We would like to catch up with Ontario economically, but like us, in health, it risks becoming a world heritage of the disabled, as the needs for cataract operations, hip and knee replacements are so pressing. No wonder that here too the private sector wants to push the wheel, but what about our Ministry of Health (MS)?
Another major crisis in the emergency room has just been avoided thanks to Minister Dubé who, despite his efforts, found himself at the gates of hell, just like his predecessors. How to explain such political vulnerability when we have a super MS and a vast infrastructure stuffed with civil servants, many of whom are in the business and should have been at the front since the beginning of the crisis?
As China deconfines at high speed, we still have more than 2,000 health workers on sick leave. After decades of perennial crises, is it normal that we still have so much recourse to hospital emergencies, when the first lines could be more efficient and less costly for the State? What are we waiting for to relieve the MS of paralyzing systemic rigor and monster paperwork, and free up staff for emergencies? […]
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