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To: abuelita who wrote (188159)7/8/2022 10:05:10 AM
From: Maple MAGA   Respond to of 218919
 
Hospital 'nightmare' in Kamloops for Quebec patient denied surgery

HOSPITAL 'NIGHTMARE' IN BC

The Canadian Press - Jul 7, 2022 / 6:43 am | Story: 374588



Photo: Patrick B?langer

A Quebec man who fell and broke his jaw, cheekbone and a bone around his left eye while visiting British Columbia says his surgery was cancelled after he was told his home province "won't pay" for the procedure.

Patrick Bélanger, 23, said his experience is a warning for residents of Quebec and all Canadians who take pride in a universal health-care system because doctors in other provinces could deny treatment to Quebecers by maintaining they won't be compensated.

Bélanger's ordeal began when he and his girlfriend were walking along a trail in the resort town of Sun Peaks on the evening of June 10. He tripped and stumbled backwards in the dark, hitting his face on a boulder.

He was taken by ambulance to Royal Inland Hospital in Kamloops just before midnight and was told he needed surgery for a "broken face." But a surgeon was not available on Saturday, so he was discharged with a prescription for the opioid-containing drug Percocet to manage his pain, Bélanger said.

The following morning, he and his girlfriend, Beth Cooper, returned to the hospital for surgery. But Bélanger said that just as he was being prepared for the operating room, the surgeon cancelled the procedure.

"He said that the hospital would not let him do the surgery because I was from Quebec," Bélanger said, adding he'd presented his provincial health card when he arrived at Royal Inland.

"I was kind of in shock. As I thought about it more, I thought that doesn't make sense. Normally, you'd do the surgery and figure out billing afterwards, or at least I thought that's what was going to happen," he said.

"I was pretty scared. I was still pretty out of it because I was in quite a bit of pain and on pain medications. And I was calling my parents trying to figure out what to do."

Bélanger said he offered to pay for the surgery through his family's private insurance, but the surgeon rejected that option, saying he first needed to speak with a hospital administrator who was not available on the weekend.

"When he told me that the surgery couldn't be done today, he suggested that I fly back to Quebec City to go get the surgery done," Bélanger said.

He was given a window of 10 days before his facial bones would start to fuse.

"We thought it was just completely absurd that I, with a broken face, was to take a commercial airline to go get a surgery done in my own country."

Bélanger's father and mother arrived in Kamloops later that week and tried unsuccessfully to speak with an administrator at the Interior Health authority about the best options for their son, Richard Bélanger said.

"We were baffled about his basic rights as a Canadian," he said, calling his son's experience a "nightmare."

Richard Bélanger said he went to the surgeon's private clinic to provide information on the family's insurance plan as well his credit card in case the surgery could be done there. But staff told him the serious facial fractures his son suffered meant the surgery had to be performed in a hospital, he added.

Four days of anguish since the surgery was cancelled had Bélanger managing "excruciating pain" with prescription opioids and morphine before his case was passed on to another surgeon, he said.

"I would wake up in the middle of the night crying and screaming in pain."

The second doctor said he needed quick intervention, and the surgery was done seven days after he fell, said Bélanger, an economics student at Bishop's University in Sherbrooke, Que.

His family said they are still puzzled about why the original surgeon did not do the surgery.

"It's gross incompetence on the part of the hospital and a failure on the part of the Canadian health-care system," said Bélanger's mother, Martha Ferris.

Both Patrick and Richard Bélanger say the end result was "discrimination" against a patient from Quebec, which pays hospital costs but does not participate in a reciprocal billing agreement for physician fees involving all other provinces and territories.

Doctors of BC, an association representing physicians, said an agreement allows its members to bill their own provincial Medical Services Plan for patients from outside the province and the plan is then reimbursed by the patients' home jurisdiction.

"The doctors get paid as if the patient is a B.C. resident," it said in a written statement.

"When a Quebec resident needs medical care in B.C., doctors are not able to bill MSP for it and get paid," the association said.

However, physicians providing services to Quebecers can either bill that province or bill the patient, who would seek reimbursement from their government.

The Health Department in Quebec said doctors elsewhere are paid at rates as if the patient received the same treatment in their home province. Patients must pay any difference in cost and could apply to have the money reimbursed through private insurance, if they have it, the department said in a written response.

The department recommended Quebecers get private insurance before travelling outside the province.

Richard Bélanger said the family's private insurance company refused to pay any costs after the first surgeon wrote in his son's medical chart that he could return to Quebec and have the surgery there within 10 days.

The insurer had also initially refused to pay costs when an emergency room doctor noted possible intoxication in his son's chart, Bélanger said. But that was later ruled out when the family asked why a test to determine the presence of any substances, including alcohol, was not done, he added.

