Canada's Crumbling Medicare System

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Re: Canada's Crumbling Medicare System

Postby styky » 08/ 18/ 11 5:08 pm

Well that's one way of thinning out the population. Just stop making the drugs that save them. :ohwell:



Chemo drug shortages possible, hospitals warned
CBC News
Posted: Aug 18, 2011 4:50 PM ET
Last Updated: Aug 18, 2011 5:11 PM ET
Some drugs used to treat cancer, infections and other ailments in hospitals could be in short supply, Health Canada says.

Health Canada sent letters to chiefs of medical staff, dated Wednesday, to notify them of a potential shortage of drugs produced by Ben Venue Laboratories of Bedford, Ohio, which the department calls a large contract manufacturer of "injectable and inhalational sterile drug products."

The list includes 17 drugs used to treat leukemia, breast and ovarian cancer and other tumours and sarcomas. Some are radioisotopes used in nuclear medicine tests such as heart stress tests, while others are antibiotics given by injection to treat serious infections in hospital...................http://www.cbc.ca/news/health/story/201 ... anada.html
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Re: Canada's Crumbling Medicare System

Postby styky » 08/ 20/ 11 3:53 pm

Noralou Roos and Raisa Deber: The case against health-care user fees

National Post Aug 17, 2011 – 7:00 AM ET | Last Updated: Aug 16, 2011 5:13 PM ET

By Noralou Roos and Raisa Deber

Here it comes again — an idea that surfaces regularly in Canadian health-care debates and seems to hold sway with those who advocate common-sense principles: user fees.

Some people think that charging patients when they use the health system would help control health-care costs, ensure that people are getting the care they need and are not overusing the system. Others believe that user fees would bring in much-needed revenue.

Unfortunately, the evidence doesn’t support the aspirations. Research to date suggests two good reasons why patient-financed health care doesn’t make sense.

First, user fees discourage patients from seeking both unnecessary and necessary care. This is often penny wise and pound foolish.

While, in theory, user fees might deter patients from seeking medical care they don’t need, that theory would require average citizens to be accurate judges of their health and any unusual symptoms — in short, to be medical experts. Common sense, and sound research, would suggest this is not the case. One study published in the New England Journal of Medicine involving fairly healthy adults showed that user fees led to a 20% increase in risk of death for people with high blood pressure because people were less likely to see a doctor and get their blood pressure under control.

The same thing happened in Canada in 1996, when Quebec began requiring patients to pay part of the cost of all drugs purchased. As a result, according to a study in the Journal of the American Medical Association, patients reduced their use of less essential drugs and essential drugs, with negative effects on their health … all of which were expensive for the health-care system to respond to.

User fees mean we have to decide whether or not symptoms warrant medical attention. Do we really want parents to make the decision about whether to take their child to the doctor on the basis of whether the user fee will leave enough money to pay the rent? After all, the onset of a potentially fatal case of meningitis appears at first to be much like the ordinary flu.

Which leads to the second finding.

Health care financed by patients does not save money. It transfers costs from third-party payers to patients, but the total cost is often higher. While user fees sometimes discourage sick people from filling hospital beds or booking appointments with a medical professional, these freed-up resources are not closed down. Instead, they often end up providing people who can more easily afford the user fees care they may not need. User fees may — ironically — encourage unnecessary or marginally useful care in order to make sure physicians and hospital beds stay occupied.

Most people don’t want a heart transplant or a hip replaced just because it won’t cost them anything the day of the operation. Doctors, not patients, determine who gets access to most health-care treatments. So what do user fees really discourage? They discourage the frugal and the poor from getting the care they really need.

One type of user fee that might make sense was recently proposed in Europe: add user fees to low-value services and eliminate them from high-value services. This approach has never been tried, and it would be a complicated process determining which services would require a fee and which would not. But it is an idea worth studying.

In the meantime, the scientific evidence supporting publicly financed care is long and strong. So why do discredited ideas like user fees keep coming back?

National Post

Noralou Roos is professor of the faculty of medicine at the University of Manitoba and the co-founder of EvidenceNetwork.ca. Raisa Deber is a professor of health policy, management and evaluation at the faculty of medicine, University of Toronto, and an expert advisor with EvidenceNetwork.ca.
http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com/201 ... user-fees/
===================================

Today’s Letters: User fees mean less ‘abusers’


National Post Aug 20, 2011 – 8:30 AM ET | Last Updated: Aug 19, 2011 6:21 PM ET

Re: The Case Against User Fees, Noralou Roos And Raisa Deber, Aug. 17.
I would like to present two real-life experiences that, in my view, beg for the use of user fees.

When I was on the board of a small community hospital, our small ER was being used by some people as a bathroom medicine chest. Citizens were coming in for medication for hangovers and toothaches. People with very minor bumps and cuts were coming in for creams and bandages found in local drug stores. We then introduced a program where the users of our ER were required to pay $5 for service. The nurses were carefully briefed and told to turn no one away who did not have the money. Within a few days, the traffic in our ER for the things described above disappeared.

