopoly gas got to learn how to compete. Q-J
National Post: "In the new Leger Marketing poll, the national average was 52% in favour of allowing 'those who wish to pay for health care in the private sector to have speedier access to this type of care while still maintaining the current free and universal health care system.' Forty-two per cent were opposed, and 5% had no opinion"

Monday, April 25, 2005

CBS News | Vacation, Adventure And Surgery? | April 25, 2005�10:33:16

This is a very informed article from 60 minutes about medical tourism.
We started Q-jumpers to let people know about medical alternatives to the existing options -expensive, long waiting ques,less then stellar or excuse riddled service often faced by those that need help now. WE WILL HELP YOU -CONTACT US QJCBS News | Vacation, Adventure And Surgery? | April 25, 2005�10:33:16: "A growing number of tourists are doing just that: combining holidays with health care. And that�s because a growing number of countries are offering first-rate medical care at third-world prices. Many of these medical tourists can�t afford health care at home; the 40 million uninsured Americans, for example. Others are going for procedures not covered by their insurance: cosmetic surgery, infertility treatment.

And the hospitals in these faraway countries are glad to have these medical tourists. In fact, they are courting their business, trying to get more people to outsource their own health care. Correspondent Bob Simon reports."

Friday, April 22, 2005

Winnipeg Sun: NEWS - 'Seamless transition'

More on the state of caring for those in need -this time from Manitoba- So when is it going to stop - what happened to accountability for the tax dollars spent?Q-J
Winnipeg Sun: NEWS - 'Seamless transition': "'Other than embarrassment, there doesn't seem to be any retribution or punishment for their treatment of tax dollars intended for vulnerable persons,' he said. 'It would appear (the province) left far too much money on the table.'
Melnick conceded yesterday that a lengthy period had elapsed since her department was first made aware of Hydra House's financial improprieties. "

Thursday, April 21, 2005

Winnipeg Sun: NEWS - Facing the people

Nothing wrong in listening to what the PM has to say . It should be interesting ! PR
Winnipeg Sun: NEWS - Facing the people: "Facing the people



By Sun Media"

Hamilton Keep Gov't institution open?

What do you think - are you getting value for your money ? I bet that If you gave the money to the family members you would see better results. It is hard to believe that the cost of care for one resident is higher then the average income of four families. It is frightening that more money is needed to maintain this infrastructure. Be creative -reduce the restrictions to care -there are lots of alternatives . Break the monopoly of care -including the sister organizations-the Community living franchises - $140,000 per resident is obscene. QJ

Hamilton: "Sayer said it costs $103,000 per year for a person to live at Huronia, and noted group homes for the disabled cannot care for residents without more funding. "

Sunday, April 17, 2005

Canada far behind in Medical Services

So you think we have the best medical system in the world. Why not read the facts and be informed . It is true that we have the most expensive medical system -but certainly not the best . We are getting very poor value for the money that we spend.

It is not more money -it is a better system that we really need, A new system of competitive care that is permitted to respond to patients and allow practitioners to do their job without the existing top heavy administration and protectionist overregulation that prevails today Q-J

Saturday, April 16, 2005

Winnipeg Sun Editorial: Too hot to handle( Health)

One is starting to get the feeling that the term Ministry of Health is a misnomer. The true label should be the Ministry of Anti-Health and Misinformation. Q-J
Winnipeg Sun Editorial: Too hot to handle: "Far from advocating the death of medicare, they sensibly point out that private-sector choices are available in every other country that offers universal health care -- including socialistic ones like Sweden and France.
What's more, while Canada spends more per capita than nearly every other comparable country on health, it lags far behind in every major ranking of quality of care -- from availability of doctors and MRIs to mortality rates. "

Osprey Media Group Inc. - Brantford Expositor City desparate for a MRI

This is a good review of a public need that is not being met by the current Health administration. The truth and reality is informative.The facts are that this necessary service was easy to deliver and could have been in place last year. A proposal and plan was presented to the Ministry of Health and died a slow amd agonizing death. The report commissioned by a government representative is a worthwhile and enlightening read ,could still be actioned without fuss and the numerous public grovelling pleas to the entrenched Ministry representatives. Ask the MPP D. Levac for the December 2004- Hollecrest report to shed some light on this murky but critical health issue in the southern health catchment basin . Q.J
Osprey Media Group Inc. - Brantford Expositor: "City desperate for MRI

By Susan Gamble
Local News - Saturday, April 16, 2005 @ 01:00 "

Friday, April 15, 2005

BUSINESS WIRE: The Global Leader in News Distribution a solution?

BUSINESS WIRE: The Global Leader in News Distribution: "According to a recent study (Arch Neurol 2003; 60: 1119-1122), there are 4.5 million people with Alzheimer's disease in the United States alone; by 2050 this number is projected to increase almost three times to 13.2 million. Worldwide estimates of the current number of people with Alzheimer's disease range from 15 to 20 million. The annual national direct and indirect costs of caring for Alzheimer patients in the U.S. alone is estimated at $100 billion. The human toll on patients, families and caregivers is incalculable. "

Thursday, April 14, 2005

BUSINESS WIRE: New record keeping in Europe

BUSINESS WIRE: The Global Leader in News Distribution: "VisualMED and Partners Set to Begin Installing Pilot Hospitals

MONTREAL--(BUSINESS WIRE)--April 13, 2005--VisualMED Clinical Solutions Corp. (NASDAQ: VMCS)(OTCBB: VMCS)


France Steps Up Adoption of Electronic Patient Record
Brussels Report Deplores Low IT Spending in European Hospitals and Calls for Reforms "

Tuesday, April 12, 2005

Sympatico / MSN : News : CTV.ca 25% of Canadians die of cancer

Sympatico / MSN : News : CTV.ca: "Aging population to set off cancer crisis
CTV.ca News Staff
While survival rates for many major cancers continue to improve, Canada's aging baby-boomers and the growing population are creating a cancer crisis, according to the Canadian Cancer Society.
In its 2005 cancer statistics, released Tuesday, the Canadian Cancer Society projects that there will be 149,000 new cases of cancer diagnosed this year and 69,500 people will died of the disease in 2005. That is 3,500 more new cases and 1,200 deaths over last year."

Report slams ONt.Health system

Hamilton

Saturday, April 09, 2005

Boston.com / Business / Study urges steps to fast-track new diabetes monitor

Boston.com / Business / Study urges steps to fast-track new diabetes monitor: "Study urges steps to fast-track new diabetes monitor
By Jeffrey Krasner, Globe Staff | March 25, 2005
Devices to continuously monitor the blood-sugar levels of diabetes patients are still largely in research labs, but the New England Healthcare Institute says it's high time to figure out how to get the machines approved by regulators and paid for by insurance companies."