Dr. Peter Stefanuto, the original surgeon, declined requests for an interview.

He said in an email that he could not speak about any specific case but that "care is provided to all patients regardless of their province or country of origin on an emergency basis."

Issues involving compensation for services would be best addressed through the B.C. and Quebec governments, Stefanuto added.

Dr. Bob Rishiraj, who ended up doing the operation, said he was not concerned about any "politics" surrounding billing, especially after learning the patient had been taking opioids and methadone for days, and a longer wait for surgery carried the risk of infection.

"It became very concerning for me that he was using a lot of morphine and his pain was not well controlled. If we don't do it, we have a problem of possibly having somebody with narcotics abuse potential down the road," he said.

"I think a patient is a patient and it doesn't matter if they're from Quebec or Ontario or wherever. I think they should just be treated," Rishiraj said.

The risk of a patient who is billed not paying a physician is low, and cost did not appear to be an issue for Bélanger's family, he said.

Interior Health did not respond to a request for an interview but said in an email that physicians are not employees of the health authority.

Ferris said the family paid Rishiraj $2,563 and will apply for reimbursement from Quebec.

The irony is that the family has used its private health insurance while travelling outside the country but did not expect they would have to rely on it in Canada, she said.

"It's mind-blowing to me, kind of shocking."

British Columbia's Health Ministry did not respond to questions about patients from Quebec being denied surgery.

Dr. Katharine Smart, president of the Canadian Medical Association, said Canada's universal health-care system is intended to provide care to all Canadian citizens and permanent residents.

"We strongly encourage provincial and territorial governments to work together to ensure Canadians receive the care they need, when and where they need it, and the federal government to enforce the principles of the Canada Health Act uniformly across the country," she said in a written statement.

Health Canada said the reciprocal billing agreements are administrative arrangements between provinces and territories to help facilitate the portability criterion of the act while people are temporarily away in another part of the country and need care.

“These agreements are voluntary and not a requirement of the Canada Health Act,” it said in a written response.

Bélanger, who had trouble speaking because his jaw was wired shut for six weeks following surgery, said the emotional toll he has suffered is "incalculable," on top of the physical pain, which still includes migraines.

Damien Contandriopoulos, a University of Victoria nursing professor and health policy researcher, said that regardless of Quebec's billing scheme, the province pays, on average, higher physician rates than other jurisdictions for the same care, a reversal from its practice years ago.

It's common for thousands of patients from Quebec to get care from family doctors in Ontario border towns and for their province to reimburse the cost, he said, adding he is "shocked" that services would be denied to a patient based on billing issues.

However, doctors in British Columbia, where relatively few Quebecers get care, may be deterred from seeking information on rates paid by that province because they're listed on about 3,000 pages in some complicated categories, and in French, said Contandriopoulos, a former resident of Quebec.

In Bélanger's case, the surgeon could have contacted his insurance company's 24-7 phone line to get information from a representative, rather than saying administrators were not available on the weekend, Contandriopoulos said.

He called Bélanger's weeklong wait for surgery "insane."



To: abuelita who wrote (188159)8/8/2022 10:01:30 AM
From: TobagoJack5 Recommendations

Recommended By
ggersh
kingfisher
marcher
Pogeu Mahone
SirWalterRalegh

  Respond to of 218919
 
Re <<Jack>>

The coconut shall leave home for college in a few days, and nearly time to devote 95% effort to the Jack :0)

In no particular order in case you forgot the Jack :0)

A few days from starting 6th Grade.

He doesn’t do ballet, is passable early-stage w/ piano



okay w/ computers


Fairly active but okay studious, would say balanced








okay with jumping, kicking, smashing, etc, and okay with smiling














































To: abuelita who wrote (188159)11/8/2022 10:00:18 PM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

Recommended By
Mick Mørmøny
Winfastorlose

  Respond to of 218919
 



To: abuelita who wrote (188159)11/9/2022 8:30:45 AM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

Recommended By
Mick Mørmøny
Pogeu Mahone

  Respond to of 218919
 
Rex Murphy: How Chrystia Freeland could save everyone's Disney+ subscription

Stop trying to suppress oil and gas development and their could be streaming aplenty for everyone

Nov 07, 2022



Canada's Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance Chrystia Freeland arrives to a news conference about the fall economic statement in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada November 3, 2022.

Bit of a kind of diary today.

Don’t mind the jumpy sentences.

Good times can’t last forever — we all knew that.

Like millions of other Canadians, had to bite the bullet.

Yup. Very melancholy. Choices in a hard time must be made.