Last year, a friend who needed a CT scan was in a lot of discomfort, but was told that the waiting time was at least six months. He was put on the call list in case of a cancellation. Ten days later he came into the hospital for his scan, as the person with that appointment was a no-show. The technician said that this was common in a system that is supposedly booked to the maximum. I suggest that if clients had to post a fee, refundable if they keep their appointment, the public system we value would be more cost effective.
Eric Sykes, Richmond, B.C.

If it’s free, people abuse it — this is human nature. One example is “all-you-can-eat” buffets, where people go back for more and end up wasting food. In the days when you could still smoke in restaurants, more than once I saw people put out a cigarette by sticking it right in the middle of their second or third serving. I’m confident that a charge as low as 50 cents or $1 per additional serving would prevent this type of abuse.

As a family physician, I can attest to the abuse of medical services in our “all-you-can-get” primary care system. A small charge per visit would go a long way in discouraging repeat visits by abusers. And, I’m sure, would not leave “parents having to make a decision whether to take their child to the doctor on the basis of whether the user fee will leave enough money to pay the rent.” I agree that it wouldn’t help control health-care costs, but it would be a great way of decongesting doctors’ appointment books and waiting rooms, thereby facilitating access to care for people in need.
Dr. Christiane Dauphinais, Toronto.

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Re: Canada's Crumbling Medicare System

Postby styky » 08/ 22/ 11 11:22 am

Aglukkaq outlines fed strategy for renewed health accord
Updated: Mon Aug. 22 2011 07:38:35

The Canadian Press

ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq says Ottawa will work with the provinces and territories to renew the $41-billion health accord with emphasis on accountability and putting patients first.

A patient-centred approach with improved reporting will help transform the health-care system as the population ages, Aglukkaq told a meeting Monday of the Canadian Medical Association.

She stressed that governments and doctors have a leading role to play.

"Although we are still in our planning stages, I can tell you that we will be working collaboratively with the provinces and the territories to renew the accord," Aglukkaq said. "And there will be a clear emphasis on accountability.

"This way, Canadians will be able to know that we are achieving real results in improving the system."

New Democrat and Liberal health critics at the meeting swiftly pounced on her comments, saying Aglukkaq offered no detail on what accountability will mean. They also noted that the minister offered no timeline for when federal-provincial talks on a new health deal may begin.

The 10-year federal-provincial funding accord reached under former prime minister Paul Martin expires in 2014. Touted as a deal to transform health care, problems persist in a fractured, unwieldy system that has been criticized for a shortage of countrywide reporting and performance benchmarks. ............http://edmonton.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local ... montonHome
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Re: Canada's Crumbling Medicare System

Postby styky » 08/ 22/ 11 11:24 am

Ailing health-care system needs to be resuscitated

By Bruce Urquhart, Special to QMI Agency

Last Updated: August 22, 2011 9:38am

Recently a little boy almost died because an overworked doctor only glanced at the CT scan. In the few seconds given to the black-and-white image, the doctor had missed the tear that would have proved fatal.

Despite being in agony, this little boy was going to be sent home from the hospital. The doctor assured the little boy's frantic parents that nothing was seriously wrong. The crying, he said, just meant the boy was still upset by the fall from his push scooter.

But instead of meekly accepting the doctor's diagnosis of the injury, like most do, the boy's parents demanded their child receive treatment. Exasperated, the doctor referred the little boy and the CT scan to a colleague at another hospital.

The doctor at the second hospital took a long look at the same CT scan and saw the laceration in the liver that, untreated, would have killed the boy.

We've all heard similar stories of misdiagnoses, cancelled surgeries and botched treatments. We read headlines about emergency-room waits and nod in weary agreement.

So when the Canadian Medical Association (CMA) described our public health-care system as "broken" in a report released last week, no one was surprised. The Voices Into Action report, the result of comments from roughly

1,500 Canadians who attended nationwide town hall meetings and another 4,000 online participants, condemned the current system for marathon wait times, exorbitant drug costs and creating obstacles to needed medical services.

The CMA stated the "once-proud" system now fails those who are most at risk, including children and the elderly.

With the health-care system on the brink, the provincial and federal governments must do something substantive-- something that begins to reverse years of waste and political neglect.

And that political neglect is near the core of this. Everything--from private-sector delivery to different governance models-- needs to be on the table. With the current federal-provincial health-care agreement expiring in March 2014, the discussion needs to begin in earnest and without the political baggage or ineffectual promises that usually undermine any serious attempts at reform. The solutions need to be more than just dollars and worthless benchmarks.

