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Irene Jansen

Enquêtes sur trois coopératives de santé. Quebec health insurance board rulin... - 0 views

  • la Régie de l'assurance maladie du Québec (RAMQ) conclut que la majorité des personnes consultées lors de ces enquêtes avaient la perception qu'il était obligatoire d'être membre de la coopérative et de payer une cotisation annuelle pour avoir accès ou plus rapidement accès à un médecin
  • Les enquêtes ont aussi démontré que le paiement à l'avance d'une cotisation annuelle s'apparentait à un forfait. Ce forfait pouvait comprendre l'accès à des services non assurés, à des fournitures ou des frais accessoires à des services assurés pour lesquels les personnes pouvaient être facturées à coût moindre ou, encore, les obtenir sans frais additionnels. La RAMQ considère que ce type de forfait est illégal.
  • Une contribution financière exigée de quelque manière que ce soit d'une personne assurée pour avoir accès ou une priorité d'accès à un médecin contrevient à la Loi sur l'assurance maladie.
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  • Par conséquent, les trois coopératives doivent prendre les mesures appropriées afin de dissiper toute confusion, de sorte que les personnes assurées n'aient pas la perception qu'elles doivent être membres et payer une cotisation annuelle pour voir ou continuer de voir leur médecin. De plus, les trois coopératives de santé doivent modifier leurs règles de cotisation annuelle afin que celles-ci servent à financer leur fonctionnement et non à constituer un forfait annuel de services médicaux à l'intention des personnes assurées.
  • Les personnes qui ont déboursé des frais considérés comme illégaux dans ces trois coopératives peuvent demander un remboursement à la RAMQ. À cette fin, des factures détaillées et des preuves de paiement originales démontrant que de tels frais ont été payés doivent être jointes. La demande de remboursement doit être faite dans l'année suivant la date du paiement.
healthcare88

UN alarmed at how Canada treats black people; Delegation critiques nation on poverty, e... - 0 views

  • Toronto Star Thu Nov 3 2016
  • A UN working group on issues affecting black people is raising alarm over poverty, poor health, low educational attainment and overrepresentation of African Canadians in justice and children's aid systems. The findings were made by the United Nations Working Group of Experts on People of African Descent after its cross-Canada mission in October - the first ever since it was established in 2002. Previous attempts to visit Canada by the group failed under the former Conservative government, but it was made possible this time with an invitation by the Trudeau Liberals.
  • "The working group is deeply concerned about the human rights situation of African Canadians," the group wrote in its preliminary report, the final version of which will be submitted to the UN Human Rights Council next September. "Canada's history of enslavement, racial segregation and marginalization has had a deleterious impact on people of African descent which must be addressed in partnership with communities." Dena Smith of Toronto's African Canadian Legal Clinic was happy the working group acknowledged some of the key issues faced by the community.
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  • While the findings and recommendations are not binding, Smith said they highlight the challenges faced by African Canadians for the international community and hopefully put more pressure on Ottawa to rectify the inequities. "The situation is only going to get worse," Smith said. "We have families in the community torn apart at an alarming rate. "The future looks pretty bleak for our young people."
  • The UN delegation was in Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal and Halifax to meet with government officials, community members and rights groups to identify good practices and gaps in protecting the rights of black people. "We had been trying to secure a visit to Canada for a long time. It's a great joy that we were officially invited here," the working group's chair Ricardo Sunga told the Star in a phone interview Tuesday. "We look at Canada as a model in many ways when it comes to human rights protection.
  • We appreciate Canada's effort in addressing discrimination in various forms, but no country is exempt from racism and racial discrimination." Despite the wealth of information on socio-economic indicators in Canada, the investigators criticized the "serious" lack of race-based data and research that could inform prevention, intervention and treatment strategies. "The working group is concerned that the category 'visible minorities' obscures the realities and specific concerns of African Canadians," its report said. "There is clear evidence that racial profiling is endemic in the strategies and practices used by law enforcement. Arbitrary use of 'carding' or street checks disproportionately affects people of African descent."
  • The overrepresentation of black people in the criminal justice system was of particular concern for the group, who found African Canadians make up only 3 per cent of the population but account for 10 per cent of the prison population. In the last decade, the number of black detainees in federal correctional facilities has grown by 71.1 per cent, it warned. Among other findings by the UN experts: Across Canada, African Canadian children are being taken into child welfare on "dubious" grounds. Forty-one per cent of children in Children's Aid Society of Toronto's care were black when only 8 per cent of children are of African descent. The unemployment rate for black women is 11 per cent, 4 per cent higher than the general population, and they earn 37 per cent less than white males and 15 per cent less than white women.
  • A quarter of African Canadian women live below the poverty line compared to 6 per cent for their white counterparts. One-third of Canadian children of Caribbean heritage and almost half of continental African children live in poverty, compared to 18 per cent of white Canadian children. Chris Ramsaroop, an advocate with Justicia for Migrant Workers, hopes the report will raise awareness of the plight of African Canadians. "We need every opportunity to hold the feet of the federal and provincial governments to the fire," he said. The UN experts recommend a national department of African-Canadian affairs to develop policies to address issues facing black people and implement a nationwide mandatory disaggregated data collection policy based on race, colour, ethnic background and national origin.
  • Odion Fayalo, of Justice is Not Color Blind Campaign, protests racial profiling before a Toronto Police board meeting. • René Johnston/TORONTO STAR file photo
Heather Farrow