Cancelled the Disney+. Worse than saying “Goodbye” to an old friend

And how shall my fellow Canadians who faced this same nerve-burning choice get
through a cruel winter? Without a streaming of Desperate Housewives? How, I ask, how?

Gruesome times. The dirty Thirties. Back to hard tack* and molasses.

But what are you going to do?

Desperate times. Desperate remedies.

Still. Held on to The New Yorker (online) subscription. Long cold nights ahead, and we’re all going to need
something really smug to keep us warm. The New Yorker is better than an alpaca blanket.

We could, you know, be in better shape though. At least better than we are now.

Allow me to indulge in this little scenario, a kind of dream of what things might have been.

Start: There’s this stuff we have a lot of and half the world hasn’t got. Or, especially now, can’t get a hold of.

And if we had been looking ahead these last — I don’t know, say seven years — if we had given it a push, hauled down all the embargoes and regulations and got over this mad green fetish, built a pipeline or eight, we, Canada would be in the catbrid’s seat right now.

What a different conversation we’d be having with the world. Sample:

“Hi Germany?” Need a bit of oil and gas? Hey, Canada here, we have bucket-loads of the stuff. Be getting a great price for it too.

And giving a well-deserved economic finger to Mr. “I’ll-invade-wherever-I-want V. Putin” at the same time.

“Hey Britain.” Not to worry. We got your back. Winter’s coming and we know you’re worried, but you’ve been good friends for a long while. The containers are even now leaving Halifax Harbour – the pipeline all the way from Alberta goes right to the port – great thing we built it in 2015. No rationing for you guys as long as Canada – democratic, environmentally sensitive, and reliable – is here to help. You want energy. We’ve got energy.

“Hey Ukraine — see you’re in a spot” — Putin thought he could scare Europe by holding back on the energy front. Shut down the pipelines.

What a tool!

We’ve got oil and gas coming out of the seams. His “embargo” is a joke as long as Canadian oil and gas is in full supply, has nationwide — east and west, and north, south — pipelines. Bully Putin has no leverage, whatsoever.

Need some fuel? Give us a call.

Even better. Now out West in Alberta and Saskatchewan — the latter one of the great potash, thereby fertilizer-producing jurisdictions in the the whole wide world — have two conservative premiers, even more intent on making sure their natural resources work for the good of the Canadian economy, and the health of the industrial world, things can only get better.

I can’t see things slowing down on this front.

Now it is possible that Greenpeace or the Suzuki Foundation (not the car manufacturer let it be clear) or the tattered tag-ends of Canada’s dwarfish Green party (for they are all very silly people) might send out some of their more idle camp followers to glue themselves to a Tom Thompson painting, (The Jack Pine) or even drape some tiresome banner on the CN Tower (to be honest — that’s been done) and get special coverage on something called Quirks and Quarks (the name is half right) — but it’s all too late.

As you’ve all heard: “Canada is back.”
Canada has a magnificent resource. It has had the good sense to develop it. And the world, yes the whole world, is so grateful that we have lowered the temperature in a time of war and anxiety. And Canadian citizens are so grateful that the revenues that have resulted have left them so much stronger in an otherwise anxious time. Three Cheers for Alberta and energy! Three cheers for Saskatchewan and potash!





We certainly will not be facing an “energy shortage.” And all is so because we had a government of such sound common sense, such courage to stare down foolish net-zero follies, and put the welfare of our own country first.

Did you know that even Justin Trudeau is not attending the current green bacchanalia? Wow. There’s a turnaround. That’s like John the Baptist boycotting the Jordan River as the dove was descending!

But here’s the biggest jackpot, here’s — may I call it the icing on the cake? — yes I may. Because oil and gas have made Canadians as prosperous as we are, the great shield against chill economic winds — are you ready, everybody? — you get to keep your Disney+ subscription.

There you are Chrystia.

No need to tighten the domestic entertainment belt. And enough room left over to subscribe to The New Yorker. (Online, only, of course. There is no need to be wasteful.)

And — not to put too fine a point on it, you can still stay in great London Hotels. And refuse to say who got the high-class butler-served classy-marble-tiled bathroom suite. Which is purely a side-benefit to a functioning economy.

Win-win, I say. So ends the fantasy. End.

Well, we’re allowed to dream.



To: abuelita who wrote (188159)12/3/2022 10:43:59 PM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Mick Mørmøny

  Respond to of 218919
 
This week:
- For the first time in history, the Bank of Canada has lost money. Now taxpayers will have to pick up the bill.
- #JustinFlation will cost each Canadian $3500.
- The Liberals continue to attack law-abiding gun owners.