URGENT: Closing date for nominations JANUARY 18.
Nominations to OMA Manager, Constituency Services, Ms Sharmann GRAD sharmann.grad@oma.org Fax: 416 340-2244,Telephone: 416 340-2912 at OMA office,150 Bloor West.by 5 pm Wed. JANUARY 18, 2012. (Documents were printed Dec.8 and postmarked Dec.20.) THREE NOMINATORS needed. Nomination forms available from Ms GRAD.
Posts available:
DISTRICT CHAIR ( Presently a GP)
DISTRICT SECRETARY (Presently a Radiologist)
DISTRICT TREASURER (Presently a Gynaecologist)
THREE DISTRICT DIRECTORS (Presently all GPs)
FOUR GPs as Reps from the SECTION on GP & Family practice.
DIRECTORS spend an average of 46 days a year for an Honorarium of about $37,000 + travel TIME & EXPENSES.
At present, representing the 13,000 District 11 OMA members are:
EIGHT GPs
TWO SPECIALISTS
(COMMENT: More specialists needed especially an INTERNIST, SURGEON and Doctors with a MBA)
A FORUM on ONTARIO MEDICINE: business and professional Information from various contributors edited by Dr.Alex Franklin MBBS(Lond.)Dip.Phys.Med(UK) DPH & DIH(Tor.)LMC(C)FLex(USA).Fellow Med.Soc.London, Liveryman of London Society of Apothecaries. Freeman of City of London. Member Toronto Faculty club & Toronto Medico-Legal society.
30 Dec 2011
27 Dec 2011
CORONARY ANGIOPLASTY & STENTS
Dr.Charles DOTTER (1920-85) Hodgkins & Coronary Art Disease.
Portland,Oregon Health Sciences Univ.
Father of Interventional Radiology & Coronary angioplasty
Dr.Andreas GRUENTZIG (1939-1985) Born Germany; worked in Zurich. Died:Private plane crash
Stainless steel sirolimus-eluting stent.(1977)
.Dr. Julio PALMAZ (1945-)
MD( Nat.U.La Plata, Argentina)
Univ.Texas,San Antonio.
Balloon Expanding :PALMAS-SCHATZ stent (1985)
Drs. Jaques PUEL & Ulrich SIGWART
TOULOUSE
Coronary stent 1986
TORONTO St.Michael's Hosp
Michael Kutryk, MD, PhD, FRCPC
Appointments: St. Michael's Hospital Staff Cardiologist
University of Toronto Clinician Scientist
1981 Bachelors of Science, First Class Honors (Chemistry and Microbiology): University of Manitoba
1990 Masters of Science (Cardiovascular Physiology): University of Manitoba
1991 PhD (Cardiovascular Physiology): University of Manitoba
1990-1993 Internal Medicine Training: McGill University
1995-1999 Post-Doctoral Fellowship, Department of Cell Biology: Erasmus University, Netherlands
1993-1995 Cardiology Training: McGill University
1995-1999 Interventional Training: University Hospital, Dijkzigt, Netherlands
Languages spoken: English, French, Ukranian and Dutch
Special Interests: Myocardial angiogenesis, prevention of restenosis, intracoronary stent design, clinical gene therapy.
Bradley H. Strauss, MD, PhD, FRCP(C)
Appointments: St. Michael's Hospital Director of Interventional Cardiology, Clinician Scientist, Vascular Biology Laboratories
University of Toronto Associated Professor of Medicine and
Associate Professor of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology,
1982 Medical Degree: University of Toronto
Internal Medicine training: University of Toronto
Cardiology training: University of Ottawa
1991 PhD: Erasmus University
Languages Spoken: English, some French and Dutch
Special Interests: Restenosis, Smooth muscle cell function, experimental arterial response to injury, chronic total occlusions, assessment of new coronary interventional devices.
Portland,Oregon Health Sciences Univ.
Father of Interventional Radiology & Coronary angioplasty
Dr.Andreas GRUENTZIG (1939-1985) Born Germany; worked in Zurich. Died:Private plane crash
Stainless steel sirolimus-eluting stent.(1977)
.Dr. Julio PALMAZ (1945-)
MD( Nat.U.La Plata, Argentina)
Univ.Texas,San Antonio.
Balloon Expanding :PALMAS-SCHATZ stent (1985)
Drs. Jaques PUEL & Ulrich SIGWART
TOULOUSE
Coronary stent 1986
TORONTO St.Michael's Hosp
Michael Kutryk, MD, PhD, FRCPC
Appointments: St. Michael's Hospital Staff Cardiologist
University of Toronto Clinician Scientist
1981 Bachelors of Science, First Class Honors (Chemistry and Microbiology): University of Manitoba
1990 Masters of Science (Cardiovascular Physiology): University of Manitoba
1991 PhD (Cardiovascular Physiology): University of Manitoba
1990-1993 Internal Medicine Training: McGill University
1995-1999 Post-Doctoral Fellowship, Department of Cell Biology: Erasmus University, Netherlands
1993-1995 Cardiology Training: McGill University
1995-1999 Interventional Training: University Hospital, Dijkzigt, Netherlands
Languages spoken: English, French, Ukranian and Dutch
Special Interests: Myocardial angiogenesis, prevention of restenosis, intracoronary stent design, clinical gene therapy.
Bradley H. Strauss, MD, PhD, FRCP(C)
Appointments: St. Michael's Hospital Director of Interventional Cardiology, Clinician Scientist, Vascular Biology Laboratories
University of Toronto Associated Professor of Medicine and
Associate Professor of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology,
1982 Medical Degree: University of Toronto
Internal Medicine training: University of Toronto
Cardiology training: University of Ottawa
1991 PhD: Erasmus University
Languages Spoken: English, some French and Dutch
Special Interests: Restenosis, Smooth muscle cell function, experimental arterial response to injury, chronic total occlusions, assessment of new coronary interventional devices.
24 Dec 2011
GP Behnaz YAZDANFAR facing CPSO "Court" costs of $219,000.
22 December 2011
GP Behnaz YAZDANFAR MD (Ottawa 1994) found GUILTY. Will CPSO REGISTRAR GERACE RESIGN?
from TORONTO STAR
(Real estate agent) Krista Tabacoff Stryland, (1974-2007) was pronounced dead in North York Hosp shortly after paramedics took her there from GP Behnaz Yazdanfar’s cosmetic clinic (in a North Toronto office building).
The GP who was found incompetent in her care of cosmetic surgery patients – including Ms STRYLAND who died following a SIX LITER liposuction in 2007 .
Dr. Behnaz Yazdanfar was found to have displayed “disgraceful, dishonourable or unprofessional” conduct in her care of five patients following a TWO YEAR disciplinary hearing before the Ontario College of Physicians and Surgeons that ended in May 2011. PENALTY delayed for SEVEN MONTHS..
Yesterday the college suspended Yazdanfar’s licence for two years. After that, Dr. Yazdanfar will be restricted from SOLO surgery but will be permitted to ASSIST in surgery, including cosmetic procedures.
She was ordered Wednesday to appear before the college for a public reprimand within the next three months.
Yazdanfar was ordered to pay $219,000 in costs to the college within a year.
She must also co-operate with unannounced inspections of her practice and patient charts, conducted at her expense, and publish the terms of her restrictions at her clinic and on her website.
Like many doctors performing cosmetic procedures (in Ontario), Dr. Yazdanfar was never accredited as a plastic surgeon and holds no surgical designation.
Ms. Krista Stryland was pronounced dead in hospital shortly after paramedics took her from Dr.Yazdanfar’s cosmetic clinic. Court records obtained by the Star alleged Ms. Stryland lay in the clinic’s recovery room in serious condition for 30 minutes before anyone called 911.
Dr. Bruce Liberman, the anesthesiologist in the Stryland case, was also found to be incompetent. He is awaiting the result of a separate disciplinary hearing.
COMMENTS:
The CPSO was aware that GPs were perfoming surgery under GENERAL ANAESTHESIA in office buildings. The CPSO Registrar, past ER physician & CPSO Past President, , R.V. GERACE MD (UWO 72) FRCSC (ER 83) was aware of the danger for years and took no preventive action. As a direct result of this negligence a patient died; will Dr.Gerace resign?
Dr.Yazdanfar was represented by Lawyers Clayton Ruby CM BA(York 63) LLB (Tor.69) LLM(U.Cal.Berkeley) 11 Prince Arthur Av.,Yorkville,Tor. & Gardiner Roberts LLP partner Tracey Tremayne-Lloyd LLB( 83) Certificate in Health Law, They did a superb job: Dr. Yazdanfar did NOT lose her licence. Only a nominal "Suspension" for 2 years: no problem as the clinic can function withoout her medical services employing other doctors. Also Dr.Yazdanfar can do admin. duties. As for the CPSO legal costs of $219,000 (NOT A FINE) , this a moderate amount considering the gravity of the case. Also is TAX DEDUCTABLE.
(Real estate agent) Krista Tabacoff Stryland, (1974-2007) was pronounced dead in North York Hosp shortly after paramedics took her there from GP Behnaz Yazdanfar’s cosmetic clinic (in a North Toronto office building).
The GP who was found incompetent in her care of cosmetic surgery patients – including Ms STRYLAND who died following a SIX LITER liposuction in 2007 .
Dr. Behnaz Yazdanfar was found to have displayed “disgraceful, dishonourable or unprofessional” conduct in her care of five patients following a TWO YEAR disciplinary hearing before the Ontario College of Physicians and Surgeons that ended in May 2011. PENALTY delayed for SEVEN MONTHS..
Yesterday the college suspended Yazdanfar’s licence for two years. After that, Dr. Yazdanfar will be restricted from SOLO surgery but will be permitted to ASSIST in surgery, including cosmetic procedures.
She was ordered Wednesday to appear before the college for a public reprimand within the next three months.
Yazdanfar was ordered to pay $219,000 in costs to the college within a year.
She must also co-operate with unannounced inspections of her practice and patient charts, conducted at her expense, and publish the terms of her restrictions at her clinic and on her website.
Like many doctors performing cosmetic procedures (in Ontario), Dr. Yazdanfar was never accredited as a plastic surgeon and holds no surgical designation.
Ms. Krista Stryland was pronounced dead in hospital shortly after paramedics took her from Dr.Yazdanfar’s cosmetic clinic. Court records obtained by the Star alleged Ms. Stryland lay in the clinic’s recovery room in serious condition for 30 minutes before anyone called 911.
Dr. Bruce Liberman, the anesthesiologist in the Stryland case, was also found to be incompetent. He is awaiting the result of a separate disciplinary hearing.
COMMENTS:
The CPSO was aware that GPs were perfoming surgery under GENERAL ANAESTHESIA in office buildings. The CPSO Registrar, past ER physician & CPSO Past President, , R.V. GERACE MD (UWO 72) FRCSC (ER 83) was aware of the danger for years and took no preventive action. As a direct result of this negligence a patient died; will Dr.Gerace resign?
Dr.Yazdanfar was represented by Lawyers Clayton Ruby CM BA(York 63) LLB (Tor.69) LLM(U.Cal.Berkeley) 11 Prince Arthur Av.,Yorkville,Tor. & Gardiner Roberts LLP partner Tracey Tremayne-Lloyd LLB( 83) Certificate in Health Law, They did a superb job: Dr. Yazdanfar did NOT lose her licence. Only a nominal "Suspension" for 2 years: no problem as the clinic can function withoout her medical services employing other doctors. Also Dr.Yazdanfar can do admin. duties. As for the CPSO legal costs of $219,000 (NOT A FINE) , this a moderate amount considering the gravity of the case. Also is TAX DEDUCTABLE.
22 Dec 2011
"BINDING SITE FREELIGHT" serum free light chain analysis
Now available PRIVATELY by Gamma Dynacare laboratories.
Provided free by OHIP at selected Oncology clinics.
Provided free by OHIP at selected Oncology clinics.
Freelite™ Serum Free Light Chain Assays
(UK) Freelite™ is a major breakthrough for the detection and monitoring of Multiple Myeloma (MM) and other B-cell dyscrasia. Freelite™ assays were developed by Binding Site to measure free lambda and free kappa immunoglobulin light chains. Our expertise in the manufacture of antibodies has enabled us to provide a quantifiable, highly specific, automatable free light chain assay for serum.
Significant clinical evidence indicates the benefit of Freelite™ serum free light chain assays in initial screening for monoclonal gammopathies. Other benefits include the identification of AL amyloidosis and Nonsecretory MM patients missed by conventional electrophoretic methods, use as a prognostic indicator for progression in myeloma, for risk stratification of MGUS patients, and rapid evaluation of treatment efficacy.
Freelite™ is a sensitive, specific marker of kappa and lambda free light chains (FLC) in serum and provides quantitative measurement of:
Significant clinical evidence indicates the benefit of Freelite™ serum free light chain assays in initial screening for monoclonal gammopathies. Other benefits include the identification of AL amyloidosis and Nonsecretory MM patients missed by conventional electrophoretic methods, use as a prognostic indicator for progression in myeloma, for risk stratification of MGUS patients, and rapid evaluation of treatment efficacy.
