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Health care: more isn’t always better

May 2, 2017

Each year, at least one million unnecessary tests, treatments and procedures are done in Canadian health-care settings. This means hundreds of thousands of Canadians are exposed to potential harm by unnecessary care.

Unnecessary care could be a prescription drug, a diagnostic test or a medical procedure that doesn’t improve a patient’s health outcomes and isn’t backed by the best available evidence. It may also involve risks and harmful side-effects.

In other words, this medical care offers no value to patients and strains resources.

A recent report from the Canadian Institute for Health Information, in partnership with Choosing Wisely Canada, demonstrates how pervasive unnecessary care is across the country and highlights several key examples where changes could benefit patients and the health system.

read more at winnipegfreepress.com

Filed Under: Healthcare Waste Tagged With: Canadian Health Care, healthcare fraud and waste

Taking a stand for patients rights’ and health-care choice

April 30, 2017

“The most advanced justice system in the world is a failure if it does not provide accessible justice to the people it is meant to serve.”

That was Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin speaking last year. Now, a landmark Charter health-care case in British Columbia is showing just how empty the promise of access to justice can be if the government is determined to block it.

The plaintiffs’ case is straightforward: if the government fails to provide patients with timely medical treatment, then it cannot stop them from taking control of their own health and arranging for private treatment to alleviate their suffering.

The Supreme Court of Canada held that such restrictions violated the patients’ rights more than a decade ago. Since then, provinces have continued to unconstitutionally restrict patient choice even as the problem of wait lists has worsened.

read more at torontosun.com

Filed Under: Nutty Stuff Tagged With: Canadian Health Care, health care system, unconstitutional

Financial hurdles halt lawsuit against Canada’s health-care system

April 28, 2017

The constitutional challenge of Canada’s public health-care system has adjourned until September, with the plaintiffs arguing they have run out of money for the case and accusing the British Columbia government of stall tactics.

But the province offered no apologies for “vigorously” defending the public system and said the plaintiffs have not been sufficiently organized, accusing them of abuse of process.

The adjournment further delays a landmark case that began more than seven months ago, to significant attention, but which has since slowed to a crawl.

The matter, which is being heard in B.C. Supreme Court, had been expected to take six months but the plaintiffs are only halfway through their case and the province has not yet begun its submission.

read more at theglobeandmail.com

Filed Under: Healthcare Waste Tagged With: Canadian Healthcare

Deal that sends Canadian bank records to IRS is ‘illegal,’ lawyer tells U.S. committee

April 27, 2017

An agreement that has resulted in hundreds of thousands of Canadian banking records being sent to the U.S. Internal Revenue Service could violate the U.S. constitution, a congressional subcommittee heard Wednesday.

Testifying before a subcommittee of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, Senator Rand Paul said the intergovernmental agreements (IGAs) negotiated by the U.S. with various countries after it adopted the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) did not get the proper authorization.

The controversial legislation, adopted by the U.S. in 2010, requires financial institutions outside the U.S. to report to the Internal Revenue Service on bank and financial accounts held by those subject to U.S. tax law.

While it was designed to ferret out offshore tax cheats, thousands of Canadian residents who have dual citizenship or various connections to the U.S. have also been subject to FATCA.

read more at cbc.ca

Filed Under: International Tagged With: controversial legislation, CRA, privacy, US Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act

Canadian health care struggles to find a cure for hallway medicine

April 26, 2017

Jack Webb died in a Halifax hospital on Feb. 1, after sitting in a chilly emergency room hallway for six hours and being bumped from a room by another dying patient during his five-day stay.

“I believe Jack was terrified. … He wanted to go home,” his wife, Kim D’Arcy, said.

His story isn’t unique. Over the last few months, there have been a flurry of stories from patients across Canada, complaining that they were kept in hospital hallways because of overcrowding.
A woman from Surrey, B.C. recently spent three days in the hallway, after being admitted for internal bleeding.

“When my doctor came to see me, there were people standing around and he was talking about my private, personal information about the treatment I was about to go through,” the woman, Karen Sidhu, told Global News.

“He couldn’t help it. It was really unacceptable.”

read more at globalnews.ca

Filed Under: Healthcare Waste Tagged With: Canadian Government, Canadian Health Care

The many obstacles to health-care improvements: Opinion

April 26, 2017

A series of daunting factors have led to the public’s passive acceptance of paying high costs for a narrow range of services of mediocre quality.

The need for change in health care has been obvious for years. Many studies have been conducted and recommendations made on what’s needed to meet optimally the needs of the population in the current and coming decades. But change itself has been very scarce.

One reason is that none of our 14 provincial/territorial/federal health care delivery “systems’ has a single governance; the place where the “buck stops” with respect to what each does and does not accomplish and how well or poorly. It is only by default that Canadians hold their governments accountable for how well their hospitals, physicians, pharmacists, and other providers meet their changing needs for health care services. On the other hand that there are 14 “systems” could be an advantage as it was when Saskatchewan’s pioneering introduction of Medicare was copied by other jurisdictions.

read more at thestar.com

Filed Under: Nutty Stuff Tagged With: Canadian Government, Canadian Health Care

How Much Health Care Is Too Much?

