Monday Open Comments

Some docs in Quebec are going private.  I guess a socialized medical system ain’t working out as planned.

****

… More than 780 doctors left the public system there last year, compared with 14 in the rest of Canada combined. The exodus of doctors for the private sector in Quebec has increased 70 per cent in just four years, according to data from its Health Ministry.

[Patients described month-long waits to the author of the article, even for their family doctor and/or acute illness.  Doctors are encouraged to take on a too-large caseload. The self-pay option is a way around that.]

Critics say the situation in Quebec should act as a warning of what could happen elsewhere in Canada if incremental steps in the direction of privatization are allowed to add up to giant leaps.

/snip

“If you’re a family doctor and you want new patients, it’s not that a patient can just ring up and say, ‘Can you see me?’” Potter said. “You have to go through the government waiting list of what we call la clientele orpheline.”

[These lists are so old, they even include names of deceased.]

At his private clinic, Potter can see whoever wants his help, including those who have a family doctor monitoring them over the long-term and those who do not.

Dr. Bernard Ho, vice-chair of Canadian Doctors for Medicare, says the situation in Quebec is “a concerning trend that we’re seeing not only in Quebec but across the country as well of private pay family medicine.”

Quebec has the most family doctors going private for a number of reasons, including rules that make it easier to go back and forth between public and private, …

/snip

Ho said he believes patient safety will be compromised if private sector medicine continues to balloon in Quebec and elsewhere in the country. “There have been studies done in the U.S., U.K. and even here in Canada that show that when we outsource to the private sector, patient safety decreases, patient mortality increases,” he said.

In a comparison of for-profit versus non-profit U.S. hospitals published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, for instance, one notable difference associated with patient risk of mortality was that pressure to return a profit often equalled employing fewer highly skilled staff members per patient.

[As opposed to making patients wait for weeks or  months for tests or treatment?  Is that why America has so many Canadian patients?  Asking for a friend.]

She said research from other countries shows that overdiagnosis and over-prescribing go hand-in-hand with private medicine.

For example, antibiotics do not work for colds or for ear infections or sore throat also stemming from viruses. “But because the patient is paying $150 to see you, they’re expecting a prescription. It’s a lot harder to say no because otherwise you lose a customer,” said Leblanc.

[I agree with the too many pills being prescribed, but is that the result of patients expecting it, or Big Pharma pushing it?  Or both?  And is the socialized system restricting medical treatments because it saves money to not write a prescription?]

Life on the waitlist

Like many of her friends, 62-year-old Marlene Harper had the same family doctor for 30 years, but that person has retired. That left both Harper and her husband, Keith Ball, who has diabetes, without a family doctor.

Harper said she put herself on the province’s waitlist 2½ years ago and never heard back…

[They have resorted to paying private doctors.  Expensive health care is better than no health care.]

In 2022, the province established a system known as the GAP, which stands for Guichet d’accès à la première ligne, or Primary Care Access Point. If you need to see a doctor but don’t have one, the province finds you a one-off appointment, so — at least in theory — you don’t have to go to an emergency department. [So they strain the existing doctor pool to accommodate these folks, and one appointment means they may miss something important.]

In an email to CBC Radio, the office of Quebec’s minister of health said, in part, “the private sector — at no cost to patients — can be complementary to the public sector. However, we need to better regulate the growth of the private sector and that is what we are doing.”

Starting on Dec. 1, a new Crown Corporation called Santé Québec will take over operation and management of Quebec health care….

Santé Québec spokesperson Jean-Nicolas Aubé told CBC Radio its top priorities will include improving access to public health care, reducing steps for patients accessing care and addressing root causes of problems instead of applying “Band-Aid solutions.”

But Leblanc said she’s worried Santé Québec will only take the province further in the direction of “commercialization of health care,” especially given that a private health executive was appointed as CEO.

 


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42 responses to “Monday Open Comments”

  1. Bonecrusher Avatar
    Bonecrusher

    Good morning Couch Dwellers, Happy Monday!