Freelite™ is a sensitive, specific marker of kappa and lambda free light chains (FLC) in serum and provides quantitative measurement of:
- Free kappa in serum
- Free lambda in serum
- The serum free kappa/free lambda ratio (κ/λ)
KOREAN-CANADIAN VENTURE for AIDS VACCINE
Sumagen Canada Inc. is a solely owned subsidiary of Sumagen Co., Ltd.
Sumagen Co., Ltd is a Korean pharmaceutical venture company focusing on developing an HIV/AIDS vaccine and is a solely owned subsidiary of Curocom Co., Ltd. Sumagen is also supporting the ongoing research work at the Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry, The University of Western Ontario (UWO) for and HCV (Hepatitis C Viru) vaccine.
Dr. Chil Yong Kang, Sumagen's Chief Scientific Officer and also a professor at UWO, developed a vaccine for HIV/AIDS for both therapeutic and prophylactic use with his team. In 2006, the company opened an office in London at the Stiller Centre, in order to closely support the vaccine development. The office in London with a staff of six, are managing the project to manufacture the materials for clinical trials, conduct non-clinical studies, and coordinate through a consultant to meet the requirements of the FDA in the United States to obtain approval to conduct human clinical trials.
Sumagen Co., Ltd is a Korean pharmaceutical venture company focusing on developing an HIV/AIDS vaccine and is a solely owned subsidiary of Curocom Co., Ltd. Sumagen is also supporting the ongoing research work at the Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry, The University of Western Ontario (UWO) for and HCV (Hepatitis C Viru) vaccine.
Dr. Chil Yong Kang, Sumagen's Chief Scientific Officer and also a professor at UWO, developed a vaccine for HIV/AIDS for both therapeutic and prophylactic use with his team. In 2006, the company opened an office in London at the Stiller Centre, in order to closely support the vaccine development. The office in London with a staff of six, are managing the project to manufacture the materials for clinical trials, conduct non-clinical studies, and coordinate through a consultant to meet the requirements of the FDA in the United States to obtain approval to conduct human clinical trials.
21 Dec 2011
NEW CPSO PRESIDENT Toronto Univ. Anaesthesiology Prof R.BYRICK MD (UWO 71)
Robert J. Byrick
St. Michael’s Hospital, (Catholic Hospital funded by the State + many private donors. Separate from the University Health Network.)30 Bond Street, ( @ QUEEN /YONGE)
Toronto, ON M5B 1W8
P: (416) 864-5071
F: (416) 864-6014
robert.byrick@utoronto.ca
Professor, Department of Anesthesia, University of Toronto
University of Toronto Representative, Council of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario
Academic and Clinical Interests- Peri-operative lipid microemboli after orthopedic and cardiac surgery
Current Research Projects
- Models of post-operative neurocognitive dysfunction from lipid microemboli
- Medication – related adverse events in clinical anesthesia
Selected Publications
- Byrick RJ, Kay CJ, Mazer CD, Wang Z, Mullen JB. Dynamic Characteristics of Cerebral Lipid Microemboli : videomicroscopy studies in rats. Anesth Analg 2003;97:1789-94.
- Orser BA, Byrick RJ. Anesthesia-related Medication Error: time to take action. Can J Anesth 2004:51;756-60
- Pub.Med (77 publications)
http://www.cpso.on.ca/uploadedFiles/policies/publications/dialoguearchives/dialogueissues/Issue4_2011_web.pdf
17 Dec 2011
U.Toronto Graduation class 2011 Population statistics
Total number: 213
female 51%
Stats based on Family names:
European origin :40%
Asian origin :25%
Mid-East & Indo-Pakistan origin:25%
Ashkenazi origin:10%
(COMMENT: Why not make Obstetrics an optional subject for male students? Many male students in North America have limited interest in the high medico-legal risk of obstetrics as well as the unsocial hours associated with parturition.)
female 51%
Stats based on Family names:
European origin :40%
Asian origin :25%
Mid-East & Indo-Pakistan origin:25%
Ashkenazi origin:10%
(COMMENT: Why not make Obstetrics an optional subject for male students? Many male students in North America have limited interest in the high medico-legal risk of obstetrics as well as the unsocial hours associated with parturition.)
16 Dec 2011
UK Daily Mail: MD gets $6-million award for hospital bullying when pregnant
Huge payout: Dr Eva Michalak, 53, was awarded a whopping £4.5million after being forced out of her £90,000-per-year job
The whopping payout is enough to pay the salaries of 210 nurses earning an entry-level salary of £21,176.
Dr Eva Michalak, 53, was the first consultant physician at Pontefract General Infirmary to take maternity leave.
But senior doctors turned on her because of the pregnancy and invented spurious allegations to force her out.
The £90,000-per-year consultant was sacked after enduring a five-year campaign of harassment.
The doctor's husband Dr Julian DeHavilland, 44, had told the hearing his wife was unable to carry out everyday tasks and was reluctant to leave the house.
Experts said it was unlikely she would completely recover.
A tribunal ruled yesterday that Mid Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust - who are having to make £31million in efficiency savings - must payout a whopping £4,452,206.60 in compensation.
In a damning judgement, the tribunal in Leeds, West Yorkshire, said it had been 'outraged' at the way senior staff had behaved towards Polish born Dr Michalak.
While she was away she was subjected to a horrendous campaign of harassment and colleagues falsely claimed she had bullied junior doctors.
They appointed a locum to cover a workload and nine staff were awarded a pay rise to cover her extra responsibilities while she was away.
After returning to work Dr Michalak was repeatedly suspended before being dismissed in July 2008 for no reason.
A tribunal last year found she had faced unlawful sex and race discrimination.
Yesterday she was awarded £1.1million for loss of past and future earnings plus £660,000 for loss of pension.
She was also awarded a cash payout for injury to her feelings and psychiatric injuries. Exemplary damages were also awarded against the Trust.
Dr Michalak had claimed damages of more than £9m.
She was appointed in 2002 to do rounds on the Medical Admissions Ward.
After she fell pregnant, secret meetings were held between senior doctors where it was agreed by Eva's head of department Dr Colin White and another senior worker that they would be seen to support her while actually trying to end her employment.
Shortly after being appointed medical director of the trust, Dr David Dawson then launched an investigation and, on the advice of another doctor suspended her in January 2006.
Forced out: Dr Eva Michalak, 53, was the first consultant physician at Pontefract General Infirmary to take maternity leave
Just one claim of bullying had been made - and that was later revoked.
But the suspension dragged on for two-and-a-half years while further 'evidence' was gathered against her before her dismissal.
The tribunal panel ruled that the medical director engineered the departure.
As they awarded damages yesterday the panel said in a damning statement: 'We are positively outraged at the way this employer has behaved.
'The claimant has lost her role and status. She is never going to return to work as a doctor, a profession which she cherished together with all the status that brings with it.
'In our view, simply undergoing those experiences with all the unpleasantness, anxiety, worry and fear that it caused the claimant amply justify an award for injury to feelings.'
Dr Michalak's husband quit his role as a scientific researcher to look after his wife and represented her at the tribunal.
Dr Michalak, who lives with her husband and eight-year-old son in Leeds, said after the previous hearing: 'I suffered years of psychological abuse. They basically hounded me because I had a baby. They destroyed my life, my health and my career.
'The last seven years have been a living hell. Their dishonesty was staggering. It was frightening and sinister how these people could abuse their positions and harass and bully me.
'I was so stressed I was crying on my way to work. I have been profoundly traumatised by the conduct of fellow doctors.'
Julia Squire, chief executive at the Trust, said: 'We have only just received the judge's decision on the compensation and this is based on very complex and lengthy calculations. We will need time to carefully consider these.'
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2074963/Top-woman-doctor-awarded-staggering-4-5-MILLION-hounded-job-baby.html#ixzz1ght0GNpl
12 Dec 2011
CPSO ASSESSORS
TOP CPSO Assessors of 2009 by number of assessments. Approx $1000/day + travel expenses.
GP Renee Blumenfeld MD (Toe.89) (19)
GP. Jeffrey Habert MD (Tor.87) (22) \
both practice at 2900 Steeles East, Suite 206, THORNHILL (N/E suburb of Toronto)
GP. J. Thomas Keogh (19) MD (Tor.74) BRAMPTON (N/W suburb of Toronto)
Ob/GYN Ronald Livingstone (19) MD (Belfast 1963) 123 Edward St, Medical Building Central TORONTO
GP Toomas Sauks (16) MD(Tor.72) OWEN SOUND. 160,000 pop town 100 miles N/W of Toronto.on Georgian Bay
METHADONE
GP Martin White (16) MD(Ottawa 72) CARLTON PLACE pop.10,000; 30 m. S/W of Ottawa.
GP Iris Greenwald (19) MD (Tor.95) RICHMOND HILL (N/E suburb of Toronto.
Independent Health Facilities Program:
Ms Lori Davis (11) (NON PHYSICIAN)
Nuclear Med/ Radaiologist David Gilday (30) MD(McGill 66) 123 Edward Street,TORONTO
Mr. Louis Gorgey (20) (NON PHYSICIAN)
Dr. David Gray (13)
Dr.William Vaughan (20)
GP.Melissa Snider-Adler (33) ((UWO 87) OSHAWA
TOP SECTION assessors
Anaesthetics: Matthias Marcus "Matt" KURREK MD(Wurzburg,Germany 1986) FRCPC 1994) Scarborough (Community) Hospital,-Eastern Toronto Suburb
Dermatology Rodion Andrew "Rod" KUNYNETZ (Ukranian speaker) MD(Tor.77) FRCPC (1982) Office BARRIE,small community North of Toronto
Haematology Kevin Robert IMRIE (French speaker) MD(Ottawa 88) FRCPC (1994) SUNNYBROOK UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL CANCER CENTRE ( North Toronto)
(COMMENT:NO AGE LIMIT of CPSO COUNCIL, COMMITTEES & ASSESSORS.Mainly small town & suburban GPs. A consideration before deciding to practice in Ontario.)
(COMMENT: The CPSO sets the standard of Clinical practice outside University Medical,schools and Research facilities. Being ABOVE the technical standard is particularly dangerous. Non-clinical medicine is safest medico-legally. ( A Professor of Obstetrics had to defend himself.against a woman who clained he had promised a NO PAIN vaginal delivery!).
GP Renee Blumenfeld MD (Toe.89) (19)
GP. Jeffrey Habert MD (Tor.87) (22) \
both practice at 2900 Steeles East, Suite 206, THORNHILL (N/E suburb of Toronto)
GP. J. Thomas Keogh (19) MD (Tor.74) BRAMPTON (N/W suburb of Toronto)
Ob/GYN Ronald Livingstone (19) MD (Belfast 1963) 123 Edward St, Medical Building Central TORONTO
GP Toomas Sauks (16) MD(Tor.72) OWEN SOUND. 160,000 pop town 100 miles N/W of Toronto.on Georgian Bay
METHADONE
GP Martin White (16) MD(Ottawa 72) CARLTON PLACE pop.10,000; 30 m. S/W of Ottawa.
GP Iris Greenwald (19) MD (Tor.95) RICHMOND HILL (N/E suburb of Toronto.
Independent Health Facilities Program:
More than 10 assessments
Ms Sheila Collins (24) (NON PHYSICIAN)Ms Lori Davis (11) (NON PHYSICIAN)
Nuclear Med/ Radaiologist David Gilday (30) MD(McGill 66) 123 Edward Street,TORONTO
Mr. Louis Gorgey (20) (NON PHYSICIAN)
Dr. David Gray (13)
Dr.William Vaughan (20)
GP.Melissa Snider-Adler (33) ((UWO 87) OSHAWA
TOP SECTION assessors
Anaesthetics: Matthias Marcus "Matt" KURREK MD(Wurzburg,Germany 1986) FRCPC 1994) Scarborough (Community) Hospital,-Eastern Toronto Suburb
Dermatology Rodion Andrew "Rod" KUNYNETZ (Ukranian speaker) MD(Tor.77) FRCPC (1982) Office BARRIE,small community North of Toronto
Haematology Kevin Robert IMRIE (French speaker) MD(Ottawa 88) FRCPC (1994) SUNNYBROOK UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL CANCER CENTRE ( North Toronto)
(COMMENT:NO AGE LIMIT of CPSO COUNCIL, COMMITTEES & ASSESSORS.Mainly small town & suburban GPs. A consideration before deciding to practice in Ontario.)
(COMMENT: The CPSO sets the standard of Clinical practice outside University Medical,schools and Research facilities. Being ABOVE the technical standard is particularly dangerous. Non-clinical medicine is safest medico-legally. ( A Professor of Obstetrics had to defend himself.against a woman who clained he had promised a NO PAIN vaginal delivery!).
11 Dec 2011
OMA: GOVERNANCE CHANGE
Not-for-Profit Corporactions Act (ONCA) will come into force in 2012..
1) ALL-MEMBER ("shareholder")MEETINGS of 33,000 OMA members
2) DIRECT PROVINCE-WIDE mail/electronic or PROXY voting by ALL memebers
3) COUNCIL possibly replaced by selected "council" of elected members.OR
4) DIRECT MEMBER voting on ALL Motions (SWISS style of DIRECT voting)
Figures updated by OMA Staff Ms A.Kafandaris.
