24 Dec 2014

(Prof Antoine )MARFAN'S SYNDROME 1858-1942 TORONTO CLINIC: Prof T..J BRADLEY MD(Otago,New Zealand 1990.)

Bradley, Timothy John CPSO#: 78644

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Doctor Information

Given Name: Timothy John   Surname: Bradley
Former Name: No Former Name
Gender: Male
Language Fluency: ENGLISH

Primary Practice Location

The Hospital for Sick Children
Division of Cardiology
555 University Avenue
Toronto ON  M5G 1X8

Phone: (416) 813-7610
Fax: (416) 813-7547   

Current Registration

Registration Class: Restricted
Certificate Issued On: 07 Jul 2004
Registration Status: Active Member
Effective From: 07 Jul 2004
Graduated From: University of Otago
Year of Graduation: 1990

Specialties

Specialty Issued On Type
Pediatrics 07 Jul 2004 CPSO Recognized Specialist

Hospital Privileges

Hospital For Sick Children (Toronto)
University Health Network,Toronto General Hospital Site (Toronto)

22 Dec 2014

HOSPITAL BEDS London UK vs Toronto, Ont.

London UK 100+ Hosps for 8-million
Toronto,On. 12     Hosps for 3-million.
Inefficient policy to try to diagnose and treat as outpatient. Also closure of Toronto convalescent Hosps.
With Catastrophic policies up to $2-mill.& new UK Bupa ins.in Canada, more leaving Ont. for Private medicine with direct med/surg control by Specialist. With public med. Residents and Interns (& GP Hospitalists) make most decisions and many of the operations in Teaching Hosps... Most of the Canuck population (thankfully) are unaware of this important difference.40y since death of Ont Private Medicine

METRO TORONTO ETHNIC AREAS

Top ethnic origin per Toronto neighbourhood (as designated by the City of Toronto; 2006 Census data - total responses)
  • English (59): Leaside-Bennington (40%), The Beaches (39%), Rosedale-Moore Park (36%), Kingsway South (35%), Lawrence Park South (33%), Yonge-Eglinton (32.4%), Guildwood (32.3%), Birchcliffe-Cliffside (31.9%), Lawrence Park North (31.5%), Yonge-St. Clair (30.8%), Cabbagetown-South St. James Town (30.1%), North Riverdale (30.0%), East End-Danforth (29.8%), Playter Estates-Danforth (29.7%), Woodbine Corridor (29%), Bridle Path-Sunnybrook-York Mills (27.3%), Centennial Scarborough (27.1%), Princess-Rosethorn (27.0%), Casa Loma (26.8%), Cliffcrest (25.7%), Markland Wood (25.7%), Woodbine-Lumsden (25.6%), Etobicoke West Mall (25.3%), Runnymede-Bloor West Village (25.3%), etc.
  • Chinese (23): Steeles (70%), Milliken (65%), Agincourt North (56%), Agincourt South-Malvern West (47.1%), Hillcrest Village (46.9%), Kensington-Chinatown (44%), Tam O’Shanter-Sullivan (38%), L’Amoreaux (37.2%), Willowdale East (36.6%), Pleasant View (36%), Bayview Woods-Steeles (34%), South Riverdale (33%), Newtonbrook East (31%), Don Valley Village (29%), Greenwood-Coxwell (22.1%), Henry Farm (21.7%), Bay Street Corridor (21%), etc.
  • Italian (15): Maple Leaf (45%), Humber Summit (34.5%), Pelmo Park-Humberlea (34.2%), Yorkdale-Glen Park (33.6%), Rustic (31.1%), Downsview-Roding-CFB (30.6%), Humber Heights-Westmount (20.4%), Willowridge-Martingrove-Richview (20.4%), Glenfield-Jane Heights (18%), Oakwood-Vaughan (16.8%), York University Heights (16.7%), Briar Hill-Belgravia (15%), etc.
  • East Indian (15): West Humber-Clairville (33%), Mount Olive-Silverstone-Jamestown (30%), Thorncliffe Park (24%), Woburn (22%), Rouge (21.1%), Highland Creek (20.7%), Malvern (20.6%), Flemingdon Park (20%), Thistletown-Beaumond Heights (19.4%), Humbermede (19.1%), Crescent Town (19.0%), Morningside (16%), etc.
  • Jewish (10): Forest Hill North (32%), Westminster-Branson (31%), Forest Hill South (29%), Bedford Park-Nortown (28%), Bathurst Manor (27%), Englemount-Lawrence (26%), Clanton Park (23%), Humewood-Cedarvale (18.2%), Lansing-Westgate (17.6%), Newtonbrook West (15%)
  • Portuguese (9): Little Portugal (38%), Caledonia-Fairbank (37%), Weston-Pellam Park (34%), Keelesdale-Eglinton West (32%), Corso Italia-Davenport (31%), Trinity-Bellwoods (28%), Dovercourt-Wallace Emerson-Junction (27%), Dufferin Grove (25%), Rockcliffe-Smythe (15%)
  • Filipino (3): North St. James Town (17%), Ionview (16%), Kennedy Park (13%)
  • Jamaican (3): Beechborough-Greenbrook (15%), Black Creek (10.0%), Mount Dennis (9.7%)
  • Canadian (2): New Toronto (21%), Alderwood (19%)
  • Greek (1): Broadview North (15%)

