CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne
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For nearly a century residents of Prince Edward Island were served by three physicians known collectively to the community as Dr. Jenkins. Father John, son Stephen and grandson Jack, each of whom won acclaim for service to medicine, war service and political work, practised a total of 89 years, from 1856 to 1945. This article looks back at a distinguished family's career in medicine.
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In 1955, the Eye Bank of Canada introduced Canadians to the idea of postmortem tissue donation. The long-time administrator of the bank's Ontario Division, Anne Wolf, recalls the organization's early days and how the management of donated corneas became a family affair.
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The promise of a universal, comprehensive, publicly funded system of medical care that was the foundation of the Medical Care Act passed in 1966 is no longer possible. Massive government debt, increasing health care costs, a growing and aging population and advances in technology have challenged the system, which can no longer meet the expectations of the public or of the health care professions. A parallel, private system, funded by a not-for-profit, regulated system of insurance coverage affordable for all wage-earners, would relieve the overstressed public system without decreasing the quality of care in that system. ⋯ Wealthy Canadians can already buy medical care in the United States, where they spend $1 billion each year, an amount that represents a loss to Canada of 10,000 health care jobs. Parallel-system schemes in other countries have proven that people are driven to a private system by dissatisfaction with the quality of service, which is already suffering in Canada. Denial of choice is unacceptable to many people, particularly since the terms and conditions under which Canadians originally decided to forgo choice in medical care no longer apply.
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Two University of Toronto teaching hospitals have established chairs in women's health. Dr. ⋯ Dr. Anna Day, physician-in-chief at Women's College Hospital, which established chairs in breast cancer and women's health research, hopes that a way will be found to coordinate women's health programs to avoid duplication of research efforts.
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Drug companies appear to have been listening when researchers began complaining about their lack of participation in the MRC/PMAC Health Program, for the 30-month-old project appears to have taken on new life. It is designed to increase collaboration between university and pharmaceutical industry researchers by directing more of the industry's growing investment in Canada through the MRC's peer-review process. By mid-May, program commitments stood at $60 million.