April 26, 2017

Each year, there are at least one million unnecessary tests, treatments and procedures done in Canadian health care settings. This means that hundreds of thousands of Canadians are exposed to potential harm by unnecessary care.

What constitutes ‘unnecessary care’?

Unnecessary care could be a prescription drug, a diagnostic test or a medical procedure that does not improve a patient’s health outcomes and is not backed by the best available evidence. It may also involve risks and harmful side-effects.

In other words, this is medical care that offers no value to patients and strains health care resources.

read more at huffingtonpost.ca

Filed Under: Healthcare Waste Tagged With: Canadian Health Care, healthcare fraud and waste

Government of Canada launches tip line to help Canadians report federal contracting fraud

April 20, 2017

OTTAWA, April 20, 2017 /CNW/ – The Government of Canada is committed to protecting the integrity of federal contracts and real property agreements.

A dedicated telephone tip line and online form to accept anonymous tips from Canadians who suspect fraud, collusion and corruption in federal government contracts and real property agreements is being launched today.

Unethical business practices in public procurement undermine fair competition, threaten the integrity of markets, increase the cost and risk of doing business, and undermine public confidence in government.

Those who witness or suspect unethical business practices in federal contracting, such as bid-rigging, price‑fixing, bribery, undisclosed conflict of interest and fraudulent contract schemes, can provide information anonymously by calling 1-844-365-1616 or by completing an online form.

read more at newswire.ca

Filed Under: Government Tagged With: Federal fraud, federal government

Outspoken doc not impressed by Health Canada announcement

April 19, 2017

A general practitioner who works with Indigenous patients is skeptical about a new Health Canada policy that allows travel companions for pregnant Status Indian and Inuit women.

Dr. Mike Kirlew, a Sioux Lookout, Ont. doctor told APTN Investigates he believes the policy is just another band aid on a system that needs major surgery.

He wonders if the policy is something the federal government really feels is innovative.

“Do we honestly think that this would win a health care innovation award,” he said.

APTN Investigates is digging into Non-Insured Health Benefits (NIHB) and First Nations healthcare as part of a report called Surviving Bureaucracy airing Friday April 21.

read more at aptnnews.ca

Filed Under: Healthcare Waste Tagged With: Canadian Health Care

Is Mental Health spending a sneaky con?

April 19, 2017

Last month, we covered fraud in the healthcare system. Our next article will be zeroing in on the biggest hankerer for those healthcare funds – Mental Health.

A few years ago, I was walking down Bay Street in December with my wife. It was the Friday evening before Christmas and the street was bustling with shoppers. As we rushed, shopping bags in hand, to get to our last store before closing, a well-dressed man with an accent approached us.

He explained (and I’m keeping this much more concise here) that he and his family had driven from the US through Toronto to make it home to Montreal for Christmas. His car had broken down on the Gardiner and he put them up in a hotel. He found out his car repair would be too much, so he needed $200 to get his family on a bus. After the long-winded story, my wife started speaking with him in French and, being the most warm-hearted person I know, reached into her purse.

I gave her a look to slow her down. Being a frugal skeptic (overall jerk, in her words), I asked a few simple questions. Why did he decide to come via Toronto? Why didn’t he take the 401? Who is the mechanic he brought his car to? Where is his family now?

With a bit of prodding, he scurried away, looking for his next victim. My wife was a bit angry with me for not allowing her to help him and for being so cold with him. We left it at that and didn’t speak of it again.

The following year, we happened to be Christmas shopping downtown again. And who pops out of the crowd speaking to another young couple. My wife forgave me after that.

One thing that I admire in that man was that he had a good story and great delivery. Very convincing. His story was one that makes the heart bleed and the money come forth. Top notch business model. He could’ve been working his hands to the bone for $20 an hour or he could spend his hour with 4 different couples and 2 of them would spring for his $200 story.

What does this have to do with mental health spending you ask? Well, mental health IS an issue (just as would be families stranded on a cold December night). But you and I and every taxpayer are the dupes in this one.

In researching this, I waded through more doublespeak than can even be conceived. I sat down and started making a diagram of the direction of funds in the marketing, lobbying, advertising, advocating, associations, fundraising activities and the like. It is like drawing a rat’s nest to try and track it all. We’re definitely not conspiracy theorists here, but one group stands out as the major promoter and biggest beneficiary of the popularization of Mental Health and Mental Health funding…

Like I admired the con man, I marvel at the business model of the psychopharmaceutical industry. It’s a great return on investment. Being somewhat of a capitalist, I should probably jump in on it and pick up some stock. Alas, my moral fibre would never allow it. Nor would my wife.

 

Filed Under: Main Tagged With: Canadian Health Care, healthcare fraud and waste, psychopharmaceutical industry

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