21 Dec 2014

MYTH: CONFIDENTIALITY OF ONT. MEDICAL RECORDS.

ER records can be easily "hacked" as shown by numerous reported world-wide reports.

Written records can be read  by  Clinic & Hospital staff. (including cleaners & porters).

The Ont College Physicians & Surgeons inspect Ont.MDs every 10 years (if over 70y every 5y). A "peer-reviewer" doctor with time to spend (paid about $1,000 a day)  collecting "Trade secrets" of fellow MDs.at the same time examining charts without patients' permission.

Non-OHIP paid "Health Professionals" such as ONTARIO REGISTERED Chiropractors, Homoeopaths, Massage therapists, Naturopaths, non-hospital Physiotherapists, Traditional Chinese Medicine practitioners do not have the same problems.




QUEBEC provides whole population DRUG INSURANCE: ONTARIO does not; only for Over-65y and WELFARE.


In Québec, everyone must be covered by prescription drug insurance.
Two types of insurance plans offer this coverage:
  • the public plan Public plan
    The Public Prescription Drug Insurance Plan is administered by the Régie de l'assurance maladie du Québec and is intended for persons who are not eligible for a private group insurance plan covering prescription drugs, for persons age 65 or over, and for recipients of last-resort financial assistance and other holders of a claim slip (carnet de réclamation). Children of persons registered for the public plan are also covered by that plan.
    , that is, the one administered by the Régie de l'assurance maladie du Québec;
  • private plans Private plan
    Private plans are usually available in the form of group insurance or employee benefit plans. Persons may be eligible for a private plan through employment, through membership in a professional order or association, or through their spouse or parents. Persons who are eligible for a private plan are required to join that plan.
    (group insurance or employee benefit plans).
Only those persons who are not eligible for a private plan may register for the Public Prescription Drug Insurance Plan. The Plan was set up in 1997 to cover all Quebecers who are not eligible for a private plan.
If you are eligible for a private plan, you must join that plan and provide coverage for your spouse Spouse
Two persons (of the opposite sex or the same sex) are considered spouses if they are married and have entered into a civil union, or have been living together for 12 months (separations of less than 90 days do not interrupt the 12-month period), or are living together (regardless of for how long) and together have had or have adopted a child.
and children Children
Children are persons who are under age 18 or persons age 18 to 25 inclusive, are full-time students at an educational institution recognized by the Ministère de l'Éducation, du Loisir et du Sport, do not have a spouse and live with their parents. Persons age 18 or over are considered children if they are spouseless, have a functional impairment that began before age 18, are not receiving last-resort financial assistance benefits, and are domiciled with someone who would exercise parental authority over them if they were a minor.
.
A private plan is a group insurance or employee benefit plan offering basic coverage for prescription drugs. Plans of this type are called private plans because, unlike the public plan, administered by the Régie de l'assurance maladie du Québec, they are offered by private-sector companies.
Private plans are usually available through employment, in the form of group insurance, which an employer may offer to its employees as a fringe benefit. In addition, many professional orders and associations, as well as unions, make such plans available to their members.
Private plans are sometimes called healthcare plans or health insurance plans. Most private plans offer prescription drug coverage along with other services, such as paramedical services or consultations with certain health professionals (chiropractors, physiotherapists, dentists, etc.), but some offer prescription drug coverage only.
Coverage provided may vary from one private plan to another, depending on the agreement entered into between the policyholder Policyholder
A policyholder is the intermediary representing a group of people in the context of a group insurance contract. It may be an employer, a professional order or association, a union or a group of employees.
and the insurance company or plan administrator.
However, in Québec, all private insurers Insurer (of persons)
A legal person that holds a permit issued by the Autorité des marchés financiers authorizing it to transact personal insurance in Québec and that assumes, in return for a premium paid, the financial consequences resulting from one or more risks specified in the contract signed by the parties.
offering prescription drug insurance must fulfill minimum conditions regarding the coverage they provide and the financial participation they require of the persons they insure.