UN debates 'apocalyptic' threat of superbugs; Drug-resistant illnesses kill 700,000 peo... - 0 views

  • Toronto Star Wed Sep 21 2016
  • Today in New York City, superbugs are taking over the United Nations. At the UN headquarters, the 71st General Assembly will devote an entire day to antimicrobial resistance - the fourth time in history a health topic has been discussed at the annual gathering. Other health issues that have reached this level of global attention include high-profile killers like HIV, Ebola and noncommunicable diseases, or NCDs, which include everything from diabetes to cancer. But the growing threat of superbugs - which now kill an estimated 700,000 people every year - has become an urgent priority requiring a global response, experts say.
  • "The resistance of bacteria to antibiotics has grown significantly, to the point where we now have infections in nearly every country that are not treatable," said Ramanan Laxminarayan, director of the Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics and Policy based in Washington, D.C. "At this point, it is an emergency." Antimicrobial resistance occurs when microbes - like bacteria, parasites, viruses and fungi - evolve to defeat the drugs that once killed them. The problem is especially pressing for antibiotics, which are becoming increasingly ineffective at treating everything from gonorrhea to tuberculosis.
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  • es," said Dr. Liz Tayler, senior technical adviser on antimicrobial resistance with WHO. There are many reasons why antibiotic resistance has struggled to gain traction as global priority, however. For one, it's a complex issue that can prove difficult to explain - a headache-inducing combination of molecular chemistry, evolutionary concepts, and bacteria with unpronounceable names. WHO has compared the problem to a "silent tsunami." Unlike
  • a high-profile killer like cancer, deaths caused by antibiotic resistance tend to be less obvious or visible. "It never goes on anyone's death certificate ... when someone has died of a nasty infection, the fact that it's resistant either wasn't known or hasn't been talked about," Tayler said. "And while it's a really big problem in developing countries, the labs there aren't very good and they don't have the resources to do the testing to find out (why someone died)." Antibiotic resistance is also considered a "tragedy of the commons," where the effectiveness of antibiotics has been depleted by people who prioritize their own interests over the public good. And everyone is culpable: patients who demand antibiotics unnecessarily and doctors who cave to their demands; farmers who feed their livestock antibiotics and consumers who demand cheap
  • meat; low-income countries that allow antibiotics to be widely sold without prescription, and wealthy nations that need to do more to help those countries improve the sanitary conditions that lead to high infection rates. All of this human activity is pouring unprecedented volumes of antibiotics into the environment - and placing evolutionary pressure on microbes to evolve new strategies for defeating them. "I think of this problem as a planetary change at a microscopic level - one that we don't even notice. We're changing microbial ecology in a very significant way," Laxminarayan said. "We need to protect antibiotics with the same seriousness as we protected the ozone layer through the Montreal protocol." Wednesday's UN meeting will likely see countries agreeing to a declaration on combating antimicrobial resistance. This step - while largely symbolic - will draw global attention to the issue, sketch out solutions, and place pressure on countries to address the problem within their own boundaries.
  • "It requires all of these folks to be paying attention that they are now on notice," Laxminarayan said. But the declaration won't be binding, nor will it contain specific targets. For Dr. Brad Spellberg, an antibiotic resistance expert with the University of Southern California, the UN meeting is just one step and "there's still a lot of heavy lifting that has to be done." Tackling antibiotic resistance will require work on multiple fronts, he said - everything from improving prevention efforts to reducing antibiotic use in livestock and fish farms. The world also needs to recognize that antibiotic resistance is a threat we will have to face for not just years, but centuries or millennia, he added.
Govind Rao