  2. bsue54 Avatar
    bsue54

    G’Morning, Gang – have a blessed day

  3. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    The healthcare system in the UK is a disaster and that’s the way they put it. The rightwing Tories created a giant bureaucracy to run it because the system was dysfunctional. Once these massive socialized medical institutions set down roots, they are almost impossible to kill.

    Now the British Left wants to fire the bureaucrats and return direct control to the politicians. You know that will work out well. Yeah, when I have a medical problem, I always think of calling my local congressman.

  4. Super Dave Avatar
    Super Dave

    Well it’s Monday again and my wife has threatened to head home from Midland today so maybe I better clean this place up. Took the Keg back yesterday. 😀
    Mornin’ Gang

    1. GJT Avatar
      GJT

      That is threatening! Get yer socks and drawers picked up off the floor.

  5. Super Dave Avatar
    Super Dave

    I guess I didn’t know that Bill Hemmer was such a Jackass! He had Stephen Miller on talking about the nice father from New Jersey MS 13 Gang member being held in prison in El Salvador and Bill kept cutting him off but Miller does get on a roll, just don’t pull his chain. 😉

    1. Texpat Avatar
      Texpat

      Her Highness had it on in the breakfast area when I went to get coffee. Miller did answer my question about the conflicting statement from DOJ about the deportation being a mistake. Finally, we learn the lawyer who said that to the media was a left over Biden hire. He has also been fired.

      1. Super Dave Avatar
        Super Dave

        Yes, that was VERY informative, most everything we heard about it on the news was false. Apparently the “Mole” changed the perp’s designation to make it look like he was here legally. And OF COURSE the media ran with it. ~SPITS~

  6. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    The longer I live the more I realize how stupid and ignorant the average elected official is in the United States of America. We need to do better.

    The Province (colony) of Maryland was founded by a Roman Catholic Englishman, but the freedom for Catholics didn’t last forever. Oliver Cromwell made sure of that.

    In 2023, Maryland Democrats voted to stick it to the Catholic Church by lifting the statute of limitations on suing for child sexual abuse after an investigative report of the Archdiocese of Baltimore showed over 600 children had been abused there since the 1940s.

    Now, this might have been well intentioned, but it was also a clear attempt, and a successful one, to damage the Catholic Church in Maryland.

    But while the lawmakers were busy high-fiving the destruction of those awful Catholics, they ended up stepping in their own trap.

    It’s amazing how fast governments work when you threaten to empty their bank accounts.

    They thought it was JUST the Catholic Church that was the problem. They had no clue that so many government employees might be hit with suits.

    Smith estimates the settlements could be upwards of $4 billion, which is as much as the state’s current yearly deficit.

    And in that light, the legislature quickly wrote a new law and voted to limit their liability in the cases. (And I do mean quickly – it went from draft, to committee, to the floor in the state House and Senate, and to the governor’s desk in two days — TWO DAYS.)

  7. Super Dave Avatar
    Super Dave

    The other day I mentioned that I’d found a really nice professionally built Martini Cadet rifle re-chambered in .22 Hornet for sale up in Montana and I made the mistake of getting in touch with the seller and long story short he shipped it to me on March 10th and now it is enroute from Sioux Falls SD to who knows where after leaving Helena MT and passing through Billings MT, Glendale MT, Bismark ND, Fargo ND to Sioux Falls! Dang, I wonder if it’s on a Long Haul Truck yet, usually there is only one stop before it goes to a major hub. Rumor has it, it’ll be here on Thursday the 17th. 😉

    1. Texpat Avatar
      Texpat

      That’s one pricey .22 rifle.

      1. Super Dave Avatar
        Super Dave

        Did it send you to the Guns International link? I only meant to send one picture (the first one) that’s what I see when I click on it. I wasn’t going to embarrass myself by telling anyone the price. 😉

        1. Texpat Avatar
          Texpat

          All I did was put “Martini Cadet .22 for sale” in the search engine and the first one up was Guns International. I clicked on it and there was your Montana rifle with a “sale pending” tag.