QUEBEC also more generous in paying for expensive medicine.  For Hep C in ONTARIO Liver biopsy required; in Quebec not required. In OTTAWA,Ont. one standard of medicine across the river in HULL, PQ another standard.

18 Dec 2014

Dr Gavin HAMILTON:"The Nurses are Innocent- The Digoxin Fallacy.":


Overview

In 1980-81, 43 babies died at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children from a supposed digoxin overdose. Serial murder was suspected, leading to the arrest of nurse Susan Nelles. In order to clear Nelles's name, an investigation was launched to find an alternate explanation.
No one on the Grange Royal Commission of Inquiry had expertise in diagnosis. The post-mortem diagnosis of digoxin poisoning was based on a single biochemical test without knowledge of the normal values. Gavin Hamilton's extensive research shows that a toxin found in natural rubber, a digoxin-like substance, might well have been the culprit in the babies' deaths. He clearly demonstrates that explanations other than serial murder account for the cluster of infant deaths at HSC.
What can be learned from this black stain on Canada's judicial system? One lesson certainly stands out: we can't ever again allow a group of unqualified amateur diagnosticians make life-and-death decisions about such important matters as potential serial murders.
Read More


Editorial Reviews


Maclean's magazine
...The real parallel remains unknown to most Canadians even now; it's not that the wrong person was fingered for murder, but that no murders were committed at all. That's the conclusion meticulously and persuasively argued by retired physician Gavin Hamilton in The Nurses are Innocent.
From the Publisher
...The real parallel remains unknown to most Canadians even now; it's not that the wrong person was fingered for murder, but that no murders were committed at all. That's the conclusion meticulously and persuasively argued by retired physician Gavin Hamilton in The Nurses are Innocent.
Read More

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9781459700574
  • Publisher: Dundurn Press
  • Publication date: 12/6/2011
  • Pages: 240
  • Product dimensions: 5.50 (w) x 8.50 (h) x 1.00 (d)

Meet the Author


Gavin Hamilton grew up in St. Thomas, Ontario, and attended UWO Medical School. After practising family medicine for nine years, he studied diagnostic radiology, receiving the fellowship diploma, then practicing as a private radiologist with the rank of assistant professor until retirement. He lives in London, Ontario.

Nurse Susan NELLES sued then Attorney-General Roland McMURTRY for malicious prosecution; Ont Govt then paid for Nurse Nelles legal costs.