Present COUNCIL (293) made-up of
77 Branch Societies: 142 elected delegates
62 Sections : 110 elected delegates
11 Distrricts 41 elected delegates : 22 (Chairmn + Secretaries) + 19 District Directors.
Summary:GEOGRAPHIC Delegates= 183 (mainly GPs)
SPECIALTY Delegates = 100 (mainly Specialists)
Present BOARD (25) made up of
11 Districts: represented by 19 elected delegates
Clinical Teachers by ONE elected delegates.
ASSEMBLIES 2 from General Practice; 1 each from MEDICAL,SURGICAL, & DIAGNOSTIC.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE: SIX chosen by BOARD
COMMITTEES: 65 all members selected by Committee on Committees and are paid daily honoraria plus full travel & hotel expenses.
Governance planning supervised by
Past Assist. Deputy Minister Labour & Past Deputy Minister Ontario Management Board , James("Jim") R. THOMAS P.Eng.(Queen's) LLB(York)
Centre for Creative Change Inc.
2181 Yonge St. #3302,
Toronto M4S 3H7
416 535 6994
1) ALL-MEMBER ("shareholder")MEETINGS of 33,000 OMA members
2) DIRECT PROVINCE-WIDE mail/electronic or PROXY voting by ALL memebers
3) COUNCIL possibly replaced by selected "council" of elected members.OR
4) DIRECT MEMBER voting on ALL Motions (SWISS style of DIRECT voting)
Figures updated by OMA Staff Ms A.Kafandaris.
Present COUNCIL (293) made-up of
77 Branch Societies: 142 elected delegates
62 Sections : 110 elected delegates
11 Distrricts 41 elected delegates : 22 (Chairmn + Secretaries) + 19 District Directors.
Summary:GEOGRAPHIC Delegates= 183 (mainly GPs)
SPECIALTY Delegates = 100 (mainly Specialists)
Present BOARD (25) made up of
11 Districts: represented by 19 elected delegates
Clinical Teachers by ONE elected delegates.
ASSEMBLIES 2 from General Practice; 1 each from MEDICAL,SURGICAL, & DIAGNOSTIC.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE: SIX chosen by BOARD
COMMITTEES: 65 all members selected by Committee on Committees and are paid daily honoraria plus full travel & hotel expenses.
Governance planning supervised by
Past Assist. Deputy Minister Labour & Past Deputy Minister Ontario Management Board , James("Jim") R. THOMAS P.Eng.(Queen's) LLB(York)
Centre for Creative Change Inc.
2181 Yonge St. #3302,
Toronto M4S 3H7
416 535 6994
4 Dec 2011
"Dr.Gifford-Jones" Ontario Docs frightened to do Gynae. exams.
Canada's top syndicated medical journalist, Toronto Gynaecologist K.F.WALKER MD (HARVARD 1950) FRCS(C) a.k.a "Dr.W.Gifford-Jones" wrote in EPOCH TIMES that Ontario MDs are doing fewer pelvic.& breast exams because of the fear of losing their CPSO licence under the Sex Zero-tolerance Law. The result is delayed diagnosis of Cancer. Dr.Walker stresses the medico-legal need for a CHAPERONE while examining a female.
Problem is the expense of hiring even a low-level Registered Practical nurse as a chaperone as well as a receptionist for the State-paid, piece-work Ontario GP.
An Ontario MD has to wait at least 5 years before applying to have a licence re-activated.
Many male Ontario docs are now limiting practices to Adult males. Precedence is by OMA having separate meetings for "WOMENS" HEALTH". (More than 50% of Ontario med.students are femaale.) This also avoids the problem of persuading mothers to immunise their children CPSO now recognises Chiropraxy,Naturopathic and Traditional Chinese medicine. Ont.MDs`can actually now be censured by the CPSO if they do not take seriously patients demands for so-called "Alternative Medicine".
Problem is the expense of hiring even a low-level Registered Practical nurse as a chaperone as well as a receptionist for the State-paid, piece-work Ontario GP.
An Ontario MD has to wait at least 5 years before applying to have a licence re-activated.
Many male Ontario docs are now limiting practices to Adult males. Precedence is by OMA having separate meetings for "WOMENS" HEALTH". (More than 50% of Ontario med.students are femaale.) This also avoids the problem of persuading mothers to immunise their children CPSO now recognises Chiropraxy,Naturopathic and Traditional Chinese medicine. Ont.MDs`can actually now be censured by the CPSO if they do not take seriously patients demands for so-called "Alternative Medicine".
3 Dec 2011
CPSO ELECTION RESULTS Dist 10 TORONTO
11,595 voters
2066 voted
18% response
ELECTED:
North Toronto GP Richard B. MacKenzie (Tor.73) 1138
Central Toronto GP-psychotherapist Marc C.GABEL (NY State U. 62) 1104
Sick Child.Hosp Paed Cardiologist Joel KIRSH (Tor 92) 1020
NOT ELECTED
Tor.Gen Hosp Psychiatrist Gerard CRAIGEN (Queen's 83) 977
East Toronto GP Kumar K.GUPTA (Manitoba 94) 853
Tor Psychiatrist Mark A. VOYSEY (Monash 78) 571
Tor. Nephrologist now GP-psych Derek A. DAVIDSON (Tor.63) 483
NorthyWest Tor. Radiologist Isadore J. CZOSNIAK (McGill 82) 476
North-Tor. Psychiatrist Toghra GHAEMMAGHAMI (nee HRAB) (Tehran 69) 193
2066 voted
18% response
ELECTED:
North Toronto GP Richard B. MacKenzie (Tor.73) 1138
Central Toronto GP-psychotherapist Marc C.GABEL (NY State U. 62) 1104
Sick Child.Hosp Paed Cardiologist Joel KIRSH (Tor 92) 1020
NOT ELECTED
Tor.Gen Hosp Psychiatrist Gerard CRAIGEN (Queen's 83) 977
East Toronto GP Kumar K.GUPTA (Manitoba 94) 853
Tor Psychiatrist Mark A. VOYSEY (Monash 78) 571
Tor. Nephrologist now GP-psych Derek A. DAVIDSON (Tor.63) 483
NorthyWest Tor. Radiologist Isadore J. CZOSNIAK (McGill 82) 476
North-Tor. Psychiatrist Toghra GHAEMMAGHAMI (nee HRAB) (Tehran 69) 193
30 Nov 2011
Serum Light Chain analysis only paid in Cancer units.
Monitoring patients with monoclonal light chain diseases but no M-spike on protein electrophoresis
Clinical Information Discusses physiology, pathophysiology, and general clinical aspects, as they relate to a laboratory test
The monoclonal gammopathies are characterized by a clonal expansion of plasma cells that secrete a monoclonal immunoglobulin (Ig). The monoclonal Ig secreted by these cells serves as a marker of the clonal proliferation, and the quantitation of monoclonal protein can be used to monitor the disease course.
The monoclonal gammopathies include multiple myeloma (MM), light chain multiple myeloma (LCMM), Waldenstrom’s macroglobulinemia (WM), nonsecretory myeloma (NSMM), smoldering multiple myeloma (SMM), monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS), primary systemic amyloidosis (AL), and light chain deposition disease (LCDD).
Monoclonal proteins are typically detected by serum protein electrophoresis (SPEP) and immunofixation (IF). However, the monoclonal light chain diseases (LCMM, AL, LCDD) and NSMM often do not have serum monoclonal proteins in high enough concentration to be detected and quantitated by SPEP.
A sensitive nephelometric assay specific for kappa free light chain (FLC) that doesn’t recognize light chains bound to Ig heavy chains has recently been described. This automated, nephelometric assay is reported to be more sensitive than IF for detection of monoclonal FLC. In some patients with NSMM, AL, or LCDD the FLC assay provides a positive identification of a monoclonal serum light chain when the serum IF is negative. In addition, the quantitation of FLC has been correlated with disease activity in patients with NSMM and AL.
See Laboratory Approach to the Diagnosis of Amyloidosis and Laboratory Screening Tests for Suspected Multiple Myeloma in Special Instructions.
The monoclonal gammopathies include multiple myeloma (MM), light chain multiple myeloma (LCMM), Waldenstrom’s macroglobulinemia (WM), nonsecretory myeloma (NSMM), smoldering multiple myeloma (SMM), monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS), primary systemic amyloidosis (AL), and light chain deposition disease (LCDD).
Monoclonal proteins are typically detected by serum protein electrophoresis (SPEP) and immunofixation (IF). However, the monoclonal light chain diseases (LCMM, AL, LCDD) and NSMM often do not have serum monoclonal proteins in high enough concentration to be detected and quantitated by SPEP.
A sensitive nephelometric assay specific for kappa free light chain (FLC) that doesn’t recognize light chains bound to Ig heavy chains has recently been described. This automated, nephelometric assay is reported to be more sensitive than IF for detection of monoclonal FLC. In some patients with NSMM, AL, or LCDD the FLC assay provides a positive identification of a monoclonal serum light chain when the serum IF is negative. In addition, the quantitation of FLC has been correlated with disease activity in patients with NSMM and AL.
See Laboratory Approach to the Diagnosis of Amyloidosis and Laboratory Screening Tests for Suspected Multiple Myeloma in Special Instructions.
Reference Values Describes reference intervals and additional information for interpretation of test results. May include intervals based on age and sex when appropriate. Intervals are Mayo-derived, unless otherwise designated. If an interpretive report is provided, the reference value field will state this.
KAPPA-FREE LIGHT CHAIN
0.33-1.94 mg/dL
LAMBDA-FREE LIGHT CHAIN
0.57-2.63 mg/dL
KAPPA/LAMBDA FLC RATIO
0.26-1.65
0.33-1.94 mg/dL
LAMBDA-FREE LIGHT CHAIN
0.57-2.63 mg/dL
KAPPA/LAMBDA FLC RATIO
0.26-1.65
Interpretation Provides information to assist in interpretation of the test results
The specificity of this assay for detection of monoclonal light chains relies on the ratio of free kappa and lambda light chains. Once an abnormal free light chain (FLC) K/L ratio has been demonstrated and a diagnosis has been made, the quantitation of the monoclonal light chain is useful for monitoring disease activity.
Changes in FLC quantitation reflect changes in the size of the monoclonal plasma cell population. Our experience to date is limited, but changes of >25% or trending of multiple specimens are needed to conclude biological significance.
Changes in FLC quantitation reflect changes in the size of the monoclonal plasma cell population. Our experience to date is limited, but changes of >25% or trending of multiple specimens are needed to conclude biological significance.
Cautions Discusses conditions that may cause diagnostic confusion, including improper specimen collection and handling, inappropriate test selection, and interfering substances
Elevated kappa and lambda free light chain (FLC) may occur due to polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia or impaired renal clearance. A specific increase in FLC (eg, FLC K/L ratio) must be demonstrated for diagnostic purposes.
Moderate to marked lipemia may interfere with the ability to perform testing.
Moderate to marked lipemia may interfere with the ability to perform testing.
Supportive Data
Studies at Mayo Clinic have shown that in some patients with urine monoclonal light chains and negative serum immunofixation (IF), the free light chain (FLC) assay can identify monoclonal FLC in the serum. These studies support the increased sensitivity of the nephelometric FLC assay. In a series of patients with primary systemic amyloid treated by stem cell transplantation, the quantitation and monitoring of FLC predicted organ response (eg, disease course).
Clinical Reference Provides recommendations for further in-depth reading of a clinical nature
Drayson M, Tang LX, Drew R, et al: Serum free light chain measurements for identifying and monitoring patients with nonsecretory multiple myeloma. Blood 2001;97(9):2900-2902
29 Nov 2011
UK DAILY MAIL: COST of AIDS
MOUNTING COSTS OF HIV TREATMENT
The cost of treating someone with HIV in the UK is estimated to be around £18,000 per year when they are not showing any symptoms.
This is based on the price of care as well as triple-drug antiretroviral therapy.
However, it costs £21,500 to treat patients who are showing symptoms and £41,000 for those with full-blown AIDS.
Patients who have four drugs cost the NHS between £22,775 and £48,000 per year.
The annual cost of providing HIV treatment and care in the UK could be as high as £758 million by 2013, according to a study in PLoS One. Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2067496/Number-people-HIV-UK-poised-hit-100-000-infections-rise-6-year.html#ixzz1f6DXIu6F
28 Nov 2011
CSCH-(OD) WORKSHOPS JAN & MARCH 2012
CANADIAN SOCIETY OF CLINICAL HYPNOSIS
(ONTARIO DIVISION)
The Fundamentals of Hypnosis
a three-day Introductory workshop - January 20-21 and March 15
Medical accreditation info: 19.5 CFPC Mainpro-M1 or RCPS Section 1 credits
$675 - only $225 per day
three workshops on the Evolution of Ego State Therapy
with Claire Frederick M.D.
