14 ordspråk av Ruth Collins
Ruth Collins
[Should such change take place,] patients would no longer have to appeal to their province for approval to leave the province for specialized health care, ... It would automatically be arranged by the health care system.
|
Canada's health-care professionals remain frozen out of the upcoming meeting of federal, provincial leaders in 10 days because our leaders want to change the channel and move on from health.
|
Canadians have been left wondering whatever happened to the promise shown by the health plan,
|
Oh, my God, it's terrible. She was very generous and charitable, a very lovely person.
|
Some provinces have been doing more, but others really have not been placing a major emphasis on this until quite recently, ... Patients deserve better ... It's time we get action.
|
These data paint a pretty clear picture for our leaders, ... My message to Canadians, and to our political leaders: the clock is ticking, and it is ticking ominously.
|
They have good bargains here. My husband likes the meat, the bologna. He likes to buy his bologna here and I just hate to see them close.
|
They signed the first ministers accord. It's their deal. It's their promise to Canadians. They're letting Canadians down,
|
Today, 12 months later, Canadians must assume it was nothing but words in the air,
|
We feel the wait time issue has to be dealt with urgently, partly because of the resource shortage in different areas and partly because of the suffering of patients,
|
We hope the Guide will serve not only as a reference during times of illness but also as a source of ongoing advice that helps everyone maintain good health throughout their lives,
|
We're producing the medically acceptable benchmarks. So we're doing everything we can. We're willing to work with governments at any level to produce access for patients. What are the governments doing?
|
We've put together the medically acceptable waiting times, the maximum time patients should be waiting. So we've done the work for them,
|
What they're arguing about right now is whether there's enough evidence. There's never enough evidence. There's never certainty in medicine.
|