Just ask the parents of that little boy.

http://www.lfpress.com/comment/editoria ... 84696.html
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Re: Canada's Crumbling Medicare System

Postby styky » 08/ 22/ 11 11:30 am

Canadians want health charter to guarantee quality and timeliness
ANDRÉ PICARD — PUBLIC HEALTH REPORTER
ST. JOHN’S
Published Sunday, Aug. 21, 2011 8:23PM EDT
Last updated Monday, Aug. 22, 2011 12:23AM EDT
The time has come for a “patient health charter” that clearly spells out the state’s obligation to deliver timely, quality health care – one with a complaint mechanism that provides redress when medicare fails to live up to expectations.

That is the message that emerges from a new public-opinion survey commissioned by the Canadian Medical Association.

“Canadians want … a system that revolves around the patient, rather than the other way around, and they favour practical steps that can move us forward in that direction,” said Jeff Turnbull, president of the CMA.

For example, 85 per cent of those polled said a patient health charter “should go beyond communicating patient rights and responsibilities to become a guarantee of service, providing patients with specific timelines and assurances of quality.”

Sholom Glouberman, president of the Patients’ Association of Canada, cautioned, however, that the idea of a patient charter has been around for a long time and it’s just a stop-gap measure. “Everyone who has been in the health system recognizes there needs to be change so anything concrete appeals to them,” he said........................http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/hea ... le2136635/
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Re: Canada's Crumbling Medicare System

Postby styky » 08/ 24/ 11 2:26 pm

Tasha Kheiriddin: Politicians should scrub up on health care


Tasha Kheiriddin Aug 24, 2011 – 2:15 PM ET | Last Updated: Aug 24, 2011 2:29 PM ET

The health-care debate should be about medicine, not our national identity.

The Canadian health-care system is in critical condition. Five million Canadians do not have access to a family doctor, one in 10 cannot afford their medications and the target for surgeries such as knee replacements stretches to a full year. That damning diagnosis was delivered Tuesday by Dr. Jeffrey Turnbull, the outgoing president of the Canadian Medical Association. In a speech to the CMA’s annual general council in St. John’s, Dr. Turnbull describes the situation as “unacceptable … this pillar of Canadian society is eroding.”

Dr. Turnbull is only telling Canadians what they already know. Who among us doesn’t have a personal anecdote of an endless emergency room wait, or the frustration at waiting months to see a specialist? Meanwhile, think-tanks churn out reports chronicling the decline of our system compared to that of other nations, where service is faster, cheaper, and more effective — while our provincial budgets swell with the ever-increasing cost of a broken system.

The day of Dr. Turnbull’s speech, the CMA also released an advisory report with a list of recommendations for change. New funding models top the list: “user fees, franchises and various insurance schemes are widely used elsewhere by governments across the political spectrum. These not only provide a portion of funding, they may help create the right incentives for a broader, more appropriate and more efficient system of supports.”

But instead of calling for government leadership, the report concludes that politicians cannot be expected to act because the situation has become “too toxic.” “Given entrenched beliefs, as well as the current fiscal challenges in Canada, the ability of governments to lead fundamental health-care reform may be seriously compromised.” The CMA implores its members, as well as citizens and other professionals, to work for change.

On this point, the CMA is dead wrong. It is the very toxicity of the problem that demands leadership from our elected officials. The public and the medical profession cannot allow politicians to abdicate their responsibility. Without fundamental political reforms, the system cannot be rehabilitated, no matter how many efforts made by well-meaning physicians and nurses. Legislative roadblocks to competition, the wellspring of efficiencies, must be removed — and the people with the power to do that are politicians...........http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com/201 ... alth-care/
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Re: Canada's Crumbling Medicare System

Postby styky » 08/ 26/ 11 2:16 pm

Cancer patient suing hospitals over alleged delays
Posted By: Shuyee Lee slee@astral.com · 8/25/2011 12:06:00 PM

A Terrebonne woman dying of uterine cancer is suing three local hospitals, accusing them of not diagnosing and treating her disease in time.

Nicole Valcourt went to hospital for stomach pains in October 2009 and was diagnosed with cancer two months later. The 55-year-old was treated and underwent surgery three months after that. Valcourt says when she first went to hospital in October 2009, her cancer was treatable and her chances for survival were good but it has now evolved into a terminal phase.

Valcourt says she was planning her retirement and looking forward to living out her golden years with her husband.

"They've just stolen the best years of my life," Valcourt told reporters.

Valcourt is suing the MUHC, the Centre de Santé et de services Dorval-Lachine-Lasalle, and Notre Dame Hospital of the CHUM for $670,000 alleging delays in diagnosing and treating her cancer.

"What happened with Madame Valcourt was not an isolated case," her lawyer Jean-Pierre Ménard told a news conference. He claims as many as 130 women with uterine cancer treated at the CHUM are in the same boat as her client.

They blame healthcare bureaucracy and mismanagement. They want the government to set up a national cancer program to avoid such delays. Ménard says the current efforts being undertaken by the Charest government to improve cancer care waiting lists are not enough.

"It is unacceptable that in Quebec every year we are losing an amount of people because of administrative consideration, because the system is not properly organized," Ménard said.

"It's not the resources that are lacking, it's the organization and the management."