Part 1: History and Applications
a two day Intermediate workshop on Friday March 16 and Saturday March 17 $695
Part 2: Healing the Divided Self
a two day Advanced workshop on Friday June 8 and Saturday June 9 $695
Part 3 will be presented as part of the SCEH conference which will be held in Toronto in October 2012, co-sponsored by CSCH-OD
All workshops will be held in downtown Toronto. Student discount and CSCH / ASCH / SCEH members discounts may be available. These are non-member "early bird" rates shown above. There are eligibility requirements for each workshop. Brochures will be distributed through this mailing list as they are finalised. Registration for the Introductory workshop will open in early December.
http://www.hypnosisontario.com/
(ONTARIO DIVISION)
The Fundamentals of Hypnosis
a three-day Introductory workshop - January 20-21 and March 15
Medical accreditation info: 19.5 CFPC Mainpro-M1 or RCPS Section 1 credits
$675 - only $225 per day
three workshops on the Evolution of Ego State Therapy
with Claire Frederick M.D.
Part 1: History and Applications
a two day Intermediate workshop on Friday March 16 and Saturday March 17 $695
Part 2: Healing the Divided Self
a two day Advanced workshop on Friday June 8 and Saturday June 9 $695
Part 3 will be presented as part of the SCEH conference which will be held in Toronto in October 2012, co-sponsored by CSCH-OD
All workshops will be held in downtown Toronto. Student discount and CSCH / ASCH / SCEH members discounts may be available. These are non-member "early bird" rates shown above. There are eligibility requirements for each workshop. Brochures will be distributed through this mailing list as they are finalised. Registration for the Introductory workshop will open in early December.
http://www.hypnosisontario.com/
25 Nov 2011
Ontario College of Family Physicians new Pres. David TANNENBAUM MD( McGill 77) FCFP
At Richmond St. HILTON HOTEL Toronto Mt. Sinai Granovsky Glusken GP Centre David TANNENBAUM MD FCFP was acclaimed President.
Many GPs now leaving General GP and Focusing on a Specialty recognised by the Royal Colleges of Physicians & Surgeons. Mainly Acupuncture, Anaesthesia, Cosmetic medicine, Geriatrics (Nursing Homes) Hair Transplants, Musculoskeletal medicine(including joint injections & manipulation), Palliative medicine, Psychotherapy, Refraction, Rehabilitation (car accidents & WSIB), Sports Medicine, Surgical assisting.Weight loss.
Reasons:
Many specialties have lower overhead: especially psychotherapy.
Higher status: not "just a GP" Similar to UK GPwSI (GP with Special Interest).
Higher income as many services not covered by Provincial insurance with higher PRIVATE RATES.
Less medico-legal risk as TREATMENT stressed not Diagnosis.
With increase of clinical responsibility of Nurse Practitioners, the rise in Canada of Physician Assistants, and of Pharmacists in PAID Counselling, the role of GP in Ontario is declining. A worry to the College of FPs.
COFP Exec.Director & CEO is a Registered Nurse Ms Jan KASPERSKI
Many GPs now leaving General GP and Focusing on a Specialty recognised by the Royal Colleges of Physicians & Surgeons. Mainly Acupuncture, Anaesthesia, Cosmetic medicine, Geriatrics (Nursing Homes) Hair Transplants, Musculoskeletal medicine(including joint injections & manipulation), Palliative medicine, Psychotherapy, Refraction, Rehabilitation (car accidents & WSIB), Sports Medicine, Surgical assisting.Weight loss.
Reasons:
Many specialties have lower overhead: especially psychotherapy.
Higher status: not "just a GP" Similar to UK GPwSI (GP with Special Interest).
Higher income as many services not covered by Provincial insurance with higher PRIVATE RATES.
Less medico-legal risk as TREATMENT stressed not Diagnosis.
With increase of clinical responsibility of Nurse Practitioners, the rise in Canada of Physician Assistants, and of Pharmacists in PAID Counselling, the role of GP in Ontario is declining. A worry to the College of FPs.
COFP Exec.Director & CEO is a Registered Nurse Ms Jan KASPERSKI
19 Nov 2011
COCKROACH SENSITIVITY in Allergic rhinitis
Tahira Batool
*, Rozita Borici-Mazi From
Victoria, Canada. 3-6 November 2010
Canadian Society of Allergy and Clinical Immunology Annual Scientific Meeting 2010 Background
Role of cockroach allergy in asthma has been widely studied
and the effect of environmental control on asthma
symptoms has been established. However, the role of
cockroach sensitivity remains unknown. We have
designed this study to establish role of cockroach sensitization
on allergic rhinitis.
Hypothesis
Cockroach allergy has significant role in allergic rhinitis.
Population
Allergic rhinitis patients attending allergy and clinical
immunology clinic under Dr Rozita Borici-Mazi in Kingston
General Hospital, Kingston ON.
Method
Retrospective chart review of patients evaluated for
allergic rhinitis and underwent skin prick testing.
A cohort of 250 patients was randomly selected with
inclusion criteria being symptomatic allergic rhinitis and
positive allergy skin prick testing to usual panel of allergens.
Data collection included demographics, smoking
exposure, symptom pattern, presence or absence of
non-nasal symptoms, positive skin prick testing for
cockroach and other environmental allergens such as
dust mite, cat, dog, and seasonal pollens.
Results
Allergy to seasonal allergens was found to be the most
common (n=191, 76.4%) followed by house dust mite
(n=149, 59.6%) and cat allergen (n=118, 47.2%). Cockroach
sensitization was found in 62 (25%). Among the
cockroach sensitivity group, 8 patients had monosensitization
to cockroach. All of them had perennial symptoms.
75%of these people were residents of urban areas.
Two patients who had symptoms for more than 8 years
had developed asthma.
Conclusion
Cockroach allergy is found to be one of the significant
indoor allergens in allergic rhinitis in Kingston area.
Given the relationship of Allergic Rhinitis and Asthma
development, there is need to recognize this important
allergen earlier and treat it through allergen avoidance
and/or Immunotherapy, not only to treat allergic rhinitis
symptoms but also to prevent development of allergic
asthma. Further studies to establish the correlation
between allergic rhinitis and cockroach sensitization are
needed.
Published: 4 November 2010
doi:10.1186/1710-1492-6-S2-P11
Cite this article as:
allergic rhinitis patients; is it significant? To see prevalence of cockroach
sensitivity in allergic rhinitis patients in Kingston area.
Clinical Immunology
* Correspondence: 7TB11@queensu.ca
Department of Internal Medicine, QueenAnn Allergy. 1978 Dec;41(6):333-6.
A comparative study of prevalence of skin hypersensitivity to cockroach and house dust antigens.
Abstract
Allergy skin tests with cockroach antigen along with various common inhalant allergens were performed on 222 atopic and on 63 non-atopic subjects. The most prevalent allergen producing a positive skin test was house dust antigen with a positive response of 72%, 78% and 57% in atopic adults, atopic children and non-atopic children, respectively. The next prevalent positive skin test was to cockroach antigen with 50%, 60% and 27%, respectively, of the three groups tested. The differences between positive cockroach hypersensitivity and house dust hypersensitivity in all three groups tested were statistically significant. Next in order of prevalence of positive skin test to common inhalants were western weeds, ragweeds and cats. Incidence of cockroach hypersensitivity was 58% among asthmatic adults and 69% among asthmatic children. The results indicate that cockroach hypersensitivity is highly prevalent and that cockroach antigen is an independent agent from house dust as a cause of immediate hypersensitivity reaction.- PMID:
- 569451
- [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
POSTER PRESENTATION Open Access
WISEMAN RD, WOODIN WG, MILLER HC, MYERS MA. Insect allergy as a possible cause of inhalant sensitivity. J Allergy. 1959 May–Jun;30(3):191–197. [PubMed]
Cockroach sensitivity in allergic rhinitis patients;
is it significant? To see prevalence of cockroach
sensitivity in allergic rhinitis patients in
Kingston area
16 Nov 2011
OMA COUNCIL MEETING ELECTION RESULTS
DIRECTOR elected from the General & Family practice assembly:
Georgetown GP Kiran Udaya CHERLA MD (Tor. 2001) defeated incumbent Ottawa GP Alicia DONOHUE MHSc (Tor.1983) MD (Ottawa 1985)
DIRECTOR re-elected from the Surgical assembly, Toronto Vascular Surgeon Wayne TANNER MD( 1972 Tor.) FMSQ (1980 Quebec) FRCS(C) (1984 Vasc.Surg.)
Other candidates:
1)Toronto Surgical assistant Dr Davis ESSER MD (U.Western Ont 1987)
2)Chief of Staff Scarborough Hosp Dr.Steven JACKSON MDCM (McGill 1987) FRCS(C) Surgical oncology 1994 MBA(Rotman, U.Toronto 2011)
3)Peterborough Anaesthetist Dr Renwick MANN MD (Queen's 1975) FRCP(C) 1979
Georgetown GP Kiran Udaya CHERLA MD (Tor. 2001) defeated incumbent Ottawa GP Alicia DONOHUE MHSc (Tor.1983) MD (Ottawa 1985)
DIRECTOR re-elected from the Surgical assembly, Toronto Vascular Surgeon Wayne TANNER MD( 1972 Tor.) FMSQ (1980 Quebec) FRCS(C) (1984 Vasc.Surg.)
Other candidates:
1)Toronto Surgical assistant Dr Davis ESSER MD (U.Western Ont 1987)
2)Chief of Staff Scarborough Hosp Dr.Steven JACKSON MDCM (McGill 1987) FRCS(C) Surgical oncology 1994 MBA(Rotman, U.Toronto 2011)
3)Peterborough Anaesthetist Dr Renwick MANN MD (Queen's 1975) FRCP(C) 1979
14 Nov 2011
BAYER point-of-care HbA1c test using capillary blood & "A1CNow+" monitor
A1CNow+®
Fast. Easy. Accurate.
Get A1C test results now in just 5 minutes. The A1CNow+® monitor is hand-held, portable and simple to use. Test results are lab accurate at 99%1.The A1CNow+® monitor enables you to get rapid A1c test results while your patients are in your office, empowering you to make on-the-spot treatment decisions for your diabetes patients.
Using the A1CNow+® monitor is:
Fast.
- In office testing. No waiting for lab results
- Results in just five minutes
- Hands-on procedure time is less than one minute
- Provides opportunity for immediate, face-to-face counseling
Easy.
- Simple, 3-step procedure
- CLIA waived
- Only 5 μL of blood from a fingertip is needed
- No calibration, no daily controls, no maintenance
- No refrigeration necessary if used within four months
- No capital equipment required
- Enables A1C testing in every exam room
Accurate.
- Proven lab accuracy at 99%
- NGSP certified
13 Nov 2011
PricewaterhouseCooper The OMA Study of Income,Overhead and Hours Worked
$600,000 PwC study commissioned by OMA. published Oct. 2011. 108 pages. PwC Head Health Dept.Ms Barbara PITTS PwC CEO William McFarland B.Com(Hons.U Tor.) CA.
18 York street, Tor.,Ont. M5J 0B2
"The OMA Study of Income,Overhead and Hours Worked."
1,249 OMA members responded : 8.6%
HIGHEST DAILY NET (after overhead expenses).
#1 NUCLEAR MEDICINE $2,116
#2 RADIATION ONCOLOGY $2,085
#3 CARDIOLOGY $2,013
#4 General THORACIC SURGERY $1,854
#5 Diagnostic RADIOLOGY $1,780
HIGHEST OVERHEAD/HOUR
#1 OPHTHALMOLOGY $126
#2 GASTROENTEROLOGY $110
#3 CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY $104
#4 RESPIROLOGY $83
#5 UROLOGY $82
HIGHEST HOURS WORKED/day
#1 General THORACIC SURGERY 9.2
#2 PLASTIC SURGERY 8.8
#3 Orthopaedic SURGERY 8.7
#4 UROLOGY 8.7
#5 CARDIAC SURGERY 8.6
HIGHEST NET HOURLY INCOME
#1 RADIATION ONCOLOGY $311
#2 NUCLEAR MEDICINE $ 300
#3 COMMUNITY MEDICINE $296
#4 CARDIOLOGY $260
#5 Diagnostic RADIOLOGY $249
18 York street, Tor.,Ont. M5J 0B2
"The OMA Study of Income,Overhead and Hours Worked."
1,249 OMA members responded : 8.6%
HIGHEST DAILY NET (after overhead expenses).
#1 NUCLEAR MEDICINE $2,116
#2 RADIATION ONCOLOGY $2,085
#3 CARDIOLOGY $2,013
#4 General THORACIC SURGERY $1,854
#5 Diagnostic RADIOLOGY $1,780
HIGHEST OVERHEAD/HOUR
#1 OPHTHALMOLOGY $126
#2 GASTROENTEROLOGY $110
#3 CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY $104
#4 RESPIROLOGY $83
#5 UROLOGY $82
HIGHEST HOURS WORKED/day
#1 General THORACIC SURGERY 9.2
#2 PLASTIC SURGERY 8.8
#3 Orthopaedic SURGERY 8.7
#4 UROLOGY 8.7
#5 CARDIAC SURGERY 8.6
HIGHEST NET HOURLY INCOME
#1 RADIATION ONCOLOGY $311
#2 NUCLEAR MEDICINE $ 300
#3 COMMUNITY MEDICINE $296
#4 CARDIOLOGY $260
#5 Diagnostic RADIOLOGY $249
11 Nov 2011
Dusseldorf Heinrich-Heine University Prof N.GATTERMANN MD PhD visits Canada
Thanks to NOVARTIS sponsorship, Prof. GATTERMANN gave a series of lectures in Canada on MYELODYSPLASTIC SYNDROME (MDS) with special reference to Non-Transferrin-Bound Iron (NTBI) overload trearted by chelating agents such as deferasirox (Exjade).