      2. Super Dave Avatar
        Super Dave

        About the price, the BSA made Martini training rifles were chambered in a now obsolete caliber (.310 Cadet) that is similar to the western 32-20 and many rifles were rechambered to 32-20 but aren’t accurate since the 32-20 has a .3125″ diameter bullet and the .310 Cadet has a true 32 Cal bullet (.323) no way for the barrel to establish the bullet. Since these rifles have some collector value they go for about $600-$800 depending on condition and caliber. But this particular one was totally networked by an expert gunsmith that replaced the stock & forearm with European Walnut, hand checkered it, added a Al Biesen butt-plate and rebarreled/rechamberd it to .22 Hornet then cold blued and polished it. SO the receiver is the only part that is original. Kinda’ like the 500 year old axe. 😉
        FWIW: I really don’t need the rifle and it took a while for me to talk myself into it but it is an investment.

        1. Texpat Avatar
          Texpat

          It’s a beauty, no doubt about it.

  8. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    Compare and contrast California governance and federal governance under President Trump.

    This week we found out that the Los Angeles mayor’s office has only managed to get four building permits pushed through her city’s sausage making machine. Seventy-two are in the queue. The multimillionaire named to be the sherpa by which all things are rebuilt, has been allowed to fade into the sunset.

    and then this,

    Before he even met with Bass, President Trump had dropped federal regulation after federal regulation, and turned on water supplies. Afterwards, the EPA finished clean up of both fire sites on day 28 of its 30 day deadline.

    The feds cleaned up 9,201 properties, removing paint, pesticides, lithium-ion batteries from cars, asbestos, propane tanks, and other hazardous material. Another 4,400 properties will be cleaned up in Phase 2 of the EPA process. 

    Karen Bass got four permits through her own planning department. Four.

    1. Tedtam Avatar
      Tedtam

      I think Bass has a side gig as a clown at the local circus.

  9. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    I’m a pint of blood lighter this morning.

    1. Super Dave Avatar
      Super Dave

      Skeeters already that bad in Austin County? 😀

    2. Tedtam Avatar
      Tedtam

      It used to be that if I wanted to drop some weight, I’d cut my hair. I think you’re taking it a wee bit too far. 😉

  10. Tedtam Avatar
    Tedtam

    At the chiropractor office. Arm this time.

  11. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    cdrsalamander quotes:

    Navy Secretary John Phelan said he has a mandate from President Donald Trump: “Fix the damn rust.”

    “He has stated to me many times: ‘Shipbuilding, shipbuilding, shipbuilding. Get those ships out of maintenance yards. Fix the damn rust,’” Phelan said on Wednesday. “He does not like it, and I don’t like getting calls in the middle of the night.”

    The issue of the Navy’s rusting fleet came up during Phelan’s Feb. 27 confirmation hearing, when Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) showed a recent picture of the destroyer USS Dewey caked in orange rust.

    “Please don’t give that to President Trump because I’ll get a text at like one in the morning,” Phelan said at the time.

  12. Super Dave Avatar
    Super Dave

    The wife is at Hobby with a 2+ hour layover so she’s looking for some lunch. Eat and kill some time. She often doesn’t have enough time to get anything but a beer. 😉

  13. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    cdrsalamander is so right about this. America has primarily projected our power and commitment to open seas by visiting nation after nation around the world with our carriers, destroyers and other ships.

    It’s an unforgivable shame to let our fleets look like they do. I also wonder how much of this has to do with the EPA forcing paint manufacturers to change their formulas to “save the planet”.

    The physical condition and external appearance of a navy tells a story not only of that navy, but the nation it serves. Those of us who served at the end of the Cold War remember that we knew in the late-80s that something in the Soviet Union was “off”, simply from the condition of her fleet.

    As we face the People’s Republic of China around the world, if you want to look like the “weak horse”, look like a sick horse.

    There is a very good reason why the People’s Liberation Army Navy ships that deploy look spotless. They know the message they want to send to the rest of the world, and they know their navy is a great way to do it.

    We used to know that. Time to get back to where we once were.

