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![]() "BCITORGB" wrote in message ups.com... Tink, I'm fairly sure you didn't read this one: http://www.utoronto.ca/hpme/dhr/pdf/Barer-Lewis.pdf Yet you bypass the whole gist of the article, there are wait times across Canada. Otherwise, why the hand wringing over it? Besides, it was written for a(gasp) american Foundation... here, I give you another from utoronto "...An Ontario study reviewed the experience for 8,517 consecutive coronary bypass patients following the establishment of a provincial patient registry in 1991. While in the queue 31 patients (0.4%) died and 3 had surgery deferred after non-fatal myocardial infarction (88)..." "...Waiting lists are a source of frustration to physicians who feel themselves deprived of the ability to deliver clinical care in an optimal fashion (95), a situation which may also raise issues of medico-legal liability (30). Moreover, physicians are uncomfortable with the ethically ambivalent role into which, as a profession, they have unwittingly been cast. On the one handm they are required to act as the patient’s advocate, while on the other, they are expected to ration scarce health resources on behalf of a constrained system..." So, despite the american paper above that says doctors are indendent, that conclusion isn't entirely supported by reality as the resources they must use are not under their control. http://www.utoronto.ca/hpme/dhr/pdf/Shortt.pdf "...There were 141 deaths (0.48%) among 29,293 patients. Adjusting for age, sex, and waiting time, patients waiting for valve surgery had a significantly increased risk of death compared with patients waiting for CABG alone..." http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/q...t_uids=9616340 "...Based on data from tens of thousands of patients, it is now clear that queuing according to this system limits the risk of death for patients awaiting surgery. Currently about one in 200 to 250 patients will die while awaiting isolated coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG) in Ontario..." http://www.utoronto.ca/hpme/dhr/pdf/atrevised3.pdf kman also claimed that no one in Canada waits for treatment, yet another lie http://www.angelfire.com/pa/sergeman...anbacklog.html I quote: "In short, patients get on wait lists in Canada through a poorly understood, haphazard, unaudited, entirely private process largely controlled by individual physicians." The authors tell us that the notion of a waiting list and the notions of waiting and waiting times are hard to define. For example, when "exactly" does a patient (and, in this case, I don't care if it's in Canada, the USA, the UK, or whereever) get "on" a waiting list? Tink, when you call your family doctor, and the receptionist informs you that you can come in on Thursday, you're on a waiting list (if this is a day other than Thursday). But what is particularly interesting in the statement in question is the part about it being an "entirely private process largely controlled by individual physicians." So, no big bad government determining who gets to wait. It is the physician, using his/her best knowledge, who determines the nature of our wait. I think this is exactly what KMAN, Michael, and I have been trying to say. Doctors in Canada operate privately. Tink, your source goes on to say: "Wait times tend to be, in statistical jargon, highly skewed. This means that very long waits are the exception. A few long waits can have the same misleading effect on wait time statistics as a few palatial mansions on average housing prices." NOTE: "very long waits are the exception" To complete that thought, the authors say: "But in the world of selling papers and tv advertising spots, the exception often makes the story. This gets an unassuming public understandably concerned, playing nicely into the hands of those seeking to get more money into the system." Is that not EXACTLY what KMAN has been saying? This is hype! NOW READ THIS CAREFULLY (IT TAKES THE CANADIAN PULSE): "Some recent Canadian research has found that not all patients are unhappy about waiting. Very few patients who felt waits were "too long" wanted to see additional public funds used to reduce wait times (although this may be related to the procedures they were waiting for and may also now be changing, as Canadians seem increasingly concerned about access to care). Fewer still seemed interested in shelling out extra money personally to reduce their wait time." NOTE CAREFULLY: "Fewer still seemed interested in shelling out extra money personally to reduce their wait time." That's us, cheap Canadians (just ask the folks in Florida)! Anyway, Tink, thanks for the link. It goes on, and on, and on, supporting KMAN's points. ===================== No, it does not. frtzw906 |
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