Approx. 1800 Canadians are affected by MDS.
The cardiotoxic effect of NTBI was emphasised.
Ann.Haematol.(2011) 90:1-10 (Springer)
"Iron overload in MDS-pathophysiology,diagnosis, and complications."
N.Gattermann H.H.U. Dusseldorf, Germany E.Rachmilewitz E.Wolfson Med. Center,Holon, Israel.
Prof Gatterman studied with Late Hepatologist Dame Sheila Sherlock at the Hampstead branch of London's Royal Free Hospital and at the Boston Harvard Medical school. An idiomatically perfect English speaker..
Approx. 1800 Canadians are affected by MDS.
The cardiotoxic effect of NTBI was emphasised.
Ann.Haematol.(2011) 90:1-10 (Springer)
"Iron overload in MDS-pathophysiology,diagnosis, and complications."
N.Gattermann H.H.U. Dusseldorf, Germany E.Rachmilewitz E.Wolfson Med. Center,Holon, Israel.
Prof Gatterman studied with Late Hepatologist Dame Sheila Sherlock at the Hampstead branch of London's Royal Free Hospital and at the Boston Harvard Medical school. An idiomatically perfect English speaker..
9 Nov 2011
LEGAL NEWS friom GARDINER ROBERTS
NEW CHANGES TO RHPA TO AFFECT ONTARIO’S PHYSICIANS
By Lonny J. Rosen, LL.B., C.S. and Elyse Sunshine, B.A., LL.B.*
Significant changes to the Regulated Health Professions Act, 1991 (RHPA) and its procedural
code have recently come into effect. These will dramatically affect the information about all
regulated health professionals, including physicians, that is available to the public, and will
provide health Colleges with sweeping new powers and access to more personal information
about and from their members than ever before. Some of these changes were enacted with the
passage of Bill 171 in 2007, but were not implemented until this month. Other changes were
introduced and enacted this year to enhance Colleges’ powers of investigation. This article will
summarize some of the more significant changes to the RHPA’s Procedural Code.
Enhanced Mandatory Reporting
The RHPA and its procedural code previously imposed very limited reporting obligations. These
arose only when a doctor learned in the course of his or her practice, that a patient had been
sexually abused by a health professional or when a health professional’s employment had been
terminated or suspended because of misconduct, incompetence or incapacity.
These reporting obligations remain. Now, however, operators of a facility where one or more
members practice will now be required to report to the Registrar if they believe that a member
practicing at the facility is incompetent or incapacitated - regardless of whether the operator
terminates the member’s employment or association. As “facility” is not defined in the
legislation, Colleges are likely to interpret the word broadly.
These obligations may therefore apply to any person who operates any type of practice,
including a family practice or health team. If an individual fails to report in these circumstances,
he or she faces a fine of up to $25,000.00 for a first offence and could be subjected to
professional misconduct charges (if he or she is a professional). As operators of a facility may
have difficulty determining whether a member practicing at the facility is incapacitated or
incompetent, it is important for all professionals and “facility operators” to understand the legal
meaning of “incompetence” and “incapacity” and to avail themselves of legal advice before
taking any steps in this regard.
Additionally as of June 4, 2009, all health professionals are required to file a report with their
College if they have been found guilty of any offence. This obligation will enable Colleges to
investigate members’ conduct, and to determine whether the finding raises concerns relevant to
their suitability to practice. Offences reported to Colleges should not appear on the public
register unless there is a related finding of professional misconduct.
What Was Private is now Public
While the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO) has made much of the public
register available on its website for some time, it must now include more information than ever
before. The result of every disciplinary and incapacity hearing, a synopsis of those decisions, all
cases which have been referred to the Discipline Committee for a hearing, notations of every
suspension or revocation that has been issued to a doctor and, for the first time, any finding of
professional negligence or malpractice made against them by a court must now be included on
the website. Doctors will now have to self-report any such findings to the CPSO.
Introducing the ‘Inquiries, Complaints and Reports’ Committee
Each College will see its Complaints Committee replaced by the Inquiries, Complaints and
Reports Committee (ICRC), which will receive all complaints, inquiries and reports about a
member. Previously, if a complaint dealt with issues of standards of practice, the Complaints
Committee could refer the matter to the Quality Assurance Committee for some form of
assessment and/or mediation. This referral power has been eliminated but the ICRC could
require a member to complete continuing education or remediation.
Enhanced Emergency Powers
What is potentially most distressing for doctors is that the CPSO’s ICRC now has the power to
make an interim order suspending their licence, without notice, if there are grounds to believe
that the doctor’s conduct exposes, or is likely to expose, his or her patients to harm or injury and
urgent intervention is needed. Previously, the CPSO Executive Committee had this authority,
but could not exercise its “emergency powers” without giving the member an opportunity to
comment.
The Past May Haunt You
Among other concerning changes to the RHPA is a requirement that the ICRC, when considering
a complaint or report about a member, consider all prior decisions about the member, including
decisions in which no misconduct was found and no action was taken (except for decisions
regarding a complaint that was found to be frivolous, or made in bad faith). These amendments
will be troubling for all doctors who have previously been the subject of a complaint - even
where no action was taken by the Complaints Committee - due to a concern that the ICRC may
be reluctant to dismiss a complaint simply because a doctor has been the subject of numerous or
similar allegations in the past. Further, while information about past decisions will not
necessarily be disclosed to a complainant, such information may still become available in a
review, appeal or subsequent proceeding.
Alternative Dispute Resolution
Another change to the regulatory regime is that Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) is now
formally available for the resolution of a complaint matter. A complaint matter may only be
referred to ADR with the consent of both the complainant and the physician, as long as it does
not involve an allegation of sexual abuse. If an ADR process results in resolution, the panel has
discretion to accept the proposed resolution, but may reject the settlement and still continue with
its investigation of the complaint! If no resolution is reached, however, then all communications
between the health professional, the complainant and any facilitator in connection with the ADR
process shall remain confidential and cannot be part used in any subsequent proceeding.
Penalties Effective Immediately
Presently, most Discipline Committee orders which suspend or revoke a doctor’s license or
impose terms, conditions or limitations on the license, will not take effect until he or she has had
the opportunity to appeal and the appeal has been decided. Colleges will now be permitted to
apply to the Court to have the decision of the Discipline Committee take effect immediately,
notwithstanding the commencement of an appeal. Additionally, if a doctor is found guilty of
certain types of sexual abuse or has his or her licence suspended or revoked on the grounds of
incapacity or incompetence, the suspension or revocation takes effect immediately, despite any
appeal.
Enhanced Powers of College Investigators
CPSO Investigations have typically involved chart reviews and witness interviews, but rarely
have investigators sought to compel the physicians under investigation to answer questions or to
carry out procedures while under investigation. When the CPSO attempted to employ these
investigative techniques in the course of recent investigations, some of the physicians being
investigated challenged the scope of the CPSO’s investigative powers. The Divisional Court
accepted the CPSO’s expansive interpretation of its investigative powers, but the Ontario Court
of Appeal agreed to hear the physicians’ appeal and did so (the decision is under reserve). In the
interim, however, rather than awaiting the Court of Appeal’s ruling, the Government of Ontario
has enacted Bill 141, further amending the Code to authorize investigators to “make reasonable
inquiries of the member who is the subject of the investigation” and to compel the member to
cooperate fully with an investigator. The Code now provides for direct observation of a member
in his or her practice, including the direct observation by inspectors of procedures (i.e. surgery).
It appears that regardless of the Court of Appeal’s determination, CPSO investigators and
inspectors will have significantly greater and more intrusive powers at their disposal.
Conclusion
While these amendments will no doubt allow for the CPSO, patients and members of the public
to learn more about Ontario’s doctors, there is no corresponding enhancement of doctors’ rights
or procedural protections. Such protections will still be available in connection with many
proceedings, but the concern remains that doctors will find themselves embroiled in more
conflicts and other proceedings as a result of the College’s enhanced investigative powers and
the increased information disclosure required by the new amendments. For these reasons, access
to advice from lawyers who specialize in representing health professionals in regulatory
proceedings will be more important than ever before.
This column is intended to convey brief, timely, but only general information and does not constitute legal
advice. Readers are encouraged to speak with legal counsel to understand how the general issues noted
above apply to their particular circumstances.
*Lonny J. Rosen (a Certified Specialist in Health Law) and Elyse Sunshine are partners in the Health
Law Group at Gardiner Roberts LLP. Please talk to Elyse or Lonny about how the changes discussed
in this article will impact your practice. Elyse can be reached at: 416.369.4343 or by e-mail
esunshine@gardiner-roberts.com. Lonny can be reached at:
416-369-4345 or by e-mail:
lrosen@gardiner-roberts.com
By Lonny J. Rosen, LL.B., C.S. and Elyse Sunshine, B.A., LL.B.*
Significant changes to the Regulated Health Professions Act, 1991 (RHPA) and its procedural
code have recently come into effect. These will dramatically affect the information about all
regulated health professionals, including physicians, that is available to the public, and will
provide health Colleges with sweeping new powers and access to more personal information
about and from their members than ever before. Some of these changes were enacted with the
passage of Bill 171 in 2007, but were not implemented until this month. Other changes were
introduced and enacted this year to enhance Colleges’ powers of investigation. This article will
summarize some of the more significant changes to the RHPA’s Procedural Code.
Enhanced Mandatory Reporting
The RHPA and its procedural code previously imposed very limited reporting obligations. These
arose only when a doctor learned in the course of his or her practice, that a patient had been
sexually abused by a health professional or when a health professional’s employment had been
terminated or suspended because of misconduct, incompetence or incapacity.
These reporting obligations remain. Now, however, operators of a facility where one or more
members practice will now be required to report to the Registrar if they believe that a member
practicing at the facility is incompetent or incapacitated - regardless of whether the operator
terminates the member’s employment or association. As “facility” is not defined in the
legislation, Colleges are likely to interpret the word broadly.
These obligations may therefore apply to any person who operates any type of practice,
including a family practice or health team. If an individual fails to report in these circumstances,
he or she faces a fine of up to $25,000.00 for a first offence and could be subjected to
professional misconduct charges (if he or she is a professional). As operators of a facility may
have difficulty determining whether a member practicing at the facility is incapacitated or
incompetent, it is important for all professionals and “facility operators” to understand the legal
meaning of “incompetence” and “incapacity” and to avail themselves of legal advice before
taking any steps in this regard.
Additionally as of June 4, 2009, all health professionals are required to file a report with their
College if they have been found guilty of any offence. This obligation will enable Colleges to
investigate members’ conduct, and to determine whether the finding raises concerns relevant to
their suitability to practice. Offences reported to Colleges should not appear on the public
register unless there is a related finding of professional misconduct.
What Was Private is now Public
While the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO) has made much of the public
register available on its website for some time, it must now include more information than ever
before. The result of every disciplinary and incapacity hearing, a synopsis of those decisions, all
cases which have been referred to the Discipline Committee for a hearing, notations of every
suspension or revocation that has been issued to a doctor and, for the first time, any finding of
professional negligence or malpractice made against them by a court must now be included on
the website. Doctors will now have to self-report any such findings to the CPSO.
Introducing the ‘Inquiries, Complaints and Reports’ Committee
Each College will see its Complaints Committee replaced by the Inquiries, Complaints and
Reports Committee (ICRC), which will receive all complaints, inquiries and reports about a
member. Previously, if a complaint dealt with issues of standards of practice, the Complaints
Committee could refer the matter to the Quality Assurance Committee for some form of
assessment and/or mediation. This referral power has been eliminated but the ICRC could
require a member to complete continuing education or remediation.
Enhanced Emergency Powers
What is potentially most distressing for doctors is that the CPSO’s ICRC now has the power to
make an interim order suspending their licence, without notice, if there are grounds to believe
that the doctor’s conduct exposes, or is likely to expose, his or her patients to harm or injury and
urgent intervention is needed. Previously, the CPSO Executive Committee had this authority,
but could not exercise its “emergency powers” without giving the member an opportunity to
comment.
The Past May Haunt You
Among other concerning changes to the RHPA is a requirement that the ICRC, when considering
a complaint or report about a member, consider all prior decisions about the member, including
decisions in which no misconduct was found and no action was taken (except for decisions
regarding a complaint that was found to be frivolous, or made in bad faith). These amendments
will be troubling for all doctors who have previously been the subject of a complaint - even
where no action was taken by the Complaints Committee - due to a concern that the ICRC may
be reluctant to dismiss a complaint simply because a doctor has been the subject of numerous or
similar allegations in the past. Further, while information about past decisions will not
necessarily be disclosed to a complainant, such information may still become available in a
review, appeal or subsequent proceeding.
