Category Archives: Uncategorized

Diablogue is now available in French

OPSEU’s popular health care BLOG will be presented in both official languages beginning this week. A project of OPSEU’s Health Care Divisional Council, the Diablogue is entering its third year providing on-going news and analysis about Ontario’s health system. Read by members, journalists, CEOs, politicians and policy-makers, Diablogue has become an important forum for both patients and providers. In the past key stories have been translated and posted on the SEFPO site. Now all postings will be available in both English and French.

To read Diablogue in French, click here.

Health Coalition hosts two free events in response to Drummond recommendations

The Ontario Health Coalition is holding two events in response to the release of the Drummond Commission Report this week. About a quarter of the more than 400 recommendations are expected to deal with Ontario’s health care system.

The first event is an on-line webinar to take place Saturday, February 18 at 2 pm. The webinar is a live interactive briefing. Register on-line now and a confirmation e-mail will give you the details on how you can join. To register, click here.

The second event is an Emergency Assembly on Saturday, February 25 at 11 am, taking place at The Church of the Holy Trinity, 10 Trinity Square, Toronto. The church is located in behind the Eaton’s Centre near Indigo books.

There is no charge to attend either event.

For those coming from outside Toronto, a block of rooms has been booked at the Bond Place Hotel at Dundas and Yonge Streets. The special rate for this event is $89/night.  Call 1-800-268-9390 and let them know you are with the Ontario Health Coalition to book and receive this rate.

Agenda for meeting includes a briefing on Drummond’s recommendations, a half hour lunch (provided) and development of an action plan.

To register, contact the Ontario Health Coalition at ohc@sympatico.ca.

Docs get paid $123 million for patients they never saw in a year

The Ministry of Health says they conducted an in-depth analysis on the anticipated costs of new funding arrangements for doctors. When asked by the Auditor General of Ontario, they couldn’t quite find it.

They may have similarly just overlooked the fact that a significant number of doctors in family health groups (13%) and family health organizations (18%) had actually not signed their contracts or declaration forms, leading the auditor to question whether these doctors fully understood their obligations under these new arrangements. Whoops!

The auditor’s report gives a clear indication why the docs suddenly had an overriding interest in group practice – much higher compensation levels.

Continue reading

Free Music Download: They’re taking it away

By day Ian Robb works at the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO). However, Ottawa-area residents likely know him as part of a harmony trio called “Finest Kind.”

His song “They’re Taking It Away” has been sung at demonstrations against cuts to public services. Now that song is available for free for a limited time from the website of Fallen Angel Music.

“They’re Taking It Away” is about “the bully boys of Bay street” who are saying “to hell with paying taxes, pull the safety net away.” The song is certainly appropriate as the McGuinty government ramps up for what appears to be a decade of austerity.

If you like the song, you can also buy the full CD.

To go to the downloads page of Fallen Angel Music, click here.

 

 

Video: Romanow on creeping health care privatization

Missed Wednesday’s Canadian Health Coalition forum in Ottawa? Rabble has made available streaming video of the event featuring former Saskatchewan Premier Roy Romanow, Dr. Michael Rachlis, the Parkland Institute’s Diana Gibson, Allan Maslove from the Carleton University School of Public Policy and Administration, Ontario Health Coalition director Natalie Mehra and others. Two of the panels were moderated by the Globe and Mail’s Andre Picard. To watch the video, click here.

(You may want to forward the video slightly from the beginning — there is a minute or two of ambience as participants stand around and wonder who left their keys behind on the podium).

Professional liability insurance for OPSEU members of a regulated health profession

Bill 179 received Royal Assent in December 2009 making it law for all members of a Regulated Health Profession to carry Professional Liability Insurance (PLI). This law will be fully implemented by 2012.

The OPSEU Hospital Professional Division Executive has, in consultation with CG&B Insurance Group, arranged for members of Regulated Health Professions to get PLI at a discounted rate. For $40 per year, you can receive PLI that meets all the requirements of Bill 179.

This insurance is not only applicable to members of the Hospital Professionals Division, but for every OPSEU member who is also a member of a Regulated Health Profession.

