29 Dec 2012

OMA District 11(Toronto) COMMITTEE ELECTIONS

With over 10,000 members few stand for election to the NINE posts available.

NOMINATIONS are due Wed. JAN. 16 ,2013.( ONLY THREE WEEKS NOTICE)

AGM FEB. 13 (LOCATION STILL NOT PUBLISHED)

VOTING by Wed. FEB. 27.(2 pm)

At present, chances of being elected are 50/50.

Dist 11 with approx $250,000 in the bank, employs a full-time Secretary (Mrs.K.BUGEJA)

OMA pays well for time spent in Committees. Many have been committee members for over TWENTY YEARS.

Between about $870 and $1250 a day up to approx. 46 days a year

DISTRICT CHAIR gets BONUS OF 25% ..
.
A well-paid SECOND CAREER for many Toronto Docs.(easily $46,000/year + free food)

OMA HOURLY RATE for meetings and travel  increases with the number of committees:

up to 15 days/year HALF-DAY $380                            TRAVEL:/HOUR $108
15.5- 25                                    $465                                                        $133
25+                                           $547.50                                                    $156

HALF-DAY = 2.5-4.5 hrs
FULL-DAY =  5 - 8.5 hrs.

ONLY THREE NOMINATORS NEEDED.

NEW IDEAS URGENTLY REQUIRED.




28 Dec 2012

TORONTO Sick Childrens' Hosp Influenza immunisation stats

TORONTO: SICK CHILDRENS' HOSPITAL

CLINICAL STAFF: 64.3% immunized against INFLUENZA ( 35.7% of CLINICAL STAFF FAILED TO BE IMMUNISED)

NURSING STAFF  78%  immunized agaainst INFLUENZA   ( 22% of NURSING STAFF FAILED TO BE IMMUNISED)


PRIVATE MONEY subsidizes STATE MEDICINE.

Founder & CEO of  MATTAMY HOMES Ltd., PETER GILGAN donated $40,000,000  to TORONTO SICK CHILDRENS' HOSP. RESEARCH & LEARNING CENTER.

(Strictly according to OHIP rules a MD could be fined for giving Mr.GILGAN -or his family-priority medical attention).

This absurdity makes a mockery of the Ontario State monopoly of (never defined) MEDICALLY NECESSARY MEDICINE.

As with USA Prohibition the Ontario OHIP rules are broken daily through use of "WELLNESS CENTRES" that at do not bill OHIP for the DOCTOR visits, (but bill OHIP for investigations). The trick is that the office  provides ext ra services e.g. a Dietitian or Physiotherapist. An example is The Toronto CLEVELAND CLINIC CANADA -30,000 sq.ft.- that charges about $3,500/yr for unlimited medical services, a five hour annual exam and direct commuinication with the USA Cleveland Clinic.

QUEBEC has allowed PRIVATE HOSPITALS ( e.g. ROCKLANDMD)






18 Dec 2012

GPs: 2013 Ontario pay lower; USA pay higher

Ontario Health Insurance reduced all MDs' pay by 0.5%

USA Medicare increased GPs pay by 7%.

 Toronto emigration lawyers with USA offices expected to have increased business.

California & Florida preferred.

Escape from irritating time-wasting CPSO investigations about trivial patient complaints such as not prescribing antibiotics for minor respiratory complaints or refusing to perjure oneself signing phoney disability and sickness forms.

11 Dec 2012

URBAN HOUSE CALLS a waste of medical talent.

Most URBAN HOUSE CALLS are a waste of Medical talent. Can easily be done by a visiting DISTRICT NURSE: an important person in the UK NHS since 1947.

House Calls are useful in making sure that there are no safety hazards such as loose carpets. That there is food in a clean fridge. That there are Aids-to-Daily-Living in the bedroom, toilet and bath. That smoke and Carbon monoxide detectors work.

Urine dip-stick , and Diabetic blood tests can be done by a Nurse.As well as Blood pressure.and other vital signs.

Office visits are more CLINICALLY valuable as more equipment is available together with other paramedical services.

In most Ontario cities there are Wheel-Trans facilities that cost between $2-3 a journey. making a visit to the GP cheap and easy.

Stairs can be a problem  Many GP offices have ramps and elevators. An OCCUPATIONAL THERAPIST
is valuable in advising Structural Alterations and various PERSONAL Aids.for dressing and cooking.

A visiting PHYSIOTHERAPIST can instruct DIY exercises and provide simple equipment.to maintain muscle strength

Relatives should learn FIRST AID. An OXYGEN CYLINDER (with a suction adaptor) is a good investment especially in Rural areas. Electronic personal emergency devices improve yearly. and are now inexpensive.

(Personal opinion)






8 Dec 2012

$350-$500,000 yr.for GP in Northern Ontario

COCHRANE (5340) + IROQUIS FALLS (4595) + MATHESON (2410)

BONUS for Underserviced area ($98,080 - $111,400) depending on contract.time,

FREE HOUSING + subsidized office for TWO YEARS

Relocation expenses + yearly study allowance.

All-expenses paid visit.

RECRUITMENT@ MICSGROUP.COM
705-272-7200 ext 2345

OMA MD MPPs

More Ontario MDs considering entering Provincial politics. Legislative building in TORONTO Home of
many Internationally famous PRIVATE SCHOOLS and Top SOCIAL & SPORT CLUBS.

MPPs get an indexed pension after serving two 4 year terms..

Toronto Liberal MPPs Drs. HOSKINS & QAADRI are well known practicing Toronto GPs.

Politics now an attractive mid-life career.

Ont. MDs do not receive a professional pension,unlike the UK NHS.