Ménard says he's looking into similar cases and is not ruling out a class action lawsuit but he adds it's a complicated process.
http://www.cjad.com/CJADLocalNews/entry ... D=10282198
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Re: Canada's Crumbling Medicare System

Postby styky » 09/ 14/ 11 4:12 pm

Hospital horrors website set up

By TYLER KULA, QMI Agency
http://www.lfpress.com/news/london/2011 ... 83776.html
Last Updated: September 14, 2011 7:20am

SARNIA - A Sarnia woman fed up with treatment she's received at Bluewater Health in Sarnia has created a Facebook group to vent about the hospital's "horrors."

Sarnia Hospital Horrors had grown to 64 members by Monday, sharing stories of long waits, shabby treatment and pain.

"It's helped me know that I'm not alone in this, that other people are being treated like dirt too," said Betty Bourassa, 34, the group's founder.

Her husband Larry, 57, has been repeatedly ignored when he visits emergency for neuropathic pain in his legs, she said.

"They've been saying for years and years that there's nothing wrong with him," she said. "I understand that there's not much they could do to help, but at least they could try to control the pain for a little while so he could sleep."

She said she herself has been yelled at by triage staff while waiting, sick to her stomach, in the emergency department.

Others writing on the Facebook page tend to agree.

Barb Mertick wrote, "...husband went in three times and didn't get actual treatment until the third time going."

Another wrote: "I sat in the waiting room of the Sarnia emerge for over four hours. I was so sick, keeping nothing down ... there were only three people ahead of me when I asked a nurse if it would be much longer ... I was told it sucked to be me, I could wait; I was not a priority."

But not all comments on the site are entirely negative.

Jaime Ruzik said she visited the emergency department multiple times for bleeding from a C-section and was ignored by nurses. "But all in all, I do think we should be thankful for our healthcare," she said.

She was eventually admitted and treated kindly, she added.

Bluewater Health CEO and president Sue Denomy said normally 0.5% of the 70,000 people who visit Sarnia's emergency department per year call to complain.

"There are all kinds of folks that use social networking for many things and, as I understand it, health is the number one area of discussion," she said, citing a social media expert.

Bad days happen for patients and staff, she said, but hospital staff always strive for perfection.

"In terms of wait times we are very close to one of the best performers in the province," she said, adding there are initiatives to continue improvement, and the doctors are "top notch."

The Facebook group doesn't surprise her, she said, noting some complaints she receives are legitimate and others aren't.

"There aren't that many horror stories that happen."

Sarnia Observer
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Re: Canada's Crumbling Medicare System

Postby styky » 09/ 14/ 11 4:14 pm

Here's the web link from the above article. http://www.facebook.com/groups/SarniaHospitalHorrors/
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Re: Canada's Crumbling Medicare System

Postby styky » 09/ 27/ 11 4:04 pm

12 patients misdiagnosed, treatment delayed in B.C. radiology scandal


By Pamela Fayerman, Postmedia News September 27, 2011 1:01 PM

VANCOUVER — Twelve patients, including three who died, faced delayed treatment or a misdiagnosis stemming from a B.C. medical scanning scandal that occurred when four radiologists interpreted scans they were not skilled or properly trained to read, a report delving into the matter shows.

British Columbia Health Minister Michael de Jong apologized to patients, their families and the public Tuesday during a one-hour news conference.

"To all of these patients, and their families, I, we, are very, very sorry," de Jong said, adding that the health system is not infallible because it is staffed by humans who can make mistakes.

Discussions about potential compensation for patients and their families is something the government will now be assessing, the minister said.

Nearly 8,000 imaging studies were re-interpreted and the minister said the 12 cases were the worst examples detected during the seven-month review headed by Dr. Doug Cochrane, chairman of the B.C. Patient Safety and Quality Council.

Cochrane, who admitted that more deaths could still occur, largely because of delayed treatment, was appointed to head the review after concerns surfaced about the quality of scans interpreted by radiologists practising in Powell River, Comox and the Fraser Valley.

Nine of the 12 cases occurred within the Vancouver Coastal Health region and three of the four radiologists are no longer working in B.C.

The College of Physicians and Surgeons of B.C., whose mandate it is to license doctors after checking their credentials, has shared information with doctors' licensing authorities across Canada, to let them know about the events. The fourth is still working in B.C., but within his realm of expertise, de Jong said, without revealing the doctor's whereabouts.

The health minister said it has become clear that the college, health authorities and hospitals have to collaborate more effectively to safeguard patients and improve the system by which doctors are licensed, credentialed and given privileges.

A new peer-review system for radiologists will be launched, starting with immediate action to enhance the oversight of radiologists who have recently been granted privileges to work in hospitals and other clinics, including "locums" who are filling in for doctors on holidays or those who are working with provisional licenses because they have not yet passed the standardized Canadian exams.

Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/health/pati ... z1ZBaleJoJ
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Re: Canada's Crumbling Medicare System

Postby styky » 10/ 03/ 11 3:38 pm

'I live this life in pain'

One in five Canadians enduring constant physical agony struggle to find help and hope

By Sharon Kirkey, Postmedia News October 1, 2011


Sometimes, when the pain drugs don't reach her, Lous Heshusius lies on the floor as still as a corpse. "Please," she'll whisper, "Please, let it pass."

She says there have been moments when she's imagined taking a knife and cutting through the muscles and tissues in her shoulder and neck, just to ease the unbearable tightness.

It has been 15 years since the car crash that nearly killed her. Fifteen years and more than 30,000 hours of pain - stabbing, burning pain so intense at times she cannot think or speak. The kind of pain that paralyzes, says the woman from Sooke. "It's like going into another world." She has no memory of the impact, no memory of being broadsided by a car travelling 90 kilometres an hour as she pulled away from a stop sign on a country road north of Toronto in September of 1996. No memory of her car being rammed across the intersection and flipping into a ditch.

When police found her unconscious and slumped in the mangled front seat, her face bloodied from the shattered glass of the windshield she hit when her seatbelt came undone, they thought she was dead. Doctors at the hospital told her the force of the impact was so intense that her neck could have been broken; death could have been instant.

"Such a painless journey it would have been," Heshusius wrote in her published memoir of a life lived in pain.

"Straight to paradise." Instead, the accident sent Heshusius into a world she could not have prepared for, a state experienced by millions of Canadians every day - one of unrelenting, incapacitating and life-altering pain.

One in five Canadians - roughly six million people - is living with chronic pain of some kind, sometimes as a result of trauma or illness, and sometimes for no obvious reason at all. Over the next two decades, that figure is expected to grow to one in three as the population ages. Aging brings pain, from arthritis, from complications of diabetes, from stroke and heart disease.

Cardiac surgery, surgery for breast cancer, caesarean sections, hip replacements and even gallbladder removal and hernia repairs - all can cause persistent pain. Depending on the operation and how it's performed, 10 to 50 per cent of patients will be left with burning, electric-shock-like pain, sometimes years after incisions heal. Thoracotomies - where the chest is cut and the ribs pried open to gain access to the heart and lungs - carry one of the greatest risks.

While modern medicine can help people survive serious illness, sometimes it's at the cost of great pain. Nerve damage from some chemotherapy drugs can lead to one of the most profound pain conditions known - chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy, a condition that can cause numbness, tingling and pain that starts in the hands and feet and can slowly creep up the arms and legs. Doctors have no way to predict who will get it.

All in all, chronic pain - back pain, head pain, neck pain, abdominal pain, joint pain, pelvic pain, pain from fibromyalgia, pain from irritable bowel syndrome and any pain that persists beyond six months or the "normal" recovery time - costs Canada an estimated $6 billion a year in direct health care costs, as well as an estimated $37 billion a year in lost productivity. That's more than cancer, heart disease and HIV combined.

Yet chronic pain is one of the most invisible, under-treated and disbelieved afflictions in Canada - a country that is, ironically, home to some of the world's leaders in pain research.

Pain is virtually ignored in discussions about health reform. Waiting times for treatment at publicly funded pain clinics in Canada average one to three years. The chronic pain clinic at Vancouver's St. Paul's Hospital has a 3½-year waiting list of about 1,300 patients. In Calgary and Ottawa, the wait time to see a pain doctor can be a year or longer. At the Alan Edwards Pain Management Unit at the Montreal General Hospital, the waiting list is 700 names long.

For children in pain, the situation is equally bleak: Only a handful of centres with specialized pain programs for children and adolescents exist in Canada. Most don't run anywhere close to full time.

Doctors who treat patients living in pain say that any wait for care beyond six months is medically unacceptable, because early intervention can keep lives from turning into train wrecks. Uncontrolled pain can cost people their jobs, careers, homes, marriages, friends and sense of identity. People, including young mothers - and the burden of pain is greater for women than for men - lose the ability to take care of their families. Constant severe pain deadens personalities. Looking in the mirror, Heshusius said she sometimes hardly recognizes herself. "Who is she?" she wonders.

PRICE OF PAIN IS HIGH

Pain is demoralizing and isolating. It can destroy people financially. People unable to work lose their benefits; they lose fights with insurance companies and workers' compensation.

The instinct is to retreat, to curl up and wait for the torment to stop. People living with chronic pain are twice as likely to suffer major depression as people living without pain.

They are also twice as likely to kill themselves.

Yet despite the burden of suffering, pain is poorly treated in Canada. Sometimes it is not treated at all.

"You can do a lot with what's available now, but most people don't get it," says Dr. Catherine Bushnell, Canada Research Chair in clinical pain and president of the Canadian Pain Society.

