652 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
652 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
REGULATIONONTARIOHEALTHPROFESSIONHOLISTICLAWSMEDICINE
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REGULATION OF ONTARIO'S HEALTH PROFESSION
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AN EXAMINATION AND CRITIQUE OF THE RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE HEALTH
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PROFESSIONS LEGISLATION REVIEW
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Striking a New Balance: A Blueprint for the Regulation of
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Ontario's Health Professions.
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By The Association of Concerned Citizens for Preventive Medicine.
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February 1989.
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415-B McArthur Avenue, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. K1K 1G5
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(613) 749-1002
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Sections of the Health Professions Legislation Review, which are
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quotations from the recommendations Document, precede the
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Association of Concerned Citizens for Preventive Medicine's
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comment.
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The document under consideration includes an "Executive Summary".
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an "Overview of Recommendations". and "The Health Professions
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Procedural Code" which is heavily annotated. There are also the
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draft Acts for each profession. The following examination and
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critique by the Association of Concerned Citizens for Preventive
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Medicine looks at all of these parts in some degree, but is
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mainly concerned with the Procedural Code which lays down the
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rules for all the professions (and, of course, for every citizen
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who is not a "health professional").
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Page 9:
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The criteria addressed four basic issues.
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COMMENT:
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The Report makes its own summary, but does not list the criteria
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as originally presented.
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It cannot be repeated too often that the criteria were
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arbitrarily developed by the Review for its own purposes. They
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are employed as if they have the force of law whereas they are,
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in fact, just guidelines.
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Page 10:
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... all 24 professions met the criteria for self-regulation.
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COMMENT:
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The statement does not accord with the facts. The authors of the
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Report must know that the statement made is untrue and therefore
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we are entitled to conclude that the statement is self-serving
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and is intended to deceive the reader. Without going further than
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considering the original requirement that the profession must
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have a Canadian-based educational establishment, we find that
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several of the select and elect few do not qualify. These are the
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midwives, osteopaths and podiatrists.
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The fact that the midwives did not meet the criteria was early
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recognized and acknowledged, but political expediency led to the
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formation of a task force to work out a way of fitting them in.
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To say that they met the criteria at the time is to deliberately
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and knowingly utter a falsehood.
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The podiatrists did not have and do not have a school in Canada.
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The osteopaths do not have a school in Canada. Their remnants are
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to be swept into the arms of the College of Physicians and
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Surgeons of Ontario. who have no expertise in osteopathic
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medicine and have for decades fought for the extinction of
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osteopathy. They will probably attain that objective by the back-
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door method of ensuring that no further osteopaths are admitted
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to practice.
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The naturopaths met all the criteria despite the claims of the
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Review that they did not. There are clear medico-political
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motives operating here. It is noteworthy that all the professions
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to be regulated, except two, make no threat to the "medical
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establishment". They are supportive of it. The two exceptions are
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the midwives and the chiropractors. In both theses cases two
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factors operated. First, they both have powerful lobbies and so
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we again see political expediency at work. Second, they are both
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having their work and development restricted by the laws under
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which they will operate.
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Page 108 (Quotation is from Review's note on this page)
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27.01
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This is the key provision for enforcement of the licensed act
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model... (previously it) stated the rationale of licensing acts
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in terms of the potential for harm. These words have now been
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deleted. They are unnecessary and could conceivably cause
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confusion... The Review believes that prosecutorial discretion
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will be exercised in such a way that persons committing trivial,
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unintentional breaches will not be prosecuted.
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27.01
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No person shall perform any of the following licensed acts in the
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course of providing, purporting to provide or offering to provide
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human health care services.