6 Dec 2012

New Delhi M-1 ENZYME


From Toronto Star

Outbreaks of new superbug in Toronto-area hospitals raise worrisome spectre

Published 42 minutes ago
Helen Branswell
The Canadian Press
Outbreaks in two Toronto-area hospitals of a dangerous new form of superbug have infection-control experts contemplating a worrisome future.
Both outbreaks are now over. Details of the chains of spread and how the hospitals managed to stop them are outlined in two studies just published in medical journals.
But they represent the first reports of hospital outbreaks of bacteria containing the so-called NDM-1 enzyme in Canada. In each case, at least one of the people who carried the bacteria into the hospital seemed to have acquired it in Canada.
Previous NDM-1 cases in this country have been seen in individual cases and generally in people who had travelled outside Canada for health care — most commonly to India, but also on occasion to the United States.
“For many years the term superbug has been used and thrown around. And there have been threats that we’ll end up with a situation where there are infections that end up not being treatable because of the risk of drug resistance,” says Dr. Andrew Simor, senior author of one of the studies, which appeared in the journal Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology.
“I think we’re actually seriously now approaching that point with these NDM-1s.”
The NDM-1 enzyme — the ND stands for New Delhi — was first found in 2008 in a Swedish person who had travelled to India for medical treatment. The discovery, reported in the journal Lancet, rang alarm bells the world over because of it represented a new mechanism of drug resistance.
NDM-1 positive bacteria were first found in Canada in 2010.
Drug-resistant bacteria have been around as long as there have been antibiotics. And with increasing use of the drugs in the second half of the 20th century, the resistant bacteria flourished, leaving the pharmaceutical industry scrambling to try to stay ahead of the bugs.
But NDM-1 isn’t a bacterium. It’s an enzyme produced by some bacteria which disables an alarming array of antibiotics.
The few drugs that do treat NDM-1 positive bacteria are antibiotics that are rarely used. One, colistin, is highly toxic; doctors do not use it if they have an option. And NDM-1 positive bacteria become resistant to colistin over time, Simor says.
Perhaps more upsetting is the fact that the gene responsible for making the enzyme is promiscuous: It is able to move from one bacteria to another, conferring on each a level of drug resistance that leaves doctors with few treatment options.
One patient described in one of these studies had both E. coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae bacteria that contained NDM-1, leaving the authors to conclude the enzyme passed from one bug to the other in the patient.
Allison McGeer, the head of infection control at Toronto’s Mount Sinai Hospital, is an author of that paper, which appeared in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases.
The article is the first describing a hospital outbreak involving NDM-1 organisms in Canada. It occurred at William Osler Health System in Brampton, northeast of Toronto, and was first spotted in October 2011.
“Everywhere you turn there is bad news,” McGeer says of NDM-1 and a handful of similar enzymes that confer resistance to drugs in the beta-lactam class of antibiotics.
The Brampton outbreak involved five patients, all carrying Klebsiella pneumoniae. Molecular study of the bacteria from all five showed they were linked. None of the patients in the outbreak had travelled to or been hospitalized in countries where NDM-1 is endemic.
The researchers who investigated the outbreak were not able to determine where the bacteria had been acquired.
Simor’s study describes an outbreak at Toronto’s Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, where he is head of microbiology. The outbreak was identified in January 2011 and was over by February 2012.
During that time two patients came into the hospital with different strains of NDM-1 Klebsiella pneumoniae. One had received previously health care in India, but the second had no history of travel to the Indian subcontinent.
From these two patients, the resistant bacteria spread to seven others.
Five of the nine were just carrying the bacteria. At the time of their hospitalization the bugs were not making the patients sick — other ailments were.
But four of the patients did develop infections caused by their NDM-1 positive bacteria; two had infections in their bloodstream and two had urinary-tract infections.
Some of the patients who picked up the bugs were roommates of people carrying the bacteria, and others were on the same ward.
In one case, a patient moved into a room that had been occupied by one of the positive patients and then picked up the bacteria. An investigation pinpointed a handwashing sink in the room as the likely source of the bacteria. Health-care workers had used the sink to dispose of bath water and other fluids.
NDM-1 positive bacteria were growing in the biofilms in the sink’s pipes and repeated efforts to disinfect the sink failed. Eventually the sink and the sink traps were replaced.
McGeer, who has battled a sink-related outbreak — though not with a bacteria carrying NDM-1 — shudders at the idea.
“If we get our sinks contaminated with an NDM Kleb pneumo” — a short form for Klebsiella pneumoniae — “in our ICU, it will be unpleasant. Expensive.”
Simor’s study outlines the efforts Sunnybrook’s infection control team took to stop transmission. Tracing contacts of all the patients was not easy, and in fact the majority of the contacts had been discharged before they could be tested to see if they were carrying the bug.
Typically infection-control teams would take a rectal swab of patients to see if they are carrying organisms and if they are, whether those organisms are NDM-1 positive.
But in some of the cases in the Sunnybrook outbreak, swabs were negative until about three weeks after exposure. Hospitals that didn’t test that far out might miss such cases.
With numbers of NDM-1 cases still low in Canadian hospitals, Simor suggests facilities may have a hard time deciding how much effort they should put into finding such cases at this point.
“So the question is how extensively do you do surveillance when there’s little bang for the buck? I think we’re going to have to be able to gear up our surveillance as the numbers increase. And I have no doubt they will increase.”
When asked if hospitals and public-health officials in Canada are paying enough attention to the threat, McGeer’s answer suggests she isn’t sure.
“People are paying attention to it. I am sure that we’re not paying enough attention to it to be really good at dealing with it. I’m hoping we’re paying enough attention to it to be OK.”