Alternative Dispute Resolution
Another change to the regulatory regime is that Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) is now
formally available for the resolution of a complaint matter. A complaint matter may only be
referred to ADR with the consent of both the complainant and the physician, as long as it does
not involve an allegation of sexual abuse. If an ADR process results in resolution, the panel has
discretion to accept the proposed resolution, but may reject the settlement and still continue with
its investigation of the complaint! If no resolution is reached, however, then all communications
between the health professional, the complainant and any facilitator in connection with the ADR
process shall remain confidential and cannot be part used in any subsequent proceeding.
Penalties Effective Immediately
Presently, most Discipline Committee orders which suspend or revoke a doctor’s license or
impose terms, conditions or limitations on the license, will not take effect until he or she has had
the opportunity to appeal and the appeal has been decided. Colleges will now be permitted to
apply to the Court to have the decision of the Discipline Committee take effect immediately,
notwithstanding the commencement of an appeal. Additionally, if a doctor is found guilty of
certain types of sexual abuse or has his or her licence suspended or revoked on the grounds of
incapacity or incompetence, the suspension or revocation takes effect immediately, despite any
appeal.
Enhanced Powers of College Investigators
CPSO Investigations have typically involved chart reviews and witness interviews, but rarely
have investigators sought to compel the physicians under investigation to answer questions or to
carry out procedures while under investigation. When the CPSO attempted to employ these
investigative techniques in the course of recent investigations, some of the physicians being
investigated challenged the scope of the CPSO’s investigative powers. The Divisional Court
accepted the CPSO’s expansive interpretation of its investigative powers, but the Ontario Court
of Appeal agreed to hear the physicians’ appeal and did so (the decision is under reserve). In the
interim, however, rather than awaiting the Court of Appeal’s ruling, the Government of Ontario
has enacted Bill 141, further amending the Code to authorize investigators to “make reasonable
inquiries of the member who is the subject of the investigation” and to compel the member to
cooperate fully with an investigator. The Code now provides for direct observation of a member
in his or her practice, including the direct observation by inspectors of procedures (i.e. surgery).
It appears that regardless of the Court of Appeal’s determination, CPSO investigators and
inspectors will have significantly greater and more intrusive powers at their disposal.
Conclusion
While these amendments will no doubt allow for the CPSO, patients and members of the public
to learn more about Ontario’s doctors, there is no corresponding enhancement of doctors’ rights
or procedural protections. Such protections will still be available in connection with many
proceedings, but the concern remains that doctors will find themselves embroiled in more
conflicts and other proceedings as a result of the College’s enhanced investigative powers and
the increased information disclosure required by the new amendments. For these reasons, access
to advice from lawyers who specialize in representing health professionals in regulatory
proceedings will be more important than ever before.
This column is intended to convey brief, timely, but only general information and does not constitute legal
advice. Readers are encouraged to speak with legal counsel to understand how the general issues noted
above apply to their particular circumstances.
*Lonny J. Rosen (a Certified Specialist in Health Law) and Elyse Sunshine are partners in the Health
Law Group at Gardiner Roberts LLP. Please talk to Elyse or Lonny about how the changes discussed
in this article will impact your practice. Elyse can be reached at: 416.369.4343 or by e-mail
esunshine@gardiner-roberts.com. Lonny can be reached at:
416-369-4345 or by e-mail:
lrosen@gardiner-roberts.com
5 Nov 2011
Ontario College Physicians & Surgeons uses Private investigators with secret cameras.
In three published discipline cases`the CPSO used secret cameras and private investigators.
SPYTECH has`details of hidden cameras.
http://www.spytech.com/
In USA some doctors are recording all patient contacts.
CAMERA DETECTOR $1000
SPYTECH has`details of hidden cameras.
http://www.spytech.com/
In USA some doctors are recording all patient contacts.
CAMERA DETECTOR $1000
Mini Gadgets CD-PRO Pro Camera Detector |
4 Nov 2011
ONTARIO: GP with FOCUSED PRACTICE a copy of UK GPwSI (GP with Special Interest)
Ontario College Phys & Surgeons (CPSO) has copied UK NHS status of "GPwSI"; above basic GP but below a Specialist. GPwSIs often work as hospital clinic assistants to UK Consultants.
CPSO changed the phrase of "Practice Limited to...."
Now "GP with Focused Practice in..."
The "GP" must be included to le4t the public know that the doctor is NOT a Specialist. (The result of the YAZDANFAR case when a GP who did liposuction killed a patient.)
The new`law will help Specialists who trained abroad but can not or will not take the Canadian specialty exams.
It will also help GPs who want to rise above the herd by taking extra courses. It will also help provide a degree of specialised services in parts of Ontario where Specialists do not want to live.
CPSO changed the phrase of "Practice Limited to...."
Now "GP with Focused Practice in..."
The "GP" must be included to le4t the public know that the doctor is NOT a Specialist. (The result of the YAZDANFAR case when a GP who did liposuction killed a patient.)
The new`law will help Specialists who trained abroad but can not or will not take the Canadian specialty exams.
It will also help GPs who want to rise above the herd by taking extra courses. It will also help provide a degree of specialised services in parts of Ontario where Specialists do not want to live.
GP Focused Practice Designation: Policy and Program Overview September 2011 Page 34 of 39 Appendix B: Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada List of Specialties and Subspecialties Adolescent Medicine |
Anatomical Pathology |
Anaesthesiology |
Cardiac Surgery |
Cardiology |
Clinical Immunology and Allergy |
Clinical Pharmacology |
Clinician Investigator Program |
Colorectal Surgery |
Community Medicine |
Critical Care Medicine |
Dermatology |
Developmental Paediatrics |
Diagnostic Radiology |
Emergency Medicine |
Endocrinology and Metabolism |
Forensic Pathology |
Gastroenterology |
General Pathology |
General Surgery |
General Surgical Oncology |
Geriatric Medicine |
Gynecologic Oncology |
Gynecologic Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility |
Hematological Pathology |
Hematology |
Infectious Diseases |
Internal Medicine |
Maternal-Fetal Medicine |
Medical Biochemistry |
Medical genetics |
Medical Microbiology |
Medical Oncology |
Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine |
Nephrology |
Neurology |
Neuropathology |
Neuroradiology |
Neurosurgery |
Nuclear Medicine |
Obstetrics and Gynecology |
Occupational medicine |
Ophthalmology |
Orthopedic Surgery |
Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery |
Palliative Medicine |
Pediatric Emergency Medicine |
Pediatric General Surgery |
2 Nov 2011
INTERNATIONAL HUMANIST: OBIT.Dr.Robert A.Amiel BUCKMAN
IHEU Eulogy for Rob Buckman
Posted: 01 Nov 2011 03:25 PM PDT
When Rob Buckman – Humanist, oncologist, and TV personality – realized he was dying from an autoimmune disease, he thought it would be useful to make a film to help others learn from his death. He was right about the value of the film: Your Own Worst Enemy was a great critical success and helped countless people address a topic that is taboo and yet unavoidable. But Rob was wrong about the subject of the film: thanks to a new treatment he survived another three decades after the 1981 movie. And those three decades were filled with the love, learning and laughter that made him a hugely popular figure on both sides of the Atlantic.It was somewhere over the Atlantic that death finally caught up with Rob Buckman on October 9, 2011. He died in his sleep while flying back to Toronto after filming some health shows in London. He was 63. He is survived by his first wife, Joan van den Ende, and their two daughters, Joanna and Susie, and by his second wife, Pat Shaw, and their two sons, James and Matthew.
The attitude that led Rob to make Your Own Worst Enemy was typical of his life. He used his remarkable communication skills to share his medical expertise with the widest possible audience. But he was so much more than just an expert communicator: he laid bare his essential humanity, right down to the details of his own mortality, in order to help others find understanding and comfort. And these rare talents can be found throughout his life, intertwined in his vocations as physician, communicator and Humanist.
The 1994 Canadian Humanist of the Year, Rob was always eager to help the Humanist movement. For more than a decade, starting in 1999, he was a hands-on president of the Humanist Association of Canada. He also worked with the International Humanist and Ethical Union (IHEU) serving as Chairman of the Advisory Board for IHEU’s bio-ethics center at the United Nations. He made frequent trips from Toronto to New York City to help the bio-ethics center, speaking at the center's conferences and contributing to UN briefings.
Rob grew up in London, and then went to St John's College, Cambridge, where he graduated in medicine in 1972. At Cambridge he was a star in the famous Footlights troupe, which has featured so many of Britain's leading comedians.As a junior doctor at University College Hospital, London, he met Chris Beetles, and they teamed up as "Beetles and Buckman" Buckman" to perform live comedy and revue. Rob wrote for the long-running satirical BBC Radio 4 show Week Ending, and for a TV sitcom, Doctor On the Go, based on Richard Gordon's Doctor in the House books. In the 1980s, Rob went on to front a long-running TV medical series with Miriam Stoppard, Where There's Life.
In 1985 Rob emigrated to Canada, working as an oncologist at Sunnybrook Hospital in Toronto, before moving to Toronto’s Princess Margaret Hospital. He also became a full professor in the Department of Medicine at the University of Toronto and adjunct professor at the M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas. He specialized in breast cancer and also in teaching communication skills in oncology to physicians and nurses.In Canada, Rob continue his career presenting television science-and-medicine programmes Magic or Medicine? his series on ‘alternative medicine’, won him a Gemini award (the Canadian TV Industry equivalent of an Emmy).
As well as writing a weekly column for the Toronto Globe and Mail, Rob wrote 15 books. Many of these aimed to help people deal with death and dying, including: How To Break Bad News: A Guide for Healthcare Professionals; What You Really Need To Know About Cancer: A Comprehensive Guide for Patients and their Families; Cancer is a Word, Not a Sentence: A Practical Guide to Help You Through the First Few Weeks; and I Don't Know What To Say - How To Help And Support Someone Who Is Dying. His autobiography was titled Not Dead Yet. He also wrote a national best-seller exploring his Humanist philosophy: Can We Be Good Without God? Biology, Behavior and the Need to Believe.
In Twice Around the World and Still Stupid, Rob Buckman wrote, "To me, Humanism is what you are left with if you strip away what doesn’t make sense. I was always attracted by science, and the more I learned, the more I found that many established world-philosophies (particularly among some of the organized religions) didn’t make any form of intuitive sense. Undoubtedly they bring great comfort to their believers, but I found that I was unable to sincerely believe in any divine architecture to the cosmos, or in any predetermined destiny for any race or creed or even for any individual. From my teenage years onwards, I basically came to think that we humans are a most peculiar species huddled together in a rather uneven and random way on a rather pleasant planet, and it’s up to us to do our best. I have never felt that we can look for assistance elsewhere. What we see around us is what we’ve got.
Now that might sound as if I am some sort of unemotional reductionist - a B. F. Skinner playing the role of doctor – but I know that I am not. Accepting a Humanist view of our world does not mean that you don’t feel love, anger, fright, tenderness – or even humour. A Humanist basis simply allows you to spend less of your time twisting what you see and contorting it to fit somebody else’s idea of what ought to be. Of course I could be wrong: but if I am I don’t think I shall have done all that much damage on the way – on average, Humanists don’t."--Matt Cherry, IHEU
Posted: 01 Nov 2011 03:25 PM PDT
When Rob Buckman – Humanist, oncologist, and TV personality – realized he was dying from an autoimmune disease, he thought it would be useful to make a film to help others learn from his death. He was right about the value of the film: Your Own Worst Enemy was a great critical success and helped countless people address a topic that is taboo and yet unavoidable. But Rob was wrong about the subject of the film: thanks to a new treatment he survived another three decades after the 1981 movie. And those three decades were filled with the love, learning and laughter that made him a hugely popular figure on both sides of the Atlantic.It was somewhere over the Atlantic that death finally caught up with Rob Buckman on October 9, 2011. He died in his sleep while flying back to Toronto after filming some health shows in London. He was 63. He is survived by his first wife, Joan van den Ende, and their two daughters, Joanna and Susie, and by his second wife, Pat Shaw, and their two sons, James and Matthew.
The attitude that led Rob to make Your Own Worst Enemy was typical of his life. He used his remarkable communication skills to share his medical expertise with the widest possible audience. But he was so much more than just an expert communicator: he laid bare his essential humanity, right down to the details of his own mortality, in order to help others find understanding and comfort. And these rare talents can be found throughout his life, intertwined in his vocations as physician, communicator and Humanist.
The 1994 Canadian Humanist of the Year, Rob was always eager to help the Humanist movement. For more than a decade, starting in 1999, he was a hands-on president of the Humanist Association of Canada. He also worked with the International Humanist and Ethical Union (IHEU) serving as Chairman of the Advisory Board for IHEU’s bio-ethics center at the United Nations. He made frequent trips from Toronto to New York City to help the bio-ethics center, speaking at the center's conferences and contributing to UN briefings.