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(1) Diagnosis;
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(2) Performing procedures on tissue beyond the dermis, beyond the
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surface of the mucous membranes and in or beyond the surface of
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the cornea of the eye;
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(3) Setting and casting of fractures and dislocations of bones
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and joints;
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(4) Moving the joints of the spine beyond an individual's usual
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physiological range of motion using a high-velocity, low-
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amplitude thrust;
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(5) Administering substances by injection or inhalation;
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(6) Performing invasive instrumentation, including manual and
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digital instrumentation,
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(a) beyond the external auditory canal;
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(b) beyond the nares;
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(c) beyond the larynx;
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(d) beyond the urinary meatus;
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(e) beyond the labia majora;
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(f) beyond the anal verge;
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(g) into artificial stoma;
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(7) Ordering the application of non-ionizing radiation and other
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potentially harmful forms of energy as specified by regulation ;
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(8) Prescribing, dispensing, selling or compounding drugs, or
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supervising the part of a pharmacy in which drugs are kept;
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(9) Prescribing or dispensing ophthalmic appliances;
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(10) Prescribing personal hearing aids;
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(11) Fitting and dispensing fixed and removable prostheses and
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dental appliances for the oral-facial complex:
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(12) Managing labour and conducting deliveries; and
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(13) Allergy challenge testing provoking significant allergic
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response, unless,
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(a) the person is a member of a regulated health profession
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listed in Schedule A and is specifically authorized by a valid
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certificate of registration issued by the College of the health
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profession to perform the licensed act, provided that the act is
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a license act of the health profession of which the person is a
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member; or
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(b) the performance of the licensed act has been delegated
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pursuant to section 27.03 to the person by a person described in
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paragraph (a).
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(c) deleted.
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27.01A
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In this section
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(a) "dental appliance" means any device fabricated for use in or
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about the mouth for the purpose of replacing some or all of the
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teeth or tooth structure, or realigning, re-positioning or
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stabilizing teeth or hard or soft tissue of the oral-facial
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complex, or protecting teeth from abnormal function;
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(b) "diagnosis" means the communication to a patient or his or
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her representative of a conclusion as to the cause or
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identification of a disease, disorder or dysfunction;
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(c) "drug" means any substance or preparation containing any
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substances,
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(i) manufactured, sold or represented for use in,
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1. the diagnosis,treatment, mitigation or prevention of
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a disease, disorder, abnormal physical or mental state or the
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symptoms thereof, in humans, animals or fowl, or
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2. restoring, correcting or modifying function in
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humans, animals or fowl.
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(ii) referred to in Schedule D,
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(iii) listed in a publication named by the regulations, or
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(iv) named in the regulations,
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but does not include,
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(v) any substance or preparation referred to in subclause
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(i), (ii) or (iii) manufactured, offered for sale or sold as, or
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as part of, a food, drink or cosmetic,
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(vi) any proprietary medicine as defined from time to time
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by the regulation made under the Food and Drugs Act (Canada) that
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does not contain any substance or preparation containing any
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substance referred to in Schedule D,
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(vii) a substance or preparation named in Schedule C;
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(d) :ophthalmic appliance" means lenses, spectacles, eye glasses,
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subnormal vision devices, contact lenses or appurtenances thereto
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for the aid, correction or relief of visual or ocular anomalies
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of the eye;
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(e) "personal hearing aid" means a personal amplification device
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prescribed for an individual hearing impaired person, consisting
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of a built in microphone, amplifier, receiver and individual
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amplifying system, with capability for specification of gain,
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frequency response and output levels.
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27.02
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A person or corporation who contravenes section 27.01 is guilty
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of an offence and on conviction is liable to a fine of not more
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than $25,000 or the imprisonment for a term of not more than six
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months, or to both.
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27.04
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(1) No person shall treat, offer to treat, or advise in respect
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of any human health condition in circumstances in which the
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treatment, offer of treatment or advice, or an omission there
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from, had resulted in harm or may result in a risk of harm.
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(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who is a member of
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a regulated health profession listed in Schedule A where the
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treatment, offer of treatment or advice is part of the practice
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of the profession of which the person is a member.
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(3) In subsection (1), "harm" includes
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(a) any or increased physical or mental disease, disorder,
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dysfunction, injury or pain: and
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(b) death or earlier death.
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27.05
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A person who contravenes section 27.04 is guilty of an offence
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and on conviction is liable to a fine of not more than $25,000 or
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to imprisonment for a term of not more than two years, or to
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both.
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COMMENT:
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one must agree unhesitatingly with the Review in regarding
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section 27.01 as a key provision in this proposed legislation.