3 Dec 2012

New Dir. U.Tor Institute HPME Prof A. BROWN

U.Tor Dept. Health Policy, Management & Evaluation to be an INSTITUTE 

New Director Oxford U. Rhodes Scholar & Harvard grad. Prof Adalsteinn BROWN.

HPME is pleased to announce that the Governing Council of the University of Toronto has approved the Department's proposal to become an Extra Departmental Unit (EDU-A)—specifically an Institute. The proposal was approved at the Council's October 27th meeting. HPME will implement the change in mid-November.

Institute Proposal: April 6, 2011 - [PDF]

2 Dec 2012

UK DAILY MAIL GPs' LOCUM FEES

Recruitment firm offers locum GPs £1,200 a day to work between now until New Year

By Eleanor Harding
|
Doctors are being paid £1,200 per day to work as locums in GP surgeries and other local services, it emerged last night.
They are being recruited to work up to 12 hour sessions in service across Oxfordshire from now until New Year.
The lucrative offer was uncovered when the recruiters, Merco Recruitment Ltd, posted an advertisement online.
Lucrative: Doctors are being recruited to work up to 12 hour sessions in service across Oxfordshire from now until New Year for around £1,200 a day
Lucrative: Doctors are being recruited to work up to 12 hour sessions in service across Oxfordshire from now until New Year for around £1,200 a day
It offers work to doctors in Oxfordshire who are newly qualified, recently retired or those looking for extra work, on an ad-hoc or regular basis.
Two years ago it was revealed that the NHS spends more than £750million a year on temporary doctors - many from overseas who would not normally get work in the NHS.
The outcry drew attention to the astronomical sums paid to locums - and health chiefs pledged to crack down on the practice.
 
In one example, a doctor was paid £5,700 for a 24-hour shift in an A&E unit.
As well as the huge cost to the NHS, doctors leaders criticise the hidden impact of insufficient cover, poorer training and inadequate shift systems, says the Royal College of Surgeons.
One consultant surgeon, who recently moved from a London teaching hospital, told the Daily Mail that the 48-hour limit was a 'complete disaster' and leading to an 'unsafe' system.
Figures show the NHS spends more than £750million a year on temporary doctors - many from overseas who would not normally get work in the NHS
Figures show the NHS spends more than £750million a year on temporary doctors - many from overseas who would not normally get work in the NHS
In 2007/8, £384.4million was spent on temporary doctors, rising to £548.7million in 2008/9 and £758.4million in 2009/10, according to RCS calculations.
Some of the spend is for doctors already working in the hospitals who take on temporary shifts, but external agencies accounted for £467million last year.

OMERS PENSION FUND

OMA could copy OMERS (Ont.Municipal Employees Retirement) which bought the MetroConvention and other prime property on FRONT St.

27 Nov 2012

Preventing infection from GOLDMANN TONOMETERS

admin | November 19, 2012

Why Patients Are Googling You



Patients Google more than just symptoms. According to a new study, they research doctors and procedures to help them make medical decisions.
Manhattan Research surveyed 5,210 adults who use the Internet for healthcare information and found that 54 percent go online to choose doctors and to decide which services they might need.
“Once the Affordable Care Act takes effect at the beginning of next year, millions of patients will be seeking out a new doctor online.”
More than half of those patients who have been diagnosed with chronic illness for at least a year sought out treatment information online. And more strikingly, 20 percent of patients choose a primary care physician based on what they read online.
Google Your Name Before Your Patients Do
Most patients begin the quest for healthcare information on search engines like Google and Bing, so it’s more important than ever for doctors to manage their e-presence. And once the Affordable Care Act takes effect at the beginning of next year, millions of patients will be seeking out a new doctor – some for the first time.
In an article by American Medical News, Howard Luks, M.D., an orthopedic surgeon, said his patients frequently tell him they found him because of what they read on his website.
“People want to trust you as a person,” said Luks to American Medical News. “They are going to pick you over the best hospital in the country because of the way you humanize your existence and your presence using tools like YouTube or Vimeo or a simple Web cam.”
How to Beef Up Your Online Presence
Here’s what you can do to improve search rankings and reel in new patients:
  • Manage listings on ratings sites that appear at the top of search results. Make sure the name, address, phone number, website URL and practice information are all current.
  • Use social media to boost search rankings, and to stay in touch with current patients and extend reach to new ones. Patients use Facebook and Twitter every day. Read more about how eye care practices can use social media to market their businesses.
  • Keep your website up-to-date. Blog posts and news stories are easy ways to maintain a strong Google presence that makes it easier for patients to find you online.
For daily practice marketing tips, follow Haag-Streit on Twitter and ‘like’ us on Facebook.
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Category: Uncategorized
admin |

Important Changes to Tonometer Disinfecting Procedure



To help curb the risk of transmitted diseases, Haag-Streit International has revised the recommended procedure for cleaning and disinfecting Goldmann tonometer prisms.
Here’s what’s new:
  • Clinicians should wear disposable gloves throughout the cleaning process.
  • We recommend the use of a Desinset plastic tray during cleaning and disinfecting.
  • Updates to the list of suitable disinfectants.
Download the PDF version of the revised instructions for cleaning reusable prisms.
Tonosafe Disposable Prisms: Safer and Faster
But if you don’t want to spend additional time and money on disinfecting reusable prisms, switch to Tonosafe disposable prisms. It’s the safest way to prevent the spread of diseases at your practice.
A 2011 study at the Veterans Affairs Boston Healthcare System found virtually no accuracy difference in readings from disposable and reusable prisms (including patients with extreme IOP). Since the results of the study, the healthcare system began to phase out reusable prisms for Tonosafe disaposables.
Learn more about Tonosafe disposable prisms.