Rob grew up in London, and then went to St John's College, Cambridge, where he graduated in medicine in 1972. At Cambridge he was a star in the famous Footlights troupe, which has featured so many of Britain's leading comedians.As a junior doctor at University College Hospital, London, he met Chris Beetles, and they teamed up as "Beetles and Buckman" Buckman" to perform live comedy and revue. Rob wrote for the long-running satirical BBC Radio 4 show Week Ending, and for a TV sitcom, Doctor On the Go, based on Richard Gordon's Doctor in the House books. In the 1980s, Rob went on to front a long-running TV medical series with Miriam Stoppard, Where There's Life.
In 1985 Rob emigrated to Canada, working as an oncologist at Sunnybrook Hospital in Toronto, before moving to Toronto’s Princess Margaret Hospital. He also became a full professor in the Department of Medicine at the University of Toronto and adjunct professor at the M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas. He specialized in breast cancer and also in teaching communication skills in oncology to physicians and nurses.In Canada, Rob continue his career presenting television science-and-medicine programmes Magic or Medicine? his series on ‘alternative medicine’, won him a Gemini award (the Canadian TV Industry equivalent of an Emmy).
As well as writing a weekly column for the Toronto Globe and Mail, Rob wrote 15 books. Many of these aimed to help people deal with death and dying, including: How To Break Bad News: A Guide for Healthcare Professionals; What You Really Need To Know About Cancer: A Comprehensive Guide for Patients and their Families; Cancer is a Word, Not a Sentence: A Practical Guide to Help You Through the First Few Weeks; and I Don't Know What To Say - How To Help And Support Someone Who Is Dying. His autobiography was titled Not Dead Yet. He also wrote a national best-seller exploring his Humanist philosophy: Can We Be Good Without God? Biology, Behavior and the Need to Believe.
In Twice Around the World and Still Stupid, Rob Buckman wrote, "To me, Humanism is what you are left with if you strip away what doesn’t make sense. I was always attracted by science, and the more I learned, the more I found that many established world-philosophies (particularly among some of the organized religions) didn’t make any form of intuitive sense. Undoubtedly they bring great comfort to their believers, but I found that I was unable to sincerely believe in any divine architecture to the cosmos, or in any predetermined destiny for any race or creed or even for any individual. From my teenage years onwards, I basically came to think that we humans are a most peculiar species huddled together in a rather uneven and random way on a rather pleasant planet, and it’s up to us to do our best. I have never felt that we can look for assistance elsewhere. What we see around us is what we’ve got.
Now that might sound as if I am some sort of unemotional reductionist - a B. F. Skinner playing the role of doctor – but I know that I am not. Accepting a Humanist view of our world does not mean that you don’t feel love, anger, fright, tenderness – or even humour. A Humanist basis simply allows you to spend less of your time twisting what you see and contorting it to fit somebody else’s idea of what ought to be. Of course I could be wrong: but if I am I don’t think I shall have done all that much damage on the way – on average, Humanists don’t."--Matt Cherry, IHEU
30 Oct 2011
LYTINSKI-CONN SYNDROME (Primary Aldosteronism)
At a Toronto International Endocine conference,Melbourne (Clayton) Prince Henry's Institute, Senior Fellow Prof. John FUNDER AO, MD,PhD, FRCP,FRACP pointed out that Dr. Michal LYTINSKI published in Polish before Dr.Jerome CONN.
Primary Aldosteronism is missed in most hypertensives.. 20% of the Canadian population are hypertensive( 6,800,000) 10% of hypertensives have Primary Aldosteronism (680,000). Mainly undiagnosed at present through "cost, ignorance & indifference". Less than 1% of those with Primary Aldosteronism are screened; especially indicated in Atrial fibrillation.
"Guidelines for Primary Hypertension need revision".
Low potassium is not the main sign. Resistant hypertension, weakness and nocturnal polyuria are clinical clues. Small adrenal tumours may be seen on CT scans.
A quick diagnostic test of eplerenone (INSPRA) or spironolactone (ALDACTONE) will immediately drop blood pressure in patients with Primary Aldosteronism. INSPRA does not cause gynaecomastia or erectile disfunction..
Primary Aldosteronism is missed in most hypertensives.. 20% of the Canadian population are hypertensive( 6,800,000) 10% of hypertensives have Primary Aldosteronism (680,000). Mainly undiagnosed at present through "cost, ignorance & indifference". Less than 1% of those with Primary Aldosteronism are screened; especially indicated in Atrial fibrillation.
"Guidelines for Primary Hypertension need revision".
Low potassium is not the main sign. Resistant hypertension, weakness and nocturnal polyuria are clinical clues. Small adrenal tumours may be seen on CT scans.
A quick diagnostic test of eplerenone (INSPRA) or spironolactone (ALDACTONE) will immediately drop blood pressure in patients with Primary Aldosteronism. INSPRA does not cause gynaecomastia or erectile disfunction..
24 Oct 2011
ASTRAZENICA FREE PROSTATE CANCER PATIENT NOTEBOOK
Black-cover breastpocket-sized 35 page treatment notebook provided free by AstraZenica.including a PSA tracking graph
22 Oct 2011
UK DAILY MAIL: CIRRHOSIS, DEMENTIA & DRINK
Don't drink on 3 days a week... As the liver crisis deepens, leading doctors warn of the dangers
- More than 16,000 people die from liver disease every year in the UK
- Young regular drinkers and middle-class women particularly at risk
- Royal College of Physicians say current guidelines must be rewritten
By Daniel Martin
Last updated at 11:23 AM on 22nd October 2011
Current official guidance on healthy drinking limits is ‘extremely dangerous’ and must be rewritten – because it implies that drinking every day is fine, the Royal College of Physicians said.
Government advice states men should drink no more than four units a day and women no more than three.
New guidelines: Leading doctors now say drinkers should have at least three alcohol-free days a week
They told MPs the risk of liver disease, alcohol dependence and serious illness increases if people drink every day rather than taking time off.
More...
They also urged Ministers to consider imposing stricter guidelines on pensioners – perhaps as little as seven units a week for older women and 11 for older men.
One unit is the equivalent of one small glass of wine (125ml) or half a pint of lager.
Limits: Government advice states men should drink no more than four units per day and women no more than three
Yet pensioners are currently given the same guidelines as all adults.
In their submission to MPs on the Commons science and technology committee, the doctors said: ‘Government guidelines should recognise that hazardous drinking has two components: frequency of drinking and amount of drinking.
‘To ignore either of these components is scientifically unjustified.
‘A simple addition would remedy this – namely a recommendation that to remain within safe limits people have three alcohol-free days a week.’
They added: ‘The implied sanctioning of a pattern of regular daily drinking is potentially extremely dangerous.
The RCP disputes the claim that drinking every day will not accrue a significant health risk.
‘Frequency is an important risk factor for development of alcohol dependency and alcoholic liver disease.’
More than 16,000 people die from liver disease, usually caused by excessive drinking, every year in the UK.
It is Britain’s fifth biggest killer and the only major cause of death increasing year-on-year. Twice as many people die of it now than in 1991 and rates have soared by 13 per cent since 2005.
The British Liver Trust says liver disease is the biggest cause of premature death for women, and the second only to heart attacks for men.
The first drinking guidelines in 1987 – which were written by the RCP – stated that men should drink no more than 21 units a week and women no more than 14.
On top of this, everyone should take two or three days off a week. Doctors are angry that reforms to the advice in 1995 dropped this reference to alcohol-free days.
‘This in effect appeared to sanction daily or near-daily drinking, one of the key risk factors for alcohol-related harm and dependency,’ they said.
‘If the daily limit of four units was drunk with no drink-free days, this would be the equivalent of 28 units per week; a 30 per cent increase on the RCP’s guidelines.’
Habitual: Young regular drinkers are particularly at risk of developing liver disease later in life
Young regular drinkers were particularly at risk, it said.
A 2009 study showed increases in UK liver deaths ‘are the result of daily or near-daily heavy drinking, not episodic or binge drinking. This regular drinking pattern is discernable at an early age’, the paper said.
Government experts expect the cost of treating people with liver disease will soar by 50 per cent in four years to more than £2billion.
Middle-class women are particularly at risk of daily drinking as they often have a glass or two of wine after work, followed by more at the weekend.
Lower limits should be considered for older people, as even modest levels of alcohol consumption can have a more profound effect on their bodies ‘due to physiological changes associated with ageing’, the paper said.
‘There is concern current guidelines are not appropriate for older people,’ it added.
Sir Ian Gilmore, RCP special adviser on alcohol, said: ‘We recommend a safe limit of 0-21 units a week for men and 0-14 units a week for women provided the total amount is not drunk in one or two bouts and that there are two to three alcohol-free days a week.
‘At these levels, most individuals are unlikely to come to harm.’
In June, a Royal College of Psychiatrists report called for a limit of 11 units a week for men aged over 65 and seven for women of this age.
The RCP quoted these suggested limits but did not explicitly endorse them.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2052070/Alcohol-abuse-Dont-drink-3-days-week-avoid-liver-disease.html#ixzz1bVrk6v8M
21 Oct 2011
MOSCOW Prof.A.P.NESTEROV: Inventer of the scleral DIATON TONOMETER
"Diaton tonometer has accuracy enough for clinical purposes, requires no
anesthetics and sterilization. Besides, they are safe (can not damage the cornea),
comfortable for the patients and easy in use. They can be used not only in ophthalmology
studies but at home as well".
LITERATURE
1. Илларионова А.Р., Пилецкий Н.Г.//Клин.офтальмол.-2001-№2.-С.55-56
2. Маклаков А.Н.//Мед.обозр.-1884.-Т.22-С.1092-1095
3. Нестеров А.П., Бунин А.Я., Кацельсон Л.А. Внутриглазное давление: физиология и паталогия.-М.,1974
4. Нестеров А.П. Глаукома.-М.,1995
5. Goldmann H., Schmidt T.//Opthalmologica.-1957-Bd 136.-S.221-231.
6. Mark H.H.//Am.J.Ophthalmol.-1973.-Vol.76-P.223-227
7. .//Ibid.-1960.-Vol.49.-P.1149
8. Moses R.A., Liu C.H.// Ibid.-1968.-Vol.66.-P.89-94
9. Motolko M.A.//Can/J/Ophthalmol.-1982.-Vol.17.-P.93-97.
10. Phelps C.D.,Phelps G.K.//Graefes.Arch.Clin.Exp.Ophthalmol.-1976.-Vol.198.-P.39-44
11. Schottenstein M.H.//The Glaucomes/Eds R.Ritch et al.-St.Louis, 1996.-Vol.1.-P.407-428.
12. Whitacre M.M., Stein R.A., Hassanein K.//Am.J.Ophthalmol.-1993.-Vol.115.-P.592-597
Diaton tonometer now in use in Ontario: often in University emergency departments. Cost aprox. $3000.
anesthetics and sterilization. Besides, they are safe (can not damage the cornea),
comfortable for the patients and easy in use. They can be used not only in ophthalmology
studies but at home as well".
LITERATURE
1. Илларионова А.Р., Пилецкий Н.Г.//Клин.офтальмол.-2001-№2.-С.55-56
2. Маклаков А.Н.//Мед.обозр.-1884.-Т.22-С.1092-1095
3. Нестеров А.П., Бунин А.Я., Кацельсон Л.А. Внутриглазное давление: физиология и паталогия.-М.,1974
4. Нестеров А.П. Глаукома.-М.,1995
5. Goldmann H., Schmidt T.//Opthalmologica.-1957-Bd 136.-S.221-231.
6. Mark H.H.//Am.J.Ophthalmol.-1973.-Vol.76-P.223-227
7. .//Ibid.-1960.-Vol.49.-P.1149
8. Moses R.A., Liu C.H.// Ibid.-1968.-Vol.66.-P.89-94
9. Motolko M.A.//Can/J/Ophthalmol.-1982.-Vol.17.-P.93-97.
10. Phelps C.D.,Phelps G.K.//Graefes.Arch.Clin.Exp.Ophthalmol.-1976.-Vol.198.-P.39-44
11. Schottenstein M.H.//The Glaucomes/Eds R.Ritch et al.-St.Louis, 1996.-Vol.1.-P.407-428.
12. Whitacre M.M., Stein R.A., Hassanein K.//Am.J.Ophthalmol.-1993.-Vol.115.-P.592-597
Diaton tonometer now in use in Ontario: often in University emergency departments. Cost aprox. $3000.
18 Oct 2011
OTTAWA Internist Christiane FARAZLI MD(Montreal 73) FRCPC (78)
Some facts from Toronto Star. (K.WALLACE)
Ont.College Phys. Surgeons found in MAY 2011 that cleaning of endoscopes(stomach & colon) at Dr. Farazli's clinic was less than satisfactory. Ontario Ministry of Health informed OTTAWA Medical Officer Health Dr.Isra LEVY MB BCh (Witwatersrand 86) FRCPC(Community med.) in JULY. Public advised in OCTOBER. Ottawa Public Health sent 6,800 letters sent to patients (2002 - June 2010) advising testing for Hep. B/C & HIV.
Dr.FARAZLI's clinic at PARKDALE MEDICAL TOWER,1081 Carling avenue is next to Ottawa Civic Hosp.