Please see the attached form to find out more about this insurance offer.

Video: Alex Himelfarb on the consequences of tax cuts

In Mid-October we wrote about Alex Himelfarb’s comments about why we needed to invest more in our future, not less.
The former clerk of the privy council, Himelfarb was frank about his assessment that we have been sold a bill of goods with regards to tax cuts and austerity.
The lecture was sponsored by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives and the Literary Review of Canada. It was produced for TVO’s Big Ideas series.
Watch the full lecture and Q&A online here.
Rather read about it? Our Diablogue story is here.

Ottawa Hospital celebrates being number six

Recently we noted a press release from The Ottawa Hospital celebrating the fact that they were ranked number six among Canada’s research hospitals.

Last year The Ottawa Hospital was also number six.

The rankings come from a private company called RE$EARCH Infosource Inc. The dollar sign in “research” is not a mistake.

We asked RE$EARCH Infosource the basis of their rankings, especially given questions over the validity of other private sector rankings, such as the Maclean’s magazine ranking of Universities.

RE$EARCH Infosource never got back to us.

The list mostly appears to be based on the volume of money the hospitals attract for research, although it is not entirely uniform.

University Health Network tops the list. They attracted a staggering $267 million in research funding last year. UHN is affiliated with the Ontario Cancer Institute, Toronto General Research Institute, and Toronto Western Research Institute.

The second ranked hospital, Hamilton Health Sciences, actually recorded less money for research, dropping to $180 million in 2010 from $191 million the year before.

While Ontario had six out of ten hospitals at the top of the list, the big increases in research money primarily went to hospitals in BC and Quebec.

The British Columbia cancer agency was the biggest mover up the rankings, having doubled its research funding from $41 million to $81 million.

Does attracting more money than other research hospitals make you more of an innovation leader? Or does it mean you are better at attracting research dollars? Is there any point to this beyond flattering the hospitals at the top, all potential customers for the private company.

Media steps up marginalization of opposition voices

Carping: Complain or find fault continually, typically about trivial matters. (The Free Dictionary)

Recently the Toronto Star’s Queen’s Park columnist Martin Regg Cohn wrote a fawning column about Don Drummond, the ex-banker invited by Dalton McGuinty to tell us how we can better deliver public services and eliminate a $16 billion deficit.

At the end of the column Cohn writes: “Yet despite carping from public sector unions and the NDP, Drummond is struck by a public perception that change is inevitable.”

Carping?

Continue reading

York Central celebrates fresh food, docs oppose retherm at South Bruce Grey

Recently OPSEU was at York Central Hospital to make a video about the work done by hospital support staff.

That included time spent in the kitchen, where staff told us about their switch to fresh food service, which they say is a hit among patients. Not only are they turning their back on the rethermalized mush that is the horror of most hospital patients, but are offering a choice of delicious freshly prepared meals.

“Gone are generic and reheated meals,” Director of Food Services Cyril Saunders told yorkregion.com, “in their place are made-from-scratch meals that patients order based on their preferences as well as their dietary needs.”

Food services “hosts” take orders from patients using hand-held tablets. The host sends the order to the kitchen and later delivers it to the patient.

The hospital anticipates that the new program will dramatically reduce food waste.

Meanwhile, in the part of the province where much of this food is grown, the South Bruce Grey Health Centre continues to defy the move to fresh by completing their plan to replace local food with the kind of rethermalized content that has failed in so many other locations.

Many community members are complaining in the local media, pointing to a September letter authored by 12 local doctors.

The doctors write that the “patients are not eating the stuff” claiming that the current food does not meet the minimum dietary standards for a hospital.

When SBGHC switched to retherm, they also replaced the cafeterias with vending machines, leaving hospital staff with nowhere to access their own meals.

“Admittedly secondary to patient considerations,” the letter states, “the staff, from nurses to physicians to food services and maintenance staff are left as isolated, fend for yourself individuals when it comes to food, all the while trying to cope with the requirements of their positions.”

The docs also complained about new gates to access parking at the hospital, which also impedes access to the emergency department.