  14. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    Several Jewish families from around here were going to Cabo San Lucas for Passover week when their Gulfstream V jet slid way off the runway. Plane is totalled yet everyone walked away.

  15. Super Dave Avatar
    Super Dave

    The wife just crossed Trinity Bay heading toward Winnie/Port Author. Climbing out 22.7K @ 394 MPH. She should be landing at NW Florida about 3:45 PM CDT.

  16. Bonecrusher Avatar
    Bonecrusher

    I had breakfast down by about 0520hrs this morning and am just now getting to eat lunch. I got busy at work. I’m hungry.

  17. Texpat Avatar
    Texpat

    I was reminded of the saying “You Can’t Fix Stupid when I read this. In fact, it is so stupid I couldn’t resist not sharing it.

    Anti-Israel Harvard Law School students organized a workshop on the Ivy League campus earlier this month to edit the Wikipedia pages of more than a dozen prominent law firms, singling out some that threatened to stop recruiting at the school over its failure to rein in anti-Semitic activity.

    Harvard’s National Lawyers Guild chapter, a left-wing legal advocacy group, hosted the “Wikipedia Edit-A-Thon” on April 2 at Harvard Law’s WCC student center, according to an announcement on Harvard Law’s website.*

    oh, and this,

    Avachat edited the pages for the firms Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, and Simpson Thacher & Bartlett to soften the language about anti-Semitic activity on college campuses. Amid a wave of anti-Semitic protests following the Hamas attack on Israel, the two firms warned Harvard Law and others that they would cut back on recruiting on their campuses for failing to rein in anti-Semitic incidents.

    Here is the genius organizer of this calamity which will reflect on all Harvard Law students whether they participated or not.

    *If Harvard says they have nothing to do with this then why was it allowed to be promoted on their official website ?

    1. Tedtam Avatar
      Tedtam

      Momma was right: “If you can’t say something nice, say nothing at all.”

      1. Texpat Avatar
        Texpat

        It’s a giant law career bonfire.

  18. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    Bush Intercontinental airport opened 55 years ago.

    The brilliant minds at Houston Metro have finally figured out it would be a good idea to run a bus every thirty minutes between there and downtown.

    And they’re so proud of themselves.

    1. Tedtam Avatar
      Tedtam

      It’s the little things that make them happy.

    2. Texpat Avatar
      Texpat

      EUREKA !!!

      Eureka (Ancient Greek: εὕρηκα, romanizedhéurēka) is an interjection used to celebrate a discovery or invention. It is a transliteration of an exclamation attributed to Ancient Greek mathematician and inventor Archimedes.

  19. Tedtam Avatar
    Tedtam

    Stopping in for a little bit. I made an appointment with Dr. Bailey during my rosary making time today, so I had to leave before saying Hello! to everyone. He jerked me around and gave me a shot to get the muscle next to my scapula to calm the heck down so I could use the arm.

    Since his office is a hop, skip, and jump from my bead stores…well, that’s where I was for an hour or so. One store has rosary parts and beads, but the second store has, on average, better prices on their beads. So, two stores it was. I meant to only buy a few things and see if I could match beads that I’m running short on here, but…well, they were shiny. And pretty. So I almost hurt my arm again, carrying stuff to my car.

    Anyway, got home around 2:30 and was very hungry, so I made myself something to eat. While I was at it, I put together a plate for Hubby’s dinner, too, and washed the dishes.

    I have an appointment this evening and have to leave in several hours, but I had to stop by here and at least check in. I think I’m going to try for some exercise time before I have to hop back in the car.

  20. Tedtam Avatar
    Tedtam

    The arm is starting to ache. I was told to put heat on it, so…looking for a heating pad.

  21. Tedtam Avatar
    Tedtam

    Today’s C&C roundup:

    Good morning, C&C, it’s Monday! And we’re off to an exciting new week of revolutionary news. In today’s roundup: election integrity wins in Arizona begin paving the road to 2026 midterms; America inks first-and-free Panama Canal deal; Iranian peace talks pick up speed as Trump deploys dickerer-in-chief to Rome; biglaw folding like a pair of Walmart dress slacks; Kennedy’s big science agencies end barbaric animal practices in stunning political reversal; another historic and revolutionary executive order floats by the mockingbird media while it was distracted by a squirrel; and the White House extinguishes Biden’s blasphemous Easter in a single Holy Week.

