
CANADA New " BILL 2 " Health
care will never be the same!!!
I think this might interest you!
Free...At Last!
By Eugene Fox
On December 21, 2000 history was quietly made in the Legislature of the
Province of Ontario, Canada. A law was passed that is significant to us
all, no matter
where we live. It is "Bill 2, An Act to amend the Medicine Act, 1991." It
is a rarity for private member's bills (not sponsored by the Government) to pass.
This one passed unanimously. Monte Kwinter, Liberal MPP, the bill's author, comments, "(it
is) sublime in its wording but profound in its impact." Very true, health
care
will never be the same!
This is the official explanation
of the Act: "The Bill ensures that physicians who provide non-traditional
therapies or alternative forms of medicine are not found guilty of professional
misconduct or incompetence unless there is evidence that proves that
the therapy poses a greater risk to a patient's health than the traditional
or prevailing practice."
Ontario doctors are now unshackled.
They can now advocate nutraceuticals and other alternatives for their
patients without fear of reprisal. This is a new day!
Mr.
Kwinter explains, "(the
bill has) only has 68 words, and it says: 'A member (of the College of
Physicians and Surgeons) shall not be found guilty of professional misconduct
or of incompetence under section 51 or 52 of the Health Professions Procedural
Code solely on the basis that the member practices a therapy that is
non-traditional or that departs from the prevailing medical practice
unless there is evidence that proves that the therapy poses a greater
risk to a patient's health than the traditional or prevailing practice.'
The bondage has been broken!
As long as an Ontario doctor advocates nutraceuticals
(which are completely safe), now there is complete freedom to do so.
Before, there was the threat of being charged with professional misconduct
and/or incompetence, of all things, even though doctors had been forced
to prescribe toxic, dangerous pharmaceuticals! This is a great day for
freedom.
To Mr. Kwinter's credit, this was the third time he presented
the bill. He first introduced it on May 8, 1997, and again on October
29, 1998. He explains that much of the difficulty in getting the bill
passed arose from the resistance of the Ontario College of Physicians
and Surgeons, which oversees medical practice in Ontario. In the Colleges'
own words, "Executive agreed that while the college has already
made clear its opposition to the bill, we will prepare to speak out strongly
against it again should it be called before the committee for further
consideration." However,
to their credit, the College is now seeing complementary medicine in
a new light, and is making changes accordingly. Mr. Kwinter's terse comment
is that the College's opposition to the bill had "fallen silent." About
time!
Mr. Kwinter acknowledged with obvious gratitude that the United
States has given leadership to the world regarding complementary medicine: "The
United States Congress passed legislation that's going to change the
face of health (care) in that country forever." He points to the
recently established Center of Alternative Medicine at the National Institutes
of Health with its significant funding as "a very significant step
forward." He might have added that health care in Ontario will never
be the same.
Drawing further on the American scene, he offered this:
* Almost two-thirds
of traditional US medical schools now teach alternative therapies
* Millions
of Americans visit alternative practitioners each year, and educators
have no choice but to respond to this relentless challenge to evolve.
A survey of 117 medical schools found that 75 of them now include alternative
medicine.
Mr. Kwinter revealed his passion
for this when he stated, "We are convinced that the sort of protection
for Ontario physicians provided by this bill is urgently needed to ensure
that all Ontarians receive safe, beneficial and cost-effectivetreatment." What
a signal to providers of nutraceuticals!
Here are interesting comments
made by other legislators in their discussion of Bill 2:
* In Europe,
St John's wort, a botanical used to treat mild to moderate depression,
is outselling Prozac by leaps and bounds.
* Hamilton's McMaster University
has proposed a $100-million center for complementary medicine...amalgamating
research into western and eastern treatments while investigating the
roles that lifestyle and diet play in keeping Canadians healthy.
* Nearly
50% of Canadians are using some form of alternative therapy, so it's
important to better understand how it works and its place in the health
care field.