Experts blame the meagre training health professionals receive on assessing and managing pain (a survey of 10 major Canadian universities found that veterinary medicine students receive, on average, 87 hours of mandatory training in pain, versus 16 hours, on average, for medical students); inadequate funding for research (just one-quarter of one per cent cent of all federal dollars for health research in Canada go to pain); a health system that doesn't compensate doctors for the time it takes to provide meaningful pain care ("we take up too much time," pain patients say over and over again), stigmatization and attitudes toward people with pain and a strong reluctance to prescribe opioids for chronic noncancer pain.

So patients struggle to find doctors to help them, leaving the burden of care to fall on over-stretched pain clinics and the small number of community doctors willing to help. People with pain describe being treated like street addicts when they land in emergency rooms in a pain attack so severe they can barely put one foot in front of the other.

Chronic pain patients "are often given the message 'you're imagining it. It can't be that bad. You need to get over it. There's nothing we can do,' " says Dr. Mark Ware, director of clinical research at the Alan Edwards Pain Management Unit.

LASTING NERVE DAMAGE

"These kinds of things stick in a patient's mind. They are horrible things to hear when you're facing a long-term diagnosis of a chronic pain syndrome."

Pain kills. People with chronic pain die two to five years earlier than those without pain. Poorly treated chronic pain can cause lasting changes in the peripheral nerves, spinal cord and brain so that, essentially, the body forgets how to stop hurting long after the point where normal healing should have occurred.

The pain system becomes so wound up, explains Dr. Michael Negraeff, an anesthesiologist and pain specialist at Vancouver General Hospital, that normal touch hurts, "and regular pain becomes huge pain."

Judy Kohut's pain starts in the middle of her back, and then snakes up, into her neck and head. The Edmonton woman has spinal stenosis, scoliosis, fibromyalgia and nerve pain. If you saw her seated in a restaurant she would look perfectly normal, until she stood. She's bent at the waist, and shuffles, dragging one leg.

In 2003, she started to feel intense pain in her back, but she was working in a communications job she loved and refused to pay attention to it, until the day she flew home from Ottawa, lifted her luggage off the turnstile, set it on the floor and couldn't stand up again. Her body had seized up completely.

At the hospital she had the first of three back surgeries to deal with the worst of the ravaged discs. She's had surgery to replace both knees and her left hip since. She used to be fivefoot-10 and is now five-footseven at most. On the worst days, which are most days, she describes her pain as nine on a scale of 10, even with powerful medications. Her total body is in spasm.

BEST DAYS ARE A 7

She says her best days are a 7. The excruciating lower back pain is still there, as well as that feeling, as if someone were sticking a hot knife under the shoulder blade. But the fibromyalgia isn't so hot and burning and prickly, and she has some feeling in her feet.

Once highly independent, Kohut now can't walk unaided; she needs help getting in and out of the bath. She can't do her own hair because she can't raise her arms; she can't do her own shopping because most days she can't even carry a purse. She says she feels like a prisoner in her own skin.

She runs a support group for people living with chronic pain and one of the things that rubs raw the most are the comments, "Well, you don't look handicapped."

"What does that mean, handicapped?" Kohut asks. "What is someone who is handicapped supposed to look like?" She says society needs to stop turning away from people in pain. "Turn toward us. Reach out and give us hope."

She reads a lot; she journals, she searches for information.

Prayer, massage, meditation and deep breathing. Physiotherapy and acupuncture and electrical spinal stimulation. Anti-convulsants to slow down the communication between pain nerves to keep them from firing uncontrollably. Narcotics and nerve blocks and Botox and cortisone injections. People with pain - at least those who can afford it or with insurance to pay for it - try one therapy after another. Some help; some make the pain worse. Some people spend thousands of dollars only to realize, "This isn't working."

DRUGS DON'T ALWAYS HELP

There is no cure for chronic pain and none is in sight. The best doctors can hope for with medications alone is about a 30 per cent reduction in pain levels.

For some patients, the drugs don't even do that much, says Dr. Lori Montgomery, medical director of the Calgary Chronic Pain Centre. As well, the side effects - nausea, dry mouth, overwhelming fatigue, weight gain, foggy thinking and memory problems - can be intolerable.

That's why pain experts say that treatment requires a multipronged approach that includes access to psychologists, rehab specialists, physiotherapists, occupational therapists - services that, in most parts of the country, aren't publicly funded. Pain researchers, doctors and patient groups across Canada want a national pain strategy that would officially recognize chronic pain as a disease in its own right - not merely a symptom of something else. They urge better coordination of resources, more investment in training doctors in pain, better assessment, prevention and pain treatment across the country in hospitals, long-term care facilities and nursing homes, more multi-disciplinary pain clinics and improved community-level care to help people manage their pain and gain control over their lives.

Lous Heshusius says what's needed is a sea change in society's mindset about pain.

"There is so much in society that works against pain relief, against us getting help - structural problems, political problems, funding problems."

We live in a society that says only that which can be seen and measured is true and valid and real, she says, "and I think that is doing us in."

She says she can't count the times she has heard, "But you look fine." Or, "Can't you take some pain pills for that?" "People have no idea what kind of lives we live," she says.