Canada should heed UN's human rights warning - Infomart - 0 views

  • Toronto Star Fri Jul 24 2015
  • On June 11, Abdurahman Ibrahim Hassan, an immigration detainee with schizophrenia, died after being held in an Ontario jail for over three years without charge while awaiting deportation to Somalia. On Thursday, the UN found that Canada's treatment of immigration detainees, people like Mr. Hassan, violates international human rights law.
  • Earlier this month, I travelled to Geneva to participate in Canada's review by the UN Human Rights Committee, and to raise the issue of Canada's treatment of immigration detainees. In my submissions to the committee, I noted the scope of detention (more than 7,000 detainees per year), the indefinite nature (with some detainees spending years in jail), the disproportionately negative impact on those with serious mental health issues, and the lack of effective oversight over the detaining authority (the Canada Border Services Agency).
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  • The committee is one of the most well-respected human rights bodies in the world, comprised of independent and eminent international law experts from every continent. My experiences in Geneva affirmed my impression that the committee approaches the Herculean task of ensuring compliance with the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights with professionalism and rigour. After reviewing thousands of pages of documentation, listening to hours of testimony from NGOs and the Canadian government, and grilling government representatives with insightful questions, on Thursday, the committee issued its final verdict.
  • The concluding observations for Canada are breathtaking in their scope, covering issues related to national security, Aboriginal Peoples' rights, prisoners' rights, and even freedom of expression and association for human rights defenders.
  • The document is a sobering reminder of how much Canada has changed in the 10 years since our last review and we should be outraged that, in such a short time, our international reputation has been so tarnished. We have gone from being a global leader in the protection of human rights - the gold standard, even - to a country that repeatedly ignores UN recommendations, engages in suppression of dissent, and enables cruel treatment of migrants. At seven pages in length, the UN's assessment of Canada is necessary pre-election reading for anyone wishing to chart the changes wrought to our society in the past nine years of Conservative government rule.
  • Of particular interest to me, of course, were the concluding observations and recommendations related to Canada's treatment of non-citizens, people like Hassan. The committee expressed grave concerns around laws that allow for the mandatory detention of asylum-seekers who arrive by boat, recent cuts to the interim federal health program for asylum-seekers, and indefinite detention of migrants.
  • The committee recommended that Canada ensure that there is proper oversight over CBSA, place time limits on immigration detention, and ensure there are viable alternatives to detention. It also recommended that those held in provincial jails be granted access to treatment centres for mental health issues.
  • These recommendations are an important vindication of the rights of non-citizens, thousands of whom are detained in maximum-security jails every year, including vulnerable migrants such as asylum-seekers, torture survivors and those with serious mental health issues, people like Hassan.
  • However, the UN's strong recommendations will quickly become cold comfort for Hassan's family if Canada does nothing to implement them. Despite the death of at least 11 immigration detainees held in CBSA custody since 2000, Canada has done nothing to end arbitrary detention and cruel treatment of non-citizens held without charge. Now that the UN has made recommendations to end rights violations against immigration detainees, we must press all the major political parties to commit to implementing the recommendations if elected. Renu J. Mandhane is executive director of the international human rights program at the University of Toronto's faculty of law.
Govind Rao