* Angus Reid, a Canadian polling company, surveyed Canadians'
attitudes towards alternative medicine. They found that the majority
(66%) feels that the government should be advocating the use of alternative
medicine and practices in order to potentially reduce the costs to the
health care system.
* A letter from the president of the Ontario Society
of Physicians for Complementary Medicine, Dr. Linda Rapson, was read
into to record: "Your bill comes at a time when there is even more
urgent need to improve the knowledge and experience of the medical profession
in the area of non-traditional medicine. The public will be best served
by a medical profession that can take a careful, objective look at various
forms of alternative' medicine, to best advise our patients. Our long-range
goal should be to critically evaluate complementary therapies in the
same way we are assessing traditional medicine, in order to provide the
safest, most cost-effective and beneficial treatments...We are convinced
that the sort of protection for Ontario physicians provided by this bill
is urgently needed to ensure that all Ontarians receive safe, beneficial
and cost-effective treatment."
* The Ontario Minister of Health
wrote in a letter to a constituent, "I want to assure you that this
government supports freedom of choice for patients..."
* The citizens
of Ontario and of Canada are far ahead of the government... (which ought
to )provide doctors with the freedom of choice and, more importantly,
patients the freedom of choice to take a hand in the treatment they receive...this
is complementary...effective, safe and, in all cases, part of what the
population seems to want.
* The public is ahead of us and it's time to
move on...it really is time to move on... Statistics Canada says that
3.3 million Canadians see non traditional practitioners, and the number
is growing.
* We've been talking for some time now in this House...about
new, integrated medical systems, the way we deal with all forms and types
of medicine, not only after the fact when we're sick, but preventive
medicine.
* ...the entire health professions legislation is under review
as we speak.
* I think all of us who use alternative medicine would like
to know there are more regulatory rules in place so that when we buy
some of these alternative medicines we feel we're protected, that what
it says on the label is actually in that bottle.
* It's important that
physicians recognize they have a responsibility to respond to their patients.
Patients come into physicians' offices and ask about alternative therapies.
They need to have answers from their physicians. It's a concern that
so many Ontarians are using alternative therapies, seeking out alternative
therapies, using alternative medicine products, and are hesitant to speak
to their physicians about them because they believe the physician would
disapprove or would not even be legally able to make any recommendations
regarding these alternative medicines because they're not within their
defined scope of practice now. (Bill 2) essentially allows physicians
to accept a responsibility to respond to patients' interest in alternative
therapies. This bill is really just one step towards the regulation of
alternative therapies that are increasingly used by Ontarians.
* ...the
greatest danger, the greatest potential harm to consumers of health care,
is to ignore the issues (of complementary medicine) altogether or to
avoid dealing with them.
* a lot of the non-traditional treatments may
be less costly than the treatments that we have in our traditional health
care system.
* We have seen that almost 70% of Canadians feel that this
could be supported and paid for by the government...this non-traditional
medicine, if you want to call it that, can be introduced, and maybe at
far less cost than traditional medicine.
Author's Comments
A great new day is dawning for health care around the world. What is now provided
for Ontario's nearly 11 million people is similar to what is taking place in
many other places. Physicians are now free to prescribe what is best for their
patients. No longer do they have to fear prosecution for doing good. This is
revolutionary.
Linked with this is the freedom being given to the people. They
are free to take charge of our own health, guided by informed, caring doctors.This
radical change is driven by the effectiveness of alternatives and their considerably
lower cost. Bill 2 is the salvation of the health care system.
Thanks to this
legislation Ontario's entire health care system is now free to undergo change.
Wellness can displace sickness care. Nutraceuticals can replace pharmaceuticals
(except in cases of trauma. Drugs will always be appropriate for that.) This
can only result in greatly increased health for Ontarians and enormous savings
for the economy. Can other jurisdictions be far behind?
It is interesting to
see legislators' serious interest in having the Ontario government fund alternatives.
This makes sense. Health care is set to cripple entire economies. Paul Zane
Pilser. the highly recognized American economist, forecasts wellness to become
a trillion dollar industry in the United States by 2010. The rest of the western
world will no doubt continue to follow the American lead.
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