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In an endeavour to erect a fence which would keep out everybody,
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the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (the COPS)
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originally proposed for their Medicine Act some very wide ranging
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licensed acts. They wanted, for instance, to have "the
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differential diagnosis, diagnosis, assessment, or evaluation of
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amy human health condition". They did not get that, but the
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Review team has done a good job for them. They have used the
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simple word diagnosis, leaving that undefined in its place. BUT,
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the pay-off comes in the next section which has not only a
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similar effect, but goes further. (See 27.01A above.)
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If there is any loophole left by means of which anyone could
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carry on a therapy practice, although that person could make an
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examination of the patient, he or she would not be able to
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communicate to the patient what conclusion had been reached as to
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the condition, etc. Obviously, the patient wants to know what the
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diagnostic report is, and also what are the chances of recovery
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using the techniques offered. It is apparent that it would not be
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possible to carry on a practice in any realistic manner.
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However, when we examine the separate Acts for the professions,
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we find that they contain reference to assessment, and they carry
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a definition of "assessment" which is identical in each case> We
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find this in the Chiropody Act, the Chiropractic Act, the
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Dietetics Act, the Massage Therapy Act, the Medicine Act, the
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Physiotherapy Act to mention those which might be of interest to
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the reader. In each case a section sets out the scope of the
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assessment and the practice and, when appropriate, the licensed
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acts.
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In each case, also, a section states: "When in any proceeding an
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issue arises as to the interpretation of (those sections), the
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Court may have regard to the expert evidence adduced by the
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parties with respect thereto."
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Not all professions have licensed acts. Although they may make
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assessments, the dietitians and the massage therapists do not
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have licensed acts. The physiotherapists are licensed to perform
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the high-velocity, low amplitude act. This is evidently part of
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the price paid for "respectability" by the chiropractors that
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they have to hand over a share in the key part of their work. It
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may be inferred from the fact that the massage therapy and
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dietetic Acts do not license any part of the scope of practice
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that it would be in order for an unlicensed person to perform
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those acts. This is not necessarily so, as will be discussed
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later.
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Furthermore, regard this definition of "assessment":
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"Assessment" means the evaluation of a patient's physical or
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mental state in order to determine whether a treatment within the
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health professional's scope of practice is appropriate to the
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patient's condition and if so, in what manner it ought to be
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applied or administered, and includes communication of evaluation
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to the patient and his or her representative.
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Please note reference to "the health professional's scope of
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practice". In the document under scrutiny, the Review uses the
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term health professional for the regulated practitioner, whereas
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those who are not regulated are referred to as "health care
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providers". One speculates that it might be held that this
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definition applies only to the regulated practitioner.
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Furthermore, please note "includes communication of
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evaluation..." which would seem to be in possible conflict with
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the ban on communication of a diagnosis unless the practitioner
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is in fact regulated.
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27.01 (2) - This would seem to effectively stop acupuncture.
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27.01 (4) - This is aimed at manipulation other than by persons
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licensed under the Medicine or chiropractic Acts. We do not
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understand the reference to beyond the individual's normal
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physiological range. The high-velocity, low-amplitude thrust
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refers to the techniques of adjustment which have been in use
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throughout this century, but which are outdated by the techniques
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which use the body's natural forces.
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27.01 (6) - Performing invasive instrumentation, including manual
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and digital instrumentation... We have tried to make sense of
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this, and conclude that it means use of the hands and fingers as
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instruments. This provision will interfere with proper
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examination of the patient, and possibly lead to missed
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diagnosis.
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(d) should be licensed to chiropractors - but is not - to permit
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examination of the prostate.
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(d) effectively prohibits use of enemas and colon therapy, unless
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done by a regulated person whose act includes license to go
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beyond the "anal verge".
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27.01 (7) - Has the potential to ban any or all forms of
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electronic, electrical or radiation technologies. "Potentially
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harmful" is a favourite idea of the Review: it gives such scope
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for finding trouble for people.
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27.01 (8) - Prescribing, dispensing, selling or compounding
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drugs... As any substance used in therapy can be described as a
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drug (ss 27.01A (c) above), this would appear to do away with
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homeopathy, botanical medicine and possibly the selling of
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vitamins and the like except in a pharmacy.
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27.01 (13) - Allergy testing by such means as muscle strength,
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