Her old one ended in a splitsecond's distraction.

Her first memory of the crash is of coming to as paramedics strapped her to a stretcher.

"It was a fantastic experience - I felt like I was in sunlight, there was this very wonderful light feeling, with a lot of beautiful faces in front of me, except the faces turned out to be very worried paramedics," says the Dutch-born Heshusius, who was a tenured, full professor of education at Toronto's York University before her accident, a job she says she loved. The crash mangled her neck and vertebrae. Fifteen years later, she still suffers sharp, shooting pain that travels from the base of her skull, up into her head, and then through her neck into her left shoulder and arm.

The pain is usually at its worst in the morning. When the pain is intense, when it lives "somewhere between 11 and infinity" on a scale of 10, as she describes it in her book, "It just grabs your attention so totally that you cannot really move. It's extraordinarily hard to find the language for it. You just move into another sphere."

During the worst years, "those horrible, dark, dark days" between 1999 and the end of 2003, she says she thought of suicide every day. She says she tried to talk to six health care professionals. The response was, essentially: "We don't want to go there."

"I'm still angry with that. I'm still furious."

Were it not for her two daughters, she would not be alive today, she says. ("There is no question about it.") One of her girls once told her she would give up her arms if it meant freeing her mother from her world of pain.

They were her salvation. So, too, were the hundreds of pages of jotted notes she kept that would later form her book, Inside Chronic Pain: An Intimate and Critical Account.

Over the years, she has seen 22 doctors and specialists, from the "truly caring to the clearly uncaring."

Prolotherapy, an alternative treatment that involves injections into the ligaments and tendons, has taken about 50 per cent of the pain away, but it's still there. It moves in and out and she says she never knows when a major pain attack will hit. She's landed in emergency rooms twice.

Heshusius can't teach any more, or take long trips. She often spends hours looking out at the ocean from her yard.

"I've always been a bit of a solitary person, which serves me well, now that I live this life in pain," she says.

"Because you find yourself alone a great deal."

WHO WILL STOP THE PAIN?

A four-part series on chronic pain, Canada's silent epidemic of suffering.

TODAY: Inside the world of unrelenting, incapacitating and life-altering pain.

MONDAY: How Canadian scientists are leading a revolution in pain research.

TUESDAY: Opioids can help with chronic pain, but it is becoming more difficult for sufferers to get them for legitimate use.

WEDNESDAY: The vast majority of Canadian children in pain do not have access to appropriate care.

WHO WILL STOP THE PAIN?

series covers a wide variety of topics associated with chronic pain and the battle to overcome it.

Find the whole package, including videos, at www.vancouversun.com

Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/health/live ... z1ZkZczbOz
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Re: Canada's Crumbling Medicare System

Postby styky » 10/ 03/ 11 3:41 pm

styky wrote:'I live this life in pain'

One in five Canadians enduring constant physical agony struggle to find help and hope

By Sharon Kirkey, Postmedia News October 1, 2011....................

Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/health/live ... z1ZkZczbOz


Welcome to my world :ohwell:
This all and all has been a very well done excellent series of articles on how our health care system fails those of us in chronic pain.
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"The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other peoples money." Margaret Thatcher They say it takes a minute to find a special person, an hour to appreciate them, a day to love them, but then an entire life to forget them.
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Re: Canada's Crumbling Medicare System

Postby styky » 10/ 15/ 11 6:38 pm

Thousands possibly exposed to infection at Ottawa clinic
By: Andrea Janus, CTVNews.ca

Date: Saturday Oct. 15, 2011 3:13 PM PT

Ottawa Public Health is warning that as many as 6,800 people may have come into contact with hepatitis B, hepatitis C or HIV while undergoing an undisclosed procedure at an Ottawa clinic.

The city's chief medical officer, Dr. Isra Levy, announced Saturday that patients of the clinic will be notified of their potential exposure to disease early next week by letter.

The patients who will receive letters will have visited the clinic over a 10-year span dating back from spring of this year.

Jocelyne Turner, spokesperson for the City of Ottawa, said there is no indication that any patients have become infected.

However, it is the agency's duty to notify patients of their potential risk, she said.

"The risk of infection is incredibly low," Turner told CTVNews.ca in a telephone interview Saturday.

The risk to the clinic's patients of contracting hepatitis B and hepatitis C is "in the millions," she said, while the risk of contracting HIV is "one in three billion."

Turner also said that Ottawa Public Health will not name the doctor, the clinic or the procedure until all patients are notified. .......................http://www.ctvbc.ctv.ca/servlet/an/loca ... lumbiaHome
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Re: Canada's Crumbling Medicare System

Postby styky » 10/ 18/ 11 9:04 pm

Nurse pleads guilty to negligence in woman's death


The Gazette October 17, 2011

MONTREAL - Gondiel Ka felt relieved when nurse Anne-Marie Couture pleaded guilty at a disciplinary hearing Monday to negligence in the 2008 death of his wife, Christine Sasseville. But his elation was short-lived.