Où vont les soins de longue durée au Québec ? - 0 views

  • WebinarNovember 6, 2014 Le gouvernement a renoncé à l’idée de créer une assurance-autonomie pour financer les soins à domicile des personnes en perte d’autonomie. Alors qu’il s’engage dans une vague de compressions budgétaires, devrait-il attribuer un plus grand rôle au tiers secteur et au secteur privé tout en comptant davantage sur les familles pour assurer les soins aux aînés ? À la suite de la publication de l’étude de l’IRPP La responsabilité des soins aux aînés au Québec : du secteur public au privé de Jean-Pierre Lavoie (avec la collaboration de Nancy Guberman et de Patrik Marier), nous avons réuni un panel pour discuter de cette question.
Govind Rao

CHNET-Works! - Free webinars in Population Health - University of Ottawa Cana... - 0 views

  • Et se terminera : le 06 Nov 11:30 heure de l’est
  • Le gouvernement a renoncé à l’idée de créer une assurance-autonomie pour financer les soins à domicile des personnes en perte d’autonomie. Alors qu’il s’engage dans une vague de compressions budgétaires, devrait-il attribuer un plus grand rôle au tiers secteur et au secteur privé tout en comptant davantage sur les familles pour assurer les soins aux aînés ? À la suite de la publication de l'étude de l'IRPP La responsabilité des soins aux aînés au Québec : du secteur public au privé de Jean-Pierre Lavoie (avec la collaboration de Nancy Guberman et de Patrik Marier) nous avons réuni un panel pour discuter de cette question.
Irene Jansen

Ça urge, car les besoins vont en croissant! | IREC | Institut de recherche en... - 2 views

  • mette en place un ensemble cohérent de services basé sur les valeurs d’accessibilité et de justice sociale
  • La politique des services à domicile doit continuer à relever du secteur public, c’est-à-dire des infirmières et des auxiliaires familiales et sociales des centres de santé et services sociaux (CSSS), tout en se préoccupant d’améliorer les arrangements institutionnels concernant le personnel du tiers secteur ».
  • le développement des services à domicile souffre de lacunes générées par un problème chronique de sous-financement : tendance à la privatisation, insuffisance de l’aide apportée aux proches aidants, partage de responsabilités mal défini concernant le rôle de certains fournisseurs de services, mauvaises conditions de travail des employés du secteur privé et du tiers secteur, listes d’attente décourageantes de plusieurs personnes en besoin urgent de services
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  • la politique libérale sur la vieillesse présentée en mai 2012 ne répond pas aux enjeux réels. Avec seulement quelques centaines de nouvelles places en CHSLD, des investissements minimes dans les services à domicile et la poursuite en douce de la politique de privatisation des services qui, par définition, conduit à une dégradation de la qualité des services pour les moins nantis, nous sommes loin du compte ».  
  • Bien que l’ancien gouvernement libéral ait annoncé des investissements additionnels de 71,6 millions de dollars dans les services à domicile, l’analyse permet aux chercheurs de constater que « le budget additionnel pour les entreprises d’économie sociale en aide domestique (EESAD) au terme de ce plan de cinq ans n’aurait été, dans la réalité, que de 20 millions $ », ont conclu les chercheurs.
Irene Jansen

Le privé en santé coûtera plus cher, soutient Yves Bolduc | Pierre Pelchat | ... - 0 views

