Archive for the ‘Health’ Category
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OPP have saved more than 100 lives with naloxone
Monday, November 18th, 2019
The OPP say calls regarding overdoses rose 121 per cent between 2016 and 2018. Further, OPP data collected between September 2017 to November 2019 shows: The majority (66 per cent) of naloxone recipients were male and 34 per cent were female; The average age of naloxone recipients was 31.5 for females and 32 for males; Most incidences occurred inside a residence
Tags: Health, jurisdiction, mental Health, pharmaceutical
Posted in Health Delivery System | No Comments »
End of HIV epidemic is within our grasp
Sunday, November 17th, 2019
… 19 per cent of Canadians diagnosed with HIV are not accessing treatment. Compared to all other G7 countries that have published figures on this measure, Canada ranks last. What sets us apart? For one, we are the only high-income country in the world with a public health-care system that lacks a country-wide pharmacare program… What are we waiting for?
Tags: Health, ideology, jurisdiction, participation, pharmaceutical, standard of living
Posted in Health Debates | No Comments »
Hospital Beds and Long-Term Care Wait Lists
Friday, November 15th, 2019
Under current rules, hospitals may charge patients copayments for their room and board only if they require complex continuing care and are “more or less permanently resident” in hospital or waiting for an LTC bed. But they may not do so if the patient is awaiting discharge to home or community care. This creates a perverse incentive for hospitals to recommend LTC in order to get copayments, leading to longer waiting lists.
Tags: budget, Health, housing, standard of living, tax
Posted in Health Policy Context | No Comments »
Video visits with doctors are a smart idea
Friday, November 15th, 2019
There are three much bigger issues the government needs to tackle to reduce the average wait time to be admitted to hospital from an emergency department. It now tops a sickening 16 hours. Those are a lack of nursing home and long-term health care beds and a shortage of home-care services. And they won’t be solved by the $3 million the province plans to spend on video visits and other digital innovations.
Tags: budget, Health, ideology, mental Health, standard of living
Posted in Health Delivery System | No Comments »
Ontario axing 9 execs in bid to save money, increase efficiencies in health care
Wednesday, November 13th, 2019
A health ministry official said no other employees other than the head of the LHINs, which provide local health care planning, are being laid off now and no offices are closing, but in future there will be “significant” savings as real estate assets are consolidated… Under the plan, between 30 and 50 “Ontario Health Teams” will form across the province to co-ordinate all levels of care, from doctor visits to hospitals stays and home care.
Tags: budget, Health, ideology, jurisdiction, mental Health
Posted in Health Delivery System | No Comments »
Home-care agencies seek key role in Doug Ford’s health reforms
Wednesday, November 13th, 2019
… the government’s restructuring of the health system and the creation of the Ontario Health Teams (OHTs) can make it easier for people to be cared for at home and can shift the burden of care away from hospitals when patients truly don’t need to be hospitalized… “Many of the solutions to hospital overcrowding lie outside hospital walls,”
Tags: featured, Health, jurisdiction, mental Health, standard of living
Posted in Health Delivery System | No Comments »
Why being a salaried doctor benefits my patients and the health care system
Sunday, November 10th, 2019
As the Ontario government bolsters its oversight of OHIP, I would like to see physician accountability move away from billing practices to emphasize quality of care and population health indicators that incentivize following best practices and address the real needs of people and communities… now is the time for her and the provincial Ministry of Health to start thinking about a transition in the current compensation model.
Posted in Health Delivery System | No Comments »
Getting to a People-Centred Health System
Friday, November 8th, 2019
… the basic purpose should be to foster wellness, the preservation of good health in addition to its restoration… we must expand its reach. Hospitals and physicians provide essential services but so also do nursing and retirement homes, rehabilitation and mental health facilities, the providers of home care and other community services, including housing, income and personal security, respite, community support, and other health determinants.
Tags: economy, Health, ideology, mental Health, participation, pharmaceutical, standard of living
Posted in Health Debates | No Comments »
Toward Healthcare’s Culture Change
Friday, November 8th, 2019
… contemporary needs demand the system’s expansion to encompass two additional imperatives: a) meeting the changed needs of people, many of them aging, who suffer from multiple, chronic conditions that are amenable to wellness-enhancing treatments provided in their own homes and communities by multi-professional teams of care givers; and, more fundamentally, b) motivating and educating people in ways to maintain life-long good health.
Tags: Health, ideology, mental Health, participation, pharmaceutical, standard of living
Posted in Health Debates | No Comments »
New Liberal minority must keep national pharmacare promise
Friday, November 8th, 2019
In August, 67.8 per cent of respondents to a Mainstreet poll called for national pharmacare, agreeing that the federal government should create a system through which it pays for prescription drugs, regardless of the cost to government. In an Angus Reid pre-election poll, 78 per cent of voters supported a national pharmacare program. Even the 57 per cent of Canadians who intended to vote for the Conservatives, whose platform included no pharmacare plan, supported either the Liberal or the NDP plan.
Tags: featured, Health, ideology, jurisdiction, mental Health, participation, pharmaceutical, standard of living
Posted in Health Debates | No Comments »