  22. Tedtam Avatar
    Tedtam

    America First Legal has managed to force a reluctant Arizona gubmint to begin cleaning its voter rolls. Lots of Childers amusing prose to view.

    ***

    Things in Panama are looking better:

     Even though the U.S. agreed to build no new bases, the deal allows US forces to occupy Panama-controlled facilities, for training, military exercises, and “other activities.” It includes former US bases that were myopically handed over to Panama by Democrat president Jimmy Carter, a one-term president with all the grace and foresight of a Columbia University gender studies major.

    More good news is planned, I hear.

    ***
    Trump has managed to get face-to-face negotiations with Iran, something that Iran had said would never happen. Winning.

    ***

    Speaking of winning:

    Despite widespread media sneering, the tariff negotiations are apparently beginning to bloom. Yesterday, White House Advisor Peter Navarro was on Meet the Press (which Rush always called “Meet the Depressed”), and said that during Trump’s tariff pause, “we have 90 deals possibly pending over the next 90 days.”

    ***

    More Trumpian results: big law firms have shuttered their DEI programs because…of the Orange Man. Heh.

    ***

    And now animal experimentation is being reduced or eliminated in medical science by gubmint. The use of AI and labratory produced tissues will be used instead. PETA is actually praising Trump! (Someone check on the temperature in Hell, because I think it just froze over.) Guess who’s not happy?

    Not everyone was happy though. Democrats gnashed their razor-sharp teeth. Trump’s attacking science! It’s another weird inversion: Historically, liberals supposedly championed animal rights, to an extent we even used to mock them about it. But they obviously never meant it. Now progressives have become the party of debarking puppies and torturing them with sand flies.

    /snuffle, snort!

    ****

    And then – winning for everyone!

    One of the least reported but most significant executive orders Trump signed last week was reported in Broadband Breakfast, succinctly headlined “Trump Administration Pushes Deregulation.” The sub-headline said, “President Trump targeted anti-competitive regulations, aimed to promote growth.” At any other time, it would have been called “historic” and “revolutionary.” These days, it was just Wednesday.

    /snip

    The new order directs all agency heads, like FCC Chairman Brendan Carr, to review all regulations within their authority and identify any rules that stifle competition. It specifically focused on regulations that facilitate monopolies, that create or enforce unnecessary barriers to entry, or needlessly burden agency buying. Agencies have 70 days to submit plans for rescission.

    It also invoked the “good cause exception,” which allows agencies to “dispense with notice-and-comment rulemaking” if “impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest.” In other words, it’s meant to happen fast. If Trump didn’t mean it, he wouldn’t have bothered finding that obscure exception.

    It is a well-known fact, often observed with forlorn, anguished futility, that once big corporations get their lobbies going, regulatory rulebooks begin swelling with detailed, arcane, and expensive restrictions related to their industries. It’s not that they love rules per se, it’s that they love how complying with those rules becomes so expensive and burdensome it prevents anyone else from competing in their markets.

    Meanwhile, consumers pay all the compliance costs.

    I love this. So. Much.

    1. Texpat Avatar
      Texpat

      I still haven’t forgiven Carter for that Panama Canal giveaway, even if he is dead. For years I called myself a Jimmy Carter Republican because that SOB drove me out of the Democratic Party by 1978.

  23. Shannon Avatar
    Shannon

    I just saw an ad that featured 72 month financing on a bed.

    A frikkin bed.

    Surely we’re doomed.

    1. Adee Avatar
      Adee

      It must be a king-size bed or a queen-size bed, with night-stands, and other bedroom furniture.

      Almost every piece of good furniture these days is much more expensive than it used to be. And there seem to be issues with the availability of suitable wood to make good furniture that will last decades.

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