23 Nov 2012

HEENAN BLAIKIE Labour Law Partner B. BURKETT

OMA negotiation led by Heenan Blaikie Toronto office Labour Law Partner B. BURKETT.
(Heenan Blaikie:offices in Canada;(9), Paris & Singapore.)

Established that OMA has`EXCLUSIVE REPRESENTATION RIGHTS for Ontario's MDs.
 
Canadian Supreme Court in 1991 (WILSON SCCJ.) applied the 1946 RAND Formula ( RAND SCCJ)
in Lavigne (Borden & Elliott) v. Ont. Public Service Employees Union (Gowlings) [1991] 2.S.C.2

26,899 Ontario MDs are to vote on Physician Services Agreement.(OHIP yearly cost = $10-BILLION =
$333,000/MD which includes MD fees + cost of investigations.)

Main points:
0.5% CUT in MEDICAL FEES..

STOP MD SENIORITY PAYMENTS

Reform CPSO COMPLAINT process: at present ANYONE, ANYWHERE in the WORLD can complain about an Ontario MD. The CPSO has to investigate even if the complaint is not about a medical matter.

MDs could apply for Govt funding for PHYSICIAN ASSISTANTS as well as NURSE PRACTITIONERS.

DELISTING ,( can be billed PRIVATELY) ,of ARTHROSCOPIC LAVAGE & INTRARTICULAR HYALURONIC ACID.

"REFLEXIVE TESTING" translated means  that the CLINICAL PATHOLOGIST can determine what tests are indicated for the stated diagnosis(es). See College of American Pathologists policy.in "CAP" Journal.
USA Pathologists point out waste of time/money in doing tests selected at random.by MDs with limited
knowledge of Clinical Pathology.

("MEDICAL NECESSITY" still NOT DEFINED after 43 years.)












19 Nov 2012

TORONTO CENTRAL LHIN

OPEN MEETING Tues. Nov. 27 1600 - 1900.

425 Bloor East, # 201 (at Sherbourne)

16 Nov 2012

Sudbury GP wins case against OHIP.

from MEDICAL POST Editor. C.LESLIE

Polish-Canadian Sudbury GP won $850 in SMALL CLAIMS COURT. against MOHLTC (OHIP)
that did not want to honour Dr. NAJGEBAUER MD MBA' medical claims.regarding a patient.

In Ontario Small Claims Courts do not require a Lawyer.

(This may be a First?)


14 Nov 2012

OMA STAFF CHANGES

2011 - 2012 STAFF CHANGES

EXECUTIVE OFFICES: reduced: 12 to 5 CEO R.SAPSFORD
ECONOMICS: increased: 9 to 10 Dr.B.KRALJ
TARIFF: increased 5 to 6.
FINANCE: reduced 25 to 18 Now divided into Accounts Payable & Accounts Receivable /Treasury
REPORTING (new section) 8
HEALTH POLICY. increased 12 to 13.Ms.B.LEBLANC
HUMAN RESOURCES: increased 6 to 8.
INFORMATION & RECORDS MANAGEMENT: no change 4.
INFORMATION MANAGEMENT( new section) 3
RESEARCH:reduced: 4 to2.
SERVICE DESK (new section) 7
SERVICE MANAGEMENT reduced 14 to 13
TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS (previously System Development) reduced 21 to 16. P.SONG
LEGAL SERVICES: reduced 6 to 5.J.SIMPSON LLB
MEMBER SERVICES no change 4.
GOVERNMENT FUNDED SERVICES: reduced 8 to 5.
INSURANCE SERVICES. increased 19 to 30
MARKETING: no change 3.T.BOWMAN
MEMBERSHIP OPERATIONS & SERVICES: reduced 12 to 9 M.GREB
PHYSICIAN HEALTH SERVICES: increased 16 to 20
PRACTICE ADVISORY SERVICE: no change 2.
RESPONSE CENTRE no change 5
NEGOTIATION & IMPLEMENTATION increased 7 to 8.Ms.C. DOWDALL
PUBLIC & CORPORATE AFFAIRS no change 2 P.NELSON
COMMUNICATIONS no change 6 J.HENRY
CORPORATE AFFAIRS: reduced 13 to 11 Ms.F.VENOSA
HEALTH PROMOTION no change 2
MEDIA RELATIONS no change 1 Ms HEIDI SINGER Ext 2960.
MEMBER RELATIONS reduced 3 to 1
PUBLIC AFFAIRS no change 4 D.TUPLING
REGIONAL ENGAGEMENT SERVICES (previously Member Outreach Services) increased 10 to 12

11 Nov 2012

"THE STUDY of LAW" by U.Tor.Prof.S.M.WADDAMS

INTRODUCTION to the STUDY of LAW. by U.Toronto Prof S.M.WADDAMS.PhD LLM SJD FRSC 7th Ed.Carswell, Tor.122 pp.$53

Essential reading for all doctors to learn that Canuck Courts judge EVIDENCE & not look for JUSTICE.
Canadian Courts are ADVERSARIAL not INQUISITORIAL as in many European Countries.
The OMA four staff lawyers do not provide MEDICAL CASE LAW. The OMA Legal dept.does not report and codify CPSO Tribunal decisions.

BTW CPSO " trials" are TRIBUNALS & NOT COURT TRIALS. The TRIBUNAL members have name
cards in front of then unlike COURT JUDGES, One does NOT have to STAND when Tribunal members enter the room. One does not have to SWEAR an OATH or AFFIRM in a TRIBUNAL HEARING.

Unlike the Courts, the CPSO Tribunal charges the OMA member the costs of the proceedings at about $3500 a day.  The CMPA insurance does not cover an APPEAL to Ont. Superior Court. The usual retainer is $30,000. Knowledge of the Law is important.