Judge François Samson soon rejected proposed sanctions against the delivery room nurse as “too severe” given the circumstances — understaffing, faulty equipment, a surcharge of patients — the night Sasseville was admitted to Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital.

Couture’s lawyer and the prosecutor suggested the nurse get a two-month ban. Instead, Samson asked for more information and gave the legal parties a month to submit further evidence.

Justice has not been served, Ka told The Gazette, noting his wife died of a preventable illness “at a major Montreal hospital in the 21st century.”

Sasseville died Aug. 14, 2008, of a massive brain hemorrhage after staff failed to monitor a common yet potentially fatal pregnancy condition: high blood pressure.

A coroner’s report questioned whether Sasseville got adequate care.

“Now people are getting off instead of getting punished,” Ka said. “It’s sad for my wife who wanted a third child, it’s sad for my children and it’s sad for me.

“A human being lost her life and there are lots of consequences.”

Ka is suing the hospital and the two obstetricians who treated his wife for nearly $4 million.

Several nurses who attended Couture’s hearing cried during her teary summary of events.

Sasseville was called back to the hospital Aug. 13 because tests earlier that day showed she was suffering from pre-eclampsia, or pregnancy induced hypertension, a potentially serious illness. The only cure is immediate delivery.

Couture testified there was no room for Sasseville in the delivery room when she arrived at 8 p.m. Sasseville became one of her four patients – two in the birthing room, two in the wait room.

Sasseville’s blood pressure was 177/90 – extremely high. Couture said she did not check on the unborn baby because the fetal heart monitoring equipment malfunctioned, and the treating doctor dismissed fetal tests as unnecessary because Sasseville had come from an external clinic that had done the exam.

Couture said she had no time to fill out notes on the doctor’s orders or the patient’s condition, which she said did not deteriorate under her care. However, she admitted that she tested Sasseville’s blood pressure only once.

At 10 p.m., Sasseville was admitted to a room on the postpartum floor and her care was transferred to another nurse.

Sasseville spent an excruciating night of pain and nausea, blurred vision, severe headaches and vomiting. She died the following day shortly after giving birth to her son, Demba.

Couture pleaded guilty to neglect, saying she realized later that despite a difficult work environment each patient must be treated as a unique case.

“I should have found a monitor for the baby,” she said.

Samson, however, said it wasn’t clear that Couture’s actions led directly to Sasseville’s death.

Couture’s colleagues in the room cried with relief for a nurse they said was a model to all.

“It could have been anyone of us in her place that night,” Caroline Remillard said.

According to the profession’s standards, a nurse should not be caring for more than one woman in labour at a time, Remillard said, calling the standards fiction.

“The reality is that we prioritize as best as we can. And that means some patients are not getting optimal care.”

While Couture would not comment, her colleagues were overjoyed that the judge “understood that nursing care cannot be divorced from context,” Remillard said.

“We understand the father … but we’re targeting the wrong people.”

Blame health administrators and Quebec’s Health and Social Services Department for tolerating forced overtime and staff shortages, they said.

A disciplinary hearing for a second nurse in the case continues Tuesday.

Read more: http://www.montrealgazette.com/health/N ... z1bBcBQ5CN
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Re: Canada's Crumbling Medicare System

Postby styky » 10/ 19/ 11 8:52 pm

What are they insinuating.....that you should not be able to sue for wrongful dealth because the persons rights died with him?????? Is that what they're saying?????????


WRHA wants ER death suit quashed

Winnipeg Sun

First posted: Wednesday, October 19, 2011 06:51 PM CDT
Lawyers for the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority are asking a judge to throw out some claims filed by the family of a man who died after waiting untreated for 34 hours at Health Sciences Centre three years ago.

According to a lawyer for the family of Brian Sinclair, the 45-year-old Winnipegger, who died Sept. 21, 2008, WRHA lawyers are seeking to strike out claims for breaches of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, violations of privacy and for damages connected to legal fees and expenses involved with the inquest called by the province’s chief medical examiner.

Manitoba Court of Queen’s Bench judge will hear arguments from the WRHA lawyers Nov. 8.

Sinclair family lawyer Vilko Zbogar said in a statement that the WRHA lawyers’ position is that Sinclair’s estate has no right to vindicate his right to life and other Charter rights because he is deceased.

“In other words, by the very act of depriving Mr. Sinclair of his right to life, WRHA deprived him of his ability to sue and thereby immunized itself from liability for fatally breaching his Charter rights,” Zbogar said in the statement. “This position is absurd, intolerable, and cruelly ironic.”

The move is being vigorously contested by the Sinclair estate and family, Zbogar said in the statement.

Sinclair, a wheelchair-bound double amputee, died as the result of a bladder infection that could have been treated with a catheter change and antibiotics.

A public inquiry into Sinclair’s death is expected to begin hearing testimony as soon as next month.

http://www.winnipegsun.com/2011/10/19/w ... it-quashed
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