Toronto hospital baby deaths

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  (Redirected from Susan Nelles)
The Toronto hospital baby deaths were multiple alleged poisonings of babies at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children that occurred between June 1980 and April 1981, when charges of murder were laid against a nurse at the hospital. The story was a major news event throughout the year, and ended with the nurse being exonerated. Although suspicion was cast on other people, no further charges were ever laid.
Later analysis suggests that the tests and methodologies that pointed to poisoning were flawed, and may have been generating false positives. Specifically, chemicals used in the manufacture of everyday medical items may have contributed to the test indicating high levels of the alleged poison. It was also demonstrated that a "wave" of similar alleged poisonings were occurring at that time.

Initial accusations

During an investigation of baby deaths in the cardiac unit of the Hospital for Sick Children, abnormally high levels of the heart medication digoxin were found in as many as 43 of the infants. The levels were measured using a newly introduced testing method known as HPLC, and the levels were high enough to suggest that it was the cause of death.
A police investigation followed during which time it was found that a nurse that the hospital had been working shifts during the times that 23 of the deaths occurred. Susan Marguerite Nelles (born in Belleville, Ontario),[1] was arrested and charged in March 1981 with murdering four babies. The deaths then stopped.
During the case that followed, it was discovered that Nelles had not actually been on duty during the noted times, having swapped shifts with other nurses who had access to the same medication. Although the deaths ended after Nelles' arrest, the hospital had introduced restrictions for access to digoxin and had implemented a policy that kept infants in intensive care longer. Total deaths between the two units remained identical.[clarification needed]
Nelles asked for legal counsel when she was arrested. Her request was interpreted by the investigating police officers to be an indication of her guilt, but the court later ruled that such requests should not be interpreted as evidence of guilt. The court also ruled that the Crown lacked evidence to convict Nelles. The government eventually paid for Nelles' legal costs after she sued the province's Attorney-General, Roy McMurtry for malicious prosecution.

Inquiry and aftermath

A Royal Commission, led by Justice Samuel Grange, found that eight infants had been murdered. Although another nurse, Phyllis Trayner,[2] fell under scrutiny, no one was charged. Moreover, the experimental test that detected digoxin may have given false results for other chemicals.
Nelles has since remained in the medical care world after her trial. In 1992 she became Director of the Belleville Dialysis Unit of Kingston General Hospital. She also counsels nurses on legal issues and on dialysis. In 1999, Nelles received an honorary degree from Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario (from which she had graduated with a Bachelor of Nursing Science degree in 1978) for her work in promoting integrity in the nursing field.[1] She helped establish the Nelles Scholarship for Queen's Nursing Science Students in memory of her father, Dr James Nelles and brother Dr David Nelles.[3]
As of 2005, only Nelles had been charged with a crime involving the baby deaths.[4]

MBT

As per 2010 LawNow.org article,[5] there is some question as to whether any of the infants were murdered – but perhaps killed by a substance called MBT (mercaptobenzothiazole) that was used in the manufacture of the syringes used to medicate the babies and can mimic digoxin in autopsies. To quote from the epilogue, "Today, no one can even say with certainty whether any crimes were ever committed on the pediatric cardiac ward."
Gavin Hamilton, M.D., of London, Ontario, published a book, The Nurses are Innocent – The Digoxin Poisoning Fallacy,[6] proving that very high blood digoxin levels should be expected in autopsy blood samples. He described an epidemic of baby poisoning occurring at the same time as the Toronto baby deaths (Hammersmith Hospital, London, England),[7] caused by a cumulative toxin leached from pharmaceutical rubber (syringes, ampoules, and I.V. apparatus).[8] Any babies receiving multiple injections (such as the seriously ill Toronto babies), worldwide, were exposed to this contaminant, MBT. In the FDA's National Center for Drug Analysis, MBT was proven to give falsely high digoxin readings by HPLC testing,[9] the test method used by the Toronto Centre for Forensic Sciences during the criminal investigation.