10 Nov 2012

Problem of Psychopathic Refugees



FROM BBC.

Ahmad Otak jailed for 34 years for murdering two teenagers

Ahmad Otak Otak was told he acted out of "childish jealousy"
A man who forced his ex-girlfriend to watch him murder her sister and her friend after she refused to take him back has been jailed for life.
Ahmad Otak, an asylum seeker from Afghanistan, stabbed 17-year-old Kimberley Frank and Samantha Sykes, 18, in March in West Yorkshire.
He then abducted his ex partner, 19-year-old Elisa Frank, and drove to Dover in a bid to flee the country.
Otak was jailed for a minimum of 34 years at Leeds Crown Court.
Otak, who repeatedly lied about his age but is thought to be at least 22, pleaded guilty to two counts of murder at a hearing in October.
Judge Justice Coulson told the double killer he "behaved like an animal" and was "incapable of behaving like a human being".

Start Quote

You forced Elisa Frank to take part and then abducted her, and your treatment of her sister's body demonstrates at least a degree of sadism”
Mr Justice Coulson
He said he was a "practised liar" who repaid the generosity the UK had shown to him by murdering two teenage girls with a "significant degree of premeditation".
Otak, of Linton Road, Wakefield, arrived in the UK in 2007 and was granted humanitarian protection to stay in Britain.
The court heard he lied about his age to get preferred treatment by social services.
'Frenzied attack' The court heard he had a turbulent relationship with Ms Frank, who he met in care, and became increasingly possessive, threatening to kill her if she left him.
In February, Ms Frank broke off their relationship.
A month later, Otak went to Kimberley Frank's flat with a kitchen knife that he bought that day and stabbed her 15 times as her sister was made to watch.
Prosecution barrister Richard Mansell QC told the court: "At one point he stood over Kimberley Frank's body, laughed, licked blood from the knife and spat at her body."
Samantha Sykes, left, and Kimberley Frank Samantha Sykes and Kimberley Frank were found dead at Kimberley's flat in Wakefield
Otak then tied Ms Frank up and made her ask her friend Miss Sykes to come to the flat. When Miss Sykes arrived, he stabbed her repeatedly.
Miss Sykes sustained 32 stab and slash wounds.
Otak then abducted Ms Frank and fled to Dover.
They met an illegal immigrant, Bahram Bahrami, at the port and hid with him in the back of a wagon.
But as Otak's back was turned, Ms Frank told Mr Bahrami she was being held at knifepoint.
He wrestled the knife from Otak, fled to nearby houses with Ms Frank and the police were called.
Mr Justice Coulson said: "You killed two people in the brutal way that you had planned.
"You forced Elisa Frank to take part and then abducted her, and your treatment of her sister's body demonstrates at least a degree of sadism.
"You will not even be considered for release until the year 2046."

6 Nov 2012

NEW IMMIGRATION POLICY: PRIORITY for SKILLED WORKERS.

 Attracting a skilled workforce and growing a stronger economy
  • As immigration increases, raise the proportion of economic immigrants to 70 per cent from the current level of 52 per cent.
  • Increase Ontario's role in selecting the immigrants who meet our unique labour market needs.
  • Request a doubling of our Provincial Nominee Program from the federal government to 2,000 in 2013, increasing to 5,000 in 2014.

5 Nov 2012

CPSO PAST CHAIR R.KOKA on ONT.IMMIGRATION COMMITTEE


Expanding our Routes to Success: The Final Report by Ontario's Expert Roundtable on Immigration


To help build a stronger economy, Ontario will develop its first-ever immigration strategy.
A new expert roundtable, led by Julia Deans, will help develop the strategy and examine ways that immigration can best support Ontario’s economic development and help new Ontarians find jobs.
The roundtable consists of business people, employers, academics and other experts on immigration and labour market needs.
Members of the Expert Roundtable on Immigration are:
    • Julia Deans (Chair) – past CEO of Greater Toronto CivicAction Alliance
    • Craig Alexander - Senior Vice President & Chief Economist, TD Bank Group
    • Steve Arnold - Warden, Lambton County
    • Charles Beach - Professor, Queens University
    • Catherine Chandler-Crichlow - Executive Director, Centre of Excellence in Financial Services Education, Toronto Financial Services Alliance
    • Debbie Douglas - Executive Director, Ontario Council of Agencies Serving Immigrants
    • Karna Gupta - President and CEO, Information Technology Association of Canada
    • Phillip Kelly - Associate Professor, York University
    • Past Pres.CPSO PSYCHIATRIST Rayudu Koka MD(1974 Karnata U.) FRCPC- Medical Director, Mental Health and Addictions Program, Hôpital régional de Sudbury Regional Hospital.
    • Gus Kotsiomitis - Vice President, Commercial Financial Services, RBC
    • Allan O’Dette - President and CEO, Ontario Chamber of Commerce
    • Ratna Omidvar – President, Maytree Foundation
    • Léonie Tchatat - Executive Director, La Passerelle - Intégration et Développement Économiques (The Gateway - Integration and Economic Development).

