Opinions

This category is used to mark all Opinions pieces in the Informed Opinions Section of Healthydebate.ca

What’s in a name – defining hospitalists in Canada

Vandad Yousefi

Over the past two decades, delivery of inpatient care at acute care institutions has changed dramatically in Canada, with fewer family doctors following their patients in hospitals and the emergence of a growing number of hospitalists. Despite this growth, there is no uniform understanding of who hospitalists are, what they do and what types of

More Ontarians should have access to team-based primary care

In our family medicine practice, we regularly ask patients to give us feedback on how we’re doing. They tell us, over and over, that one of the things they like best about our practice is the teamwork – how much they love their doctor but also their social worker, or nurse, or dietitian. And how

Canada needs to develop standards for Goals of Care conversations

Kieran Quinn

I don’t remember much about my Grandma, but I do remember how she died. It was one of those perfectly tranquil winter nights in January of 2009. My family was at our home finishing dinner when Leisureworld, her long-term care (LTC) facility, called to inform us that she had a fever and low oxygen levels.

The role of call scheduling in resident burnout

Kieran Quinn

Today my son Hunter is 821 days old (2 years, 3 months, 0 days). As a resident, I have spent 129 of those days in the hospital while on call; after-hours care that are over and above my ‘regular’ working day (0 years, 4 months, 3 days). In other words, I have missed 15% of

The evolving definition and scope of palliative care

Suman Budhwani

Is our health system’s definition of palliative care correct?  The World Health Organization (WHO) describes palliative care as “an approach that improves the quality of life of patients and their families facing the problems associated with life-threatening illness.” Keeping this in mind, most of us associate palliative care with comfort-focused care that is delivered within

A tribute to Dave Sackett

Andreas Laupacis healthydebate editor

David Sackett, the most important mentor of my professional career, died last month. I am writing this article partly to acknowledge and thank him for his incredible contributions to medicine, critical thinking and evidence-based medicine. However, others such as Andre Picard  have already done so beautifully. I am writing this partly because I fear that

What will the “sharing economy” mean for health care?

Will Falk healhtydebate.ca blogger

Boomers have marveled at the return of bellbottoms, skinny ties, mullets, and moustaches. Memories of misspent youth, suddenly became exciting trends for the generations that followed. Now we’re discovering that the process of rejuvenation applies not only to fashion, but business models too. Take, as examples, the kid across the street who cut your grass

The psychiatrist of tomorrow

Catherine Zahn

Mental health leaders have the opportunity for courageous change as they assemble in Toronto this week. Psychiatrists from around the world will be attending the American Psychiatric Association’s Annual Meeting, and I hope that there will be serious and thought provoking conversation on the future of the specialty.  As a neurologist, new to the mental

What’s really driving high-cost use of health care

Laura Rosella

So-called “high-cost users” of health care – the 5% of the population who use nearly two-thirds of health care resources – have become a major policy focus, both in Canada and abroad. But in the rush to save money on the care of patients who are already high-cost users, too little attention has been paid

Our casual attitude towards risk is taking a grim toll

Gord winkel

On the average commute home from work, it’s easy to observe people regularly carry out any number of “at-risk” behaviors on the roads: not following traffic signals, texting while driving, or driving at excessive speeds. When it comes to driving, it seems Canadians have a very high risk tolerance. This is certainly understandable in a

Culture of bullying: what can medicine learn from the Ghomeshi report?

Maureen Taylor

When people learn that I pivoted from broadcast journalism to health care, they are rightly surprised: the two fields don’t seem to have a lot in common. But in my experience, they share at least this:  both occasionally celebrate a culture of blame, celebrity and an eat-your-young mentality that fosters fear, undermines team work and

Best part of being a doctor? The stories

Kieran Quinn

The best thing about being a doctor and practicing Medicine are the stories – the patient’s stories. Each day, I get to hear someone’s life story, to share in their life’s successes, their failures, and the meaning they derive from their experiences. I have heard of the adventures and the atrocities of The Great Wars,

Modernizing scopes of practice to improve the value of physician services

Yan Xu healthy debate blogger

In 1987, a high-profile and unpopular doctors’ strike over reimbursement shook the profession, leading to the creation of CanMEDS roles framework studied by every Canadian medical student. 18 years later, income is again the focal point in the latest negotiations between the Ontario Medical Association and the provincial government. As former Chief Justice Warren Winkler

We must create healthy workplaces across the health care sector

Amy Katz

Recently, Access Alliance, a community health centre in Toronto, posed an interesting challenge to fellow health care, education, child care and social service organizations: get rid of precarious jobs in the public sector. It makes sense. An important part of the public sector’s role is to build a healthy society. Precarious jobs – temporary, part-time,