Ont.College Phys. Surgeons found in MAY 2011 that cleaning of endoscopes(stomach & colon) at Dr. Farazli's clinic was less than satisfactory. Ontario Ministry of Health informed OTTAWA Medical Officer Health Dr.Isra LEVY MB BCh (Witwatersrand 86) FRCPC(Community med.) in JULY. Public advised in OCTOBER. Ottawa Public Health sent 6,800 letters sent to patients (2002 - June 2010) advising testing for Hep. B/C & HIV.
Dr.FARAZLI's clinic at PARKDALE MEDICAL TOWER,1081 Carling avenue is next to Ottawa Civic Hosp.
17 Oct 2011
INVENDO MEDICAL Gmbh,KISSING: INVENDOSCOPY system.
The invendoscopy™ system adresses for the first time the gentle, medication-less performed colonoscopy and the solution of hygiene issues.
Gentle
Highly flexible materials are being used to ensure a small bending diameter of the endoscope. In addition the electrohydraulic deflection mechanism of the endoscope tip obviates the need to use Bowden cables, and thus maintains the flexibility. The combination of these technologies ensures that the forces exerted by the endoscope are reduced. Watch videoHygienic
Resource-intensive and critical cleaning processes of the endoscope are avoided as the invendoscope is designed for single-use only. Watch videoEasy-to-use
All endoscope functions including forward and backward driving, deflection of endoscope tip, rinsing, suction, insufflation and recording of images are controlled via a simple handheld device. This makes performance of colonoscopies ergonomical and supports ease-of-use. Watch videoInterventional Versatility
Due to its 3.1mm working channel the invendoscope SC20 can be also used for biopsies and routine therapeutic procedures such as polypectomy. The centralized working channel with the support of the deflectable electrohydraulic tip allows access to all locations in the colon. Watch video11 Oct 2011
CPSO TORONTO ELECTION: CANDIDATES URGENTLY NEEDED
CPSO jobs used as "retirement" income for aged MDs.
Two Toronto candidates
GP M.GABEL graduated 1962 (aged approx.74y)
Retired Nephrologist D.DAVIDSON graduated1963 (aged approx. 73y)
Both practice as GP-psychotherapists. If elected would sit in judgement over MDs who actively practice Modern medicine.
Dr.Gabel is also listed as "Chair" of CPSO Discipline committee, (actually just a member),in SHIATSU SOC. of ONTARIO Advisory Council
Two Toronto candidates
GP M.GABEL graduated 1962 (aged approx.74y)
Retired Nephrologist D.DAVIDSON graduated1963 (aged approx. 73y)
Both practice as GP-psychotherapists. If elected would sit in judgement over MDs who actively practice Modern medicine.
Dr.Gabel is also listed as "Chair" of CPSO Discipline committee, (actually just a member),in SHIATSU SOC. of ONTARIO Advisory Council
Shiatsu Society of Ontario
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Mirela Stosic - President
Anna Dix - Vice President
Carol Culhane - Secretary
Roselle Quesnel - Treasurer
Keane McMillan - Membership Director
John Kirkham - Director
Carlotta Trenholm - Director
Liam Ellis - Director
Brian Globus - Director of Communications
ADVISORY COUNCIL
Chair: Marc Gabel, M.D., M.P.H.,
Chair, Discipline Committee,
College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario
Tanya Harris – The Shiatsu Clinic
Sensei Yula – Zen Institute of Oriental Medicine
COMMITTEE
Governmental Relations / Policy – Dimitri Tkhinvalleli
Mirela Stosic - President
Anna Dix - Vice President
Carol Culhane - Secretary
Roselle Quesnel - Treasurer
Keane McMillan - Membership Director
John Kirkham - Director
Carlotta Trenholm - Director
Liam Ellis - Director
Brian Globus - Director of Communications
ADVISORY COUNCIL
Chair: Marc Gabel, M.D., M.P.H.,
Chair, Discipline Committee,
College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario
Tanya Harris – The Shiatsu Clinic
Sensei Yula – Zen Institute of Oriental Medicine
COMMITTEE
Governmental Relations / Policy – Dimitri Tkhinvalleli
Death Oct.10 of Prof.Robert Alexander Amiel BUCKMAN MB BChir(Cantab.) PhD (London) FRCP FRCPC (1948-2011)
Some info.fromToronto STAR.
Actor, Atheist, Author, Medical radio, television journalist and Oncologist Prof R.A.A. Buckman died on a flight from UK to Toronto from DERMATOMYOSITIS.which developed at 31y (1979).
Attended private London (Hampstead) University College School and Cambridge.Univ. Postgraduate training at Royal Marsden (Cancer) Hospital.
Emigrated to Ontario in 1988 (37y).Worked at Princess Margaret Cancer Hospital.
Was Pres. Can .Humanist (Atheist) association. Also Hon.Phys. Toronto St.George's Soc.
Married to University Toronto Pathologist Dr.Patricia SHAW MD(Tor.1976) FRCPC(1985)
4 Children.
In 26y held no office in the Ontario Medical association or College of Physicians & Surgeons of Ontario.
OBIT from LONDON GUARDIAN
Culture
Books
Health, mind and body
Actor, Atheist, Author, Medical radio, television journalist and Oncologist Prof R.A.A. Buckman died on a flight from UK to Toronto from DERMATOMYOSITIS.which developed at 31y (1979).
Attended private London (Hampstead) University College School and Cambridge.Univ. Postgraduate training at Royal Marsden (Cancer) Hospital.
Emigrated to Ontario in 1988 (37y).Worked at Princess Margaret Cancer Hospital.
Was Pres. Can .Humanist (Atheist) association. Also Hon.Phys. Toronto St.George's Soc.
Married to University Toronto Pathologist Dr.Patricia SHAW MD(Tor.1976) FRCPC(1985)
4 Children.
In 26y held no office in the Ontario Medical association or College of Physicians & Surgeons of Ontario.
OBIT from LONDON GUARDIAN
Rob Buckman obituary
Oncologist, writer and broadcaster who investigated medical matters with humour and zest
The oncologist, writer and performer Rob Buckman, who has died aged 63 in his sleep on board a plane, spent last week making a series of short films. We were working on them together, and Rob was his usual irrepressible self, full of good humour, jokes and kindness. On Sunday the whole film crew had lunch in a pub, and Rob left to catch the flight to Toronto on which he died. The films, ironically, are called Top Ten Tips for Health.
The Guardian writer Nancy Banks-Smith described Rob as "one of those exciting scientists in full fizz who look as if they have access to a strong tonic not yet on the market". She was reviewing a film he made in 1981 called Your Own Worst Enemy. He was then suffering from an autoimmune disease called dermatomyositis, in which the body's defences start to attack the body itself. At the time he started filming, Rob assumed the disease would prove fatal, and had determined to make the film to educate people on the subject. But one last treatment of blood plasma replacement and a new drug stopped the disease. However, he later suffered from another autoimmune disease that left him semi-paralysed. Banks-Smith remarked on his courage and fortitude: "The surviving drive to describe his own disease and dissolution was one of the most striking scientific achievements I have seen on television."
Rob was born in London to Bernard Buckman, a trader, and his wife, Irene, a barrister. He began his acting career at the age of 13, while still at University College school, north London, playing the Midshipmite in Gilbert and Sullivan's HMS Pinafore at the Savoy theatre. Then he went on to St John's College, Cambridge, where he graduated in medicine in 1972, after having featured in a vintage Footlights team.
Despite his physical problems, Rob was the most positive and energetic person I have met. He was constantly in good spirits, able to fill a room with warmth and laughter, and never short of ideas and projects. He was also a fount of kindness – always thinking about other people and never about his own problems.
With his first wife, Joan van den Ende, he had two daughters, Joanna and Susie, and with his second, Pat Shaw, two sons, James and Matthew. All of them survive him.
Russell Davies writes: The long and serious careers of Rob Buckman would have been hard to predict in the late 1960s, when he was an irrepressible, rubber-legged star of the Cambridge Footlights Revue. True, he took an unsparing view of medical matters even then – in one of his sketches, the television series on surgery Your Life in Their Hands re-emerged as Their Knife in Your Glands – but he was better known for the capering glee he communicated on stage. I shared many routines with him, most of them directed by Clive James: a pseudo-Russian dance ensemble; a slow-motion wrestling sketch that was taken up, bizarrely, by the BBC for The Val Doonican Show; and Rob's curiously rhapsodic, but not very rude, striptease number.
This was mostly physical stuff but verbally he was also very sharp. We worked up a piece called Chippenham Wrexham, in which two chefs intertwiningly recited a long but quick-fire recipe, incorporating as many British place-names as would fit the theme of cookery. It was a beast to perform, but I never knew him to flub a word of it. He was always more energetic than the rest of us put together, and his later illnesses caused us – who knew nothing of medicine – to wonder if it is possible to have too much vitality. We shall always remember him grinning – and making us grin.
• Robert Alexander Amiel Buckman, doctor, writer and broadcaster, born 22 August 1948; died 9 October 2011
The Guardian writer Nancy Banks-Smith described Rob as "one of those exciting scientists in full fizz who look as if they have access to a strong tonic not yet on the market". She was reviewing a film he made in 1981 called Your Own Worst Enemy. He was then suffering from an autoimmune disease called dermatomyositis, in which the body's defences start to attack the body itself. At the time he started filming, Rob assumed the disease would prove fatal, and had determined to make the film to educate people on the subject. But one last treatment of blood plasma replacement and a new drug stopped the disease. However, he later suffered from another autoimmune disease that left him semi-paralysed. Banks-Smith remarked on his courage and fortitude: "The surviving drive to describe his own disease and dissolution was one of the most striking scientific achievements I have seen on television."
Rob was born in London to Bernard Buckman, a trader, and his wife, Irene, a barrister. He began his acting career at the age of 13, while still at University College school, north London, playing the Midshipmite in Gilbert and Sullivan's HMS Pinafore at the Savoy theatre. Then he went on to St John's College, Cambridge, where he graduated in medicine in 1972, after having featured in a vintage Footlights team.
As a junior doctor at University College hospital, London, he met Chris Beetles, and they teamed up as Beetles and Buckman to perform live comedy and revue. Rob wrote for the long-running satirical BBC Radio 4 show Week Ending, and for an LWT sitcom, Doctor On the Go, based on Richard Gordon's Doctor in the House books.
Beetles and Buckman then performed their own material in another LWT series, The Pink Medicine Show (1978). I first encountered them at the Amnesty International fundraiser The Secret Policeman's Ball in 1979, and Rob went on to front a long-running ITV medical series in the 1980s with Miriam Stoppard, Where There's Life.Unable to find a consultant's job in oncology in the UK, Rob emigrated to Canada in 1985 and took up a post at the Sunnybrook hospital in Toronto. But he carried on making television programmes. In Magic or Medicine? (1994), he investigated alternative therapies, while Human Wildlife: The Life That Lives On Us (2002) looked at microbes in the home environment.
Besides contributing to Punch and writing a weekly column for the Toronto Globe and Mail, Rob also wrote many books, including Jogging from Memory: Letters to Sigmund Freud (1980); How to Break Bad News: A Guide for Healthcare Professionals (1992); Not Dead Yet: The Unauthorized Autobiography of Dr Robert Buckman, Complete With Map, Many Photographs and Irritating Footnotes (1999); Cancer is a Word, Not a Sentence (2006); and Can We Be Good Without God?: Biology, Behaviour and the Need to Believe (2002).
He was president of the Humanist Association of Canada; chair of the advisory board on bioethics of the International Humanist and Ethical Union; and a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in the UK, and of its Canadian counterpart. He became a pioneer of communication and supportive care in medicine at the Princess Margaret Hospital in Toronto, and was professor in the department of medicine at the University of Toronto.Despite his physical problems, Rob was the most positive and energetic person I have met. He was constantly in good spirits, able to fill a room with warmth and laughter, and never short of ideas and projects. He was also a fount of kindness – always thinking about other people and never about his own problems.
With his first wife, Joan van den Ende, he had two daughters, Joanna and Susie, and with his second, Pat Shaw, two sons, James and Matthew. All of them survive him.
Russell Davies writes: The long and serious careers of Rob Buckman would have been hard to predict in the late 1960s, when he was an irrepressible, rubber-legged star of the Cambridge Footlights Revue. True, he took an unsparing view of medical matters even then – in one of his sketches, the television series on surgery Your Life in Their Hands re-emerged as Their Knife in Your Glands – but he was better known for the capering glee he communicated on stage. I shared many routines with him, most of them directed by Clive James: a pseudo-Russian dance ensemble; a slow-motion wrestling sketch that was taken up, bizarrely, by the BBC for The Val Doonican Show; and Rob's curiously rhapsodic, but not very rude, striptease number.
This was mostly physical stuff but verbally he was also very sharp. We worked up a piece called Chippenham Wrexham, in which two chefs intertwiningly recited a long but quick-fire recipe, incorporating as many British place-names as would fit the theme of cookery. It was a beast to perform, but I never knew him to flub a word of it. He was always more energetic than the rest of us put together, and his later illnesses caused us – who knew nothing of medicine – to wonder if it is possible to have too much vitality. We shall always remember him grinning – and making us grin.
• Robert Alexander Amiel Buckman, doctor, writer and broadcaster, born 22 August 1948; died 9 October 2011
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