3 Nov 2012

MEDICAL NECESSITY: in Ontario NEVER DEFINED

CMAJ has two articles on MEDICAL NECESSITY. A problem since the 1980s when OHIP fined Doctors for referrals to specialists & investigations above the statistical norm for the area. The problem of MEDICAL NECESSITY was also brought before the Hon.Justice de Carteret CORY inquiry about the Ontario College of Physicians & Surgeons (CPSO) Medical Review Committee (MRC) that had no fixed policy about Medical Necessity. As a result the MRC was dissolved. The Chairmen were community GPs; e.g. Stanley.BAIN , Barnett  GIBLON & Sandy SHULMAN. The MRC Inquiry was the result of a Legislative Assembly question by NDP MPP Lawyer Peter KORMOS. after the 2003 drowning suicide of the sole Welland Paediatrician Dr.Anthony HSU (57y) who was fined  $108,000 by the MRC for not writing enough


Gentle Dr. Hsu and the audit that haunted him

Christie Blatchford -
Wednesday, October 27, 2004


TORONTO -- For about 15 minutes yesterday morning, the widow Irene Hsu sat directly across a boardroom table from retired Supreme Court Justice Peter Cory and wept behind her big sunglasses.
Mrs. Hsu was there to tell the judge, who is in charge of reforming Ontario's much-maligned system of auditing doctors, how that system drove her husband, who drowned himself in April last year, to his death.
"Justice Cory," she said in a voice quivering with emotion, "my husband did nothing wrong. The only thing he did was devote too much of himself to his patients" such that his record-keeping suffered.
"He was punished for his abbreviated notes," Mrs. Hsu cried, notes she said he kept to the brief essentials because as a frenetic pediatrician in the doctor-starved city of Welland, something had to give in his practice, and he chose his young patients over paperwork. The body of 57-year-old Anthony Hsu, by all accounts a dedicated doctor and gentle father of three, was pulled from Lake Ontario on April 10 last year, almost a week after he had gone missing.
Audited by the now-suspended Medical Review Committee, which is an agency of the Ontario government administered by a committee of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario, Dr. Hsu had cashed in his RRSPs in order to repay $108,000 for services that were allegedly incompletely detailed in his billings.
"He felt the audit had tainted his name," Mrs. Hsu told Judge Cory through her tears.
According to Mrs. Hsu and others who have appeared at the hearings in downtown Toronto, at the heart of her husband's and many other physicians' alleged irregularities was one of the complex, vague billing codes contained in the Schedule of Benefits.
This is the billing bible for doctors, so impenetrable that Judge Cory yesterday said, of his own reading of it, "I thought I might never surface again."
The judge flatly termed it "an awful mishmash" and "the root of all evil," meaning that many of the problems he has heard about here in two days stem from the incomprehensible document that governs how physicians should bill for their services and how they are paid.
Dr. Hsu, for instance, had billed for general assessments, yet the MRC found that because his examination didn't include an examination of all the body's "parts and systems," as required by the Schedule of Benefits, he should have billed instead for less expensive "intermediate assessments." Part of his repayment order was to make up the difference between the two.
Another doctor, London pediatric respirologist Brian Lyttle, was similarly ordered to repay the Ontario Health Insurance Plan for his failure to conduct "rectal/gynecological assessments" on his young patients as part of his general examinations.
But Dr. Lyttle appealed the MRC decision to the Health Services Appeal Review Board, which found that the MRC's interpretation was wrong and ordered Dr. Lyttle to be reimbursed in full.
As another pediatrician, Albert Cannitelli of Woodbridge, yesterday told Judge Cory, referring to the Lyttle case, "You bring your four-year-old child to me for a cough and I do a rectal exam" and he would be hauled before the college's disciplinary committee for professional misconduct.
In Dr. Cannitelli's case, he said, he was flagged by OHIP because he saw more patients than the provincial average; because his average cost per patient was slightly higher; and because, on three particular days, he saw a very high number of patients and did a high number of the troublesome general assessments.
Yet the explanations were there, he said, had the MRC paid attention: His practice is heavily weighted to newborns and youngsters under four, who require more first-time complete exams; he had recently joined a much busier practice in Woodbridge, and on the three particular days, his partner was off -- and Dr. Cannitelli had also seen his patients.
Ironically, about the same time, he was subject to a routine "peer review" and received an excellent rating. Yet, almost four years after his MRC audit began, and without having actually formally appeared before the committee yet, Dr. Cannitelli is facing a bill of as much as $200,000, including a repayment order, interest and legal fees for his own lawyer.
Even college president Barry Adams, registrar Rocco Gerace, and Rachel Edney, the current chair of the embattled MRC -- all of whom appeared before Judge Cory yesterday on behalf of the college -- agreed that the audit system is perceived as unfair, secretive and unjust by many doctors and has lost the confidence of the profession.
As the three were discussing a problem of "perception," Judge Cory quickly added a clarification. "The perception, and in some cases the reality," he said, "is that doctors have been mistreated and abused" by the MRC.
Because the MRC is bound by confidentiality rules, its members can't comment on specific cases, but outside the hearing room, Dr. Edney yesterday disputed how the MRC has been painted here.
"I don't think the system is truly unfair or unjust," she said, adding that contrary to claims by some doctors, the MRC always gives written reasons for its decisions, and physicians who are audited always know the allegations against them.
But she agreed the hearings aren't transcribed and all three from the college agreed that audits -- about 100 of the province's approximately 23,000 doctors are audited every year -- should be finished within a year at most.
Though some doctors have told Judge Cory that the college shouldn't be part of whatever new system he designs, and suggested it be a more independent body, perhaps even headed by a judge, Dr. Adams said repeatedly the college should and could continue to administer the audits.
Outside the hearing, Dr. Gerace said it was the college itself which, about 18 months ago, began the push for reform behind the scenes, but that it was also statutorily bound to continue participating even as the system's flaws became apparent.
Listening to the day's evidence -- except for Cesar Garcia Pan, who gave his submission behind closed doors and who, The Globe and Mail has learned, told Judge Cory about the suicide of another doctor who was under the MRC microscope at the time -- was Mrs. Hsu.
In her late husband's quarter-century in medicine, she told the judge yesterday, he had only ever taken a week off every year, working long hours and every second or third weekend because he was so devoted to his young patients.
When her grandchildren ask where their grandpa is, Mrs. Hsu said she tells them, "He's gone on a very long holiday, and we will see him again one day."
--