  • Permettre aux médecins d'avoir une pratique mixte dans le privé et le public, comme le propose François Legault et la Coalition avenir Québec (CAQ), coûtera plus cher et, en plus, les listes d'attente seront plus longues dans les hôpitaux.
  • Un des problèmes que l'on a au Québec lorsque des médecins pratiquent dans le privé et le public, c'est qu'il se crée des listes d'attente qu'on n'est pas capable de régler.
  • On l'a vu à Montréal en radiologie. Les médecins créent une pénurie dans le public pour pouvoir charger plus cher dans le privé», a-t-il affirmé.
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  • cette pratique mixte, qui n'est permise qu'aux radiologistes
  • le ministre veut que l'assurance maladie couvre les frais des échographies et des endoscopies réalisées dans le privé à l'avenir
Govind Rao

Le CHUM deux fois plus cher à bâtir en PPP - 0 views

  • 17-12-2013
  • MONTRÉAL - La décision de bâtir le CHUM en partenariat public-privé coûtera presque deux fois plus cher aux contribuables québécois, selon un rapport obtenu par TVA Nouvelles. Pour la première fois, un chercheur a évalué quels auraient été les coûts si le gouvernement avait choisi un mode de financement conventionnel, plutôt qu'un PPP.
Govind Rao

Revue médiatique sur le PL 10 modifiant l'organisation et la gouvernance du r... - 0 views

  • Voici un survol de ce qu'on a pu retrouver dans les médias depuis le dépôt par le ministre Barrette du PL 10, avant, pendant et après les auditions de la Commission de la santé et des services sociaux. 1. QUÉBEC PROPOSE UNE RÉFORME MAJEURE DU SYSTÈME DE SANTÉ - Le ministre québécois de la Santé, Gaétan Barrette, dépose son projet de loi de réforme du réseau de la santé et des services sociaux dans lequel il propose tout un virage… 
Irene Jansen

Margaret McGregor presentation slides in french May 2011 - 0 views

  •  
    Un financement similaire appliqué à des établissements publics ou privés, à but lucratif et sans but lucratif, assure-t-il aux résidents ayant le même genre de besoins des soins de même qualité?
Irene Jansen

Liette St-Hilaire presentation May 2011 Montreal in French - 0 views

  •  
    L'importance de prendre dès maintenant les moyens nécessaires pour vieillir en santé afin de vivre chez-soi le plus longtemps possible, le souhait de la majorité des aînés L'attachement au domicile est tel que, selon un sondage CROP-AQESSS 2010, la major
Irene Jansen

Un mégahôpital en PPP tourne au fiasco à Paris - archives - LesAffaires.com - 0 views

  • Cité en exemple au Québec pour jusitifier le recours aux partenariats public-privé (PPP), la construction du Centre hospitalier sud-francilien (CHSF), au sud de Paris, connaît d'importants ratés.
Govind Rao

UN pans Canadian immigration system - Infomart - 0 views

  • Toronto Star Fri Jul 24 2015
  • A UN report has raised the alarm over Canada's lengthy immigration detention and the lack of medical support for inmates with mental health conditions. Those were among the many concerns over the changes made to the immigration and refugee system by Ottawa in recent years that are raised in a country report released by the United Nations Human Rights Committee on Thursday.
  • The State party should refrain from detaining irregular migrants for an indefinite period of time and should ensure that detention is used as a measure of last resort, that a reasonable time limit for detention is set," said the committee, made up of 17 independent international experts. The seven-page report is the result of a review of Canada's human rights conditions, conducted earlier this month to ensure the country's compliance with global agreements on civil and political rights. Renu Mandhane, executive director of the International Human Rights Program at U of T, was among the deputants who presented to the committee in Geneva.
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  • We are, overall, quite pleased that the committee recognized that indefinite detention and the lack of alternatives are serious problems with the system in Canada," Mandhane said in an interview. "It hits all the key points we have raised. The fact that the Canadian government is required to report back within a year on its recommendations speaks to the seriousness of the issue."
  • Canada's immigration detention system has been under the spotlight in recent years, after the deaths of detainees in custody, including Mexican migrant Lucia Vega Jimenez in Vancouver in 2013 and Somali native Abdurahman Ibrahim Hassan, a mentally ill man who died in a Peterborough hospital in June. Last year alone, Canada detained 8,519 people - more than half in Ontario - who violated immigration law. While detainees were held an average of 23 days, 58 individuals had been detained for more than a year, including four who had been in jail for five years and more.
Govind Rao