2 Nov 2012

CENTRIC HEALTH ANNOUNCES TERMINATION OF PROPOSED SHOULDICE ACQUISITION






Investor Relations Investorrelations7@tmxequicom.com via netcommunity1.com 
08:49 (1 hour ago)



Centric Health Announces Termination of Proposed Shouldice Acquisition
TORONTO, Nov. 2, 2012 - Centric Health Corporation ("Centric Health" or "the Company") (TSX: CHH), Canada's leading diversified healthcare company, today announced that, further to the news release of September 7, 2012, the asset purchase agreement to acquire certain assets of Shouldice Hospital Limited ("Shouldice"), which was subject to closing conditions and regulatory approvals, has expired. Given the recent political developments in Ontario and uncertainty regarding timing relating thereto, the parties have agreed not to continue with the currently contemplated transaction.
"We are disappointed not to move forward at this stage," said Dr. Jack Shevel, Executive Chairman, Centric Health Corporation. "Shouldice has clearly demonstrated that the independent sector can play a meaningful role in delivering clinical services of high quality with excellent outcomes. We are well positioned with our platform of seven national Surgical Centres comprising 19 operating rooms and 86 beds across four provinces to establish Centres of Excellence in partnership with Canada's leading healthcare professionals."
About Centric Health's Surgical Centres
Centric Health has seven Surgical Centres across Canada with a total of 19 operating rooms and 86 beds. They are composed of Don Mills Surgical Unit in Toronto, Ontario, Blue Water's three locations in Sarnia, Windsor and London, Ontario, London Scoping Centre in London, Ontario, False Creek Health Centre in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canadian Surgical Solutions in Calgary, Alberta and Maples Surgical Centre in Winnipeg, Manitoba. The Company plans to establish premier Centres of Excellence across Canada focusing on the provision of specialty niche healthcare services that offer the highest standards of care with cutting edge technology.
About Centric Health
Centric Health's vision is to be Canada's premier healthcare company, providing innovative solutions centered on patients and healthcare professionals. As a diversified healthcare company with investments in several niche service areas, Centric Health currently has operations in medical assessments, disability and rehabilitation management, physiotherapy and surgical centres, homecare, specialty pharmacy and wellness and prevention. With knowledge and experience of healthcare delivery in international markets and extensive and trusted relationships with payers, physicians, and government agencies, Centric Health is pursuing expansion opportunities into other healthcare sectors to create value for all stakeholders with an unwavering commitment to the highest quality of care. Centric Health is listed on the TSX under the symbol CHH. For further information, please visit www.centrichealth.ca.
This press release contains statements that may constitute "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of applicable Canadian securities legislation.  These forward-looking statements include, among others, statements regarding business strategy, plans and other expectations, beliefs, goals, objectives, information and statements about possible future events. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on such forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are based on current expectations, estimates and assumptions that involve a number of risks, which could cause actual results to vary and in some instances to differ materially from those anticipated by Centric Health and described in the forward-looking statements contained in this press release. No assurance can be given that any of the events anticipated by the forward-looking statements will transpire or occur or, if any of them do so, what benefits Centric Health will derive there-from.

For further information:
Peter Walkey
Chief Financial Officer
Centric Health
416-619-9417
peter.walkey@centrichealth.ca

Lawrence Chamberlain
Investor Relations
The Equicom Group
416-815-0700 ext. 257
lchamberlain@equicomgroup.com

30 Oct 2012

UK DAILY MAIL


Hungary is planning to offer citizenship to any foreigner who buys at least £200,000 of its government’s bonds.
Legislation would grant residency and ultimately a Hungarian passport... allowing the holder to live and work anywhere in the European Union.
The move, backed by the ruling party, is aimed at wealthy investors, especially from China.
Radical proposals: The Hungarian Parliament in Budapest, where legislators are considering issuing bonds to foreign investors in exchange for citizenship
Radical proposals: The Hungarian Parliament in Budapest, where legislators are considering issuing bonds to foreign investors in exchange for citizenship
Hungary has billions of pounds of foreign currency debt maturing in the next few years and needs to find ways to refinance it.

Budapest has asked for help from the EU and the International Monetary Fund but talks are dragging on and analysts see only a 50 per cent chance of a deal.
 
The citizenship scheme calls for the debt management office to issue special ‘residency bonds’ to foreigners.

Holders of at least a quarter of a million euros of Hungarian debt would get preferential immigration treatment.
Legislation would grant residency and ultimately a Hungarian passport... allowing the holder to live and work anywhere in the European Union (flag pictured)
Legislation would grant residency and ultimately a Hungarian passport... allowing the holder to live and work anywhere in the European Union (flag pictured)
'The goal of the modification is to create the institution of ‘investor residency’ in Hungary,' the lawmakers who put forth the legislation wrote in their proposal.

‘The proposal ties gaining citizenship to buying bonds because it intends to aid state financing this way.

‘Other investments from those applying for such residency could boost the real estate, retail and investment markets.’

Mihaly Babak, a lawmaker with the ruling party, said: ‘The Chinese have articulated repeatedly that we should help their Hungarian investments.’
Public debt in Hungary is equivalent to about 80 per cent of its annual economic output and households also are struggling with a mountain of foreign-currency debt.