First Nation takes water case to UN; NATIONAL DIGEST - Infomart - 0 views

  • The Globe and Mail Tue Oct 6 2015
  • A reserve cut off from the mainland and under a boil-water advisory for almost two decades is taking its case to the United Nations. Shoal Lake 40 First Nation, which straddles the ManitobaOntario boundary, became isolated a century ago during construction of an aqueduct that carries water to Winnipeg. The reserve has no all-weather road and has been without clean water for 17 years.
  • A delegation from the reserve is expected to travel to Geneva, Switzerland, in February to make its case to a United Nations committee on economic, social and cultural rights. Chief Erwin Redsky said his delegation will outline "all the human rights violations we suffer daily," including a lack of clean water, no freedom of movement and inadequate health care and education.
Govind Rao

Projet de loi 10 - Appel aux députéEs du PLQ | Coalition Solidarité Santé - 0 views

  • 4 Fév 2015
  • Depuis la fin novembre, la Coalition solidarité santé a rencontré une vingtaine de députés, très majoritairement du PLQ, à leurs bureaux de circonscription pour échanger sur le projet de loi 10 (PL 10) du ministre Barrette modifiant l’organisation et la  gouvernance du réseau de la santé et des services sociaux notamment par l’abolition des agences régionales. Lors de ces rencontres, nous avons pu constater que beaucoup de ces députéEs étaient peu ou pas informés sur le PL 10, sur ses impacts, sur les enjeux sous-tendus et les dangers qu’il entraîne, de même qu’à propos de l’opposition généralisée qu’il a soulevé en commission parlementaire.
  • Depuis le début, bien qu’ayant accepté techniquement le processus démocratique, le ministre Barrette a affirmé en commission parlementaire n’avoir besoin de personne ni de quelques études que ce soit pour savoir ce qu’il faut faire. Malgré le fait que la très grande majorité des composantes du réseau se soient opposées au PL 10, le ministre a fait fi des avis des experts du réseau et s’est entêté à maintenir son projet de loi. En débutant l’étude article par article, il a déposé 160 amendements pratiquement sans lien avec les préoccupations exprimées en commission parlementaire, mais ajoutant beaucoup d’éléments nouveaux, démontrant plutôt que son projet de loi était précipité et mal préparé. Comment un ministre peut-il prétendre posséder la vérité et décider ainsi, seul, à l’encontre de tous les experts, de l’avenir du réseau de santé et de services sociaux?
Govind Rao

IRIS - Blogue - Les hôpitaux américains surclassés par les hôpitaux canadiens - 0 views

  • par Steffie Woolhandler et David Himmelstein, dans la catégorie Santé
  • S’ils étaient mieux gérés, une famille moyenne de quatre personnes économiserait 2000$ par an en frais de santé  Dans bon nombre de pays, les familles endeuillées reçoivent des fleurs et des cartes de condoléances. Aux États-Unis, elles reçoivent un déluge de factures d’hôpital et de formulaires d’assurance à remplir.
Govind Rao

IRIS - Blogue - « La grosse » argent de la santé - 0 views

  • par Guillaume Hébert, dans la catégorie Santé
  • 50% des dépenses du Québec vont à la santé? C’est vrai, si on ferme les yeux sur les angles morts du calcul derrière ce chiffre. Si on faisait preuve d’un peu plus de nuances et d’honnêteté sur les « coûts de la santé », on arriverait à un chiffre qui tourne autour de 33-34%. On s’apercevrait également que comparées à la taille de l’économie québécoise, les dépenses de santé des Québécois-e-s augmentent à un rythme qui n’a rien d’insoutenable. Finalement, on verrait que les dépenses qui augmentent le plus ne sont pas forcément celles qu’on pense.
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