HUNGARY'S DEBT

  • Hungary is currently in recession – its GDP contracted by 1.2 per cent in the first half of 2012 and is expected to fall by 1.5 per cent over the full year, according to the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD)
  • Many of Hungary’s local governments have warned they could be bankrupt by early next year. They have $5.5 billion of debt – the highest level among the EU’s eastern nations
  • The country is in discussions with the EU and IMF over a financing backdrop
One of the authors of the proposal said Chinese investors were specifically targeted.
Tory MP Priti Patel said: 'This is a shocking abuse of EU membership by the Hungarian Government and highlights one of many flaws in the EU and in the way it operates.
'This policy could pose significant challenges for the EU when it comes to immigration, social and economic policies and will do little to restore any trust and confidence in the EU with the British public.'
Tory MP Ian Liddell Grainger said: 'At the end of the day this is not the way to encourage investment. It never has been and it never should be. All you do is undermine your institutions.
'It is up to them what they do. But dare I say it it is not a very clever way of doing it.'

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2225339/Hungary-offer-wealthy-foreigners-citizenship-return-investment.html#ixzz2Ape2cqmI
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27 Oct 2012

Jul 16, 2011

Photo. study of the CPSO CEO Dr.R.V.GERACE MD FRCSC(ER) LLD(Hon.)

_DWD0303
_DWD0303.jpg
PreviousNext



CPSO CEO "Registrar" Dr.R.V.Gerace.commissioned Toronto photographer D.W.DORKEN of 1 Yonge St, for a portrait to be published in "Dialogue"., the CPSO publication.

FINAL SELECTION WAS USED FOR INCLUSION IN CPSO'S PUBLICATION "DIALOGUE'. 
TIME REQUIRED FOR PHOTOGRAPHY:   HALF A DAY
COST TO THE MEMBERSHIP;                  $ 500  
  
PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY OF :   
(click on link, then on thumbnail, use arrows to view all 76 proofs)

CPSO Registrar Dr. Rocco Gerace - DW Dorken

Above is link to approx 75 photos.

26 Oct 2012

BREAKFAST with the CHIEFS. (Oct.25)
 by
 LONGWOODS PUBLICATIONS,publisher Anton HART.
 sponsored by
 ACCENTURE & SANOFI
at
Toronto DALLA LANA School of Public Health

Ontario Privacy Commissioner Dr. Ann CAVOUKIAN PhD.told 150 Health Policy experts how to prevent medical privacy failures. ENCRYPT by DEFAULT. Main causes of privacy problems: loss of USB  & loss/theft of laptops. Insist on vertical shredding; not horizonal (easy to read).

Dr.Cavoukian complained about poor electronic communication between Toronto Teaching Hospitals.
Told about her experience as a`recent neurosurgical patient. Had brain imaging in one Toronto hospital;was referred to a Toronto neurosurgical centre which could not receive the images from the referring hosp.

(Dr.Cavoukian has no obvious neurological deficits. Normal speech and body movements normal.)

Subscribers to a LONGWOODS publication can attend the morning meetings.






17 Oct 2012

 UK DAILY MAIL

Afghan woman's slow, agonising death after husband slit her throat 'because she let their children live Western lives'

  • The 53-year-old was conscious for five minutes as she choked
  • Doctor said she could not even scream because her voicebox had been slit
  • Her children were allowed to dress and socialise as they pleased, which infuriated her husband, prosecutors said
By Emma Reynolds
|

An Afghan man slit his wife's throat and stabbed her repeatedly while she choked on her own blood - allegedly because she allowed their children to lead 'Western lives'.
Randjika Khairi, 53, remained conscious for five minutes but was unable to scream because her voicebox had been severed, a Toronto court heard.

Her husband Peer Khairi, 65, has pleaded not guilty in Ontario Superior Court to second-degree murder.
Culture clash: The immigrant couple lived in a highrise Toronto apartment block, but argued over how their children should behave
Culture clash: The immigrant couple lived in a highrise Toronto apartment block, but argued over how their children should behave
No one disputes that Khairi inflicted the injuries, only the circumstances and his state of mind.
Crown prosecutors Robert Kenny and Amanda Camara allege Khairi killed his wife of 30 years over cultural differences.
 
He wanted to make their six teenage and adult children follow traditional Muslim Afghan practices, but his wife infuriated him by allowing them to dress and socialise as they liked, prosecutors claim.
Khairi’s second eldest child, Giti, told the court her father was angry she spent most weekends with her fiance at his parents’ home, according to the Toronto Star.
The 29-year-old said her father felt adrift in Canada after moving there in 2003, and was illiterate and unable to speak English, the National Post reported.
His children were going to the mosque and praying less often, the court heard, while the 65-year-old was battling health problems, having survived a brutal car crash and attempted suicide in February 2008 - a month before the death.

He phoned 911 after the stabbing, telling the operator his wife had been murdered. Police arrived at the couple’s highrise Toronto apartment to find her lying on a blood-soaked narrow bed in the living room.
Dr Allan Hunt today told the court that Mrs Khairi’s neck was slit down to the spine, severing her carotid artery and jugular vein and almost decapitating her.
Blood then rushed to her airways, causing her to slowly suffocate.
Five additional stab wounds, to her chest, abdomen and back, bled much less than normal, suggesting they were inflicted several minutes after blood started gushing from her 10-centimetre-long neck gash, he added.
The doctor said there was so little blood left in her petite 5ft 1in body that it was difficult to gather enough for forensic testing.
Khairi showed no emotion in court as he looked at horrific photographs of the deadly, gaping wound he had inflicted upon his long-time wife, the Toronto Sun reported.

He glanced nonchalantly at the images, nodding to his Dari interpreter when he was finished looking at them.
The doctor agreed with defence lawyer Christopher Hicks when he suggested that injuries and bruises on her body were consistent with being attacked from the front and held down on the bed by her attacker.

The pathologist also agreed she appeared to have defensive cuts on her left forearm and hand, consistent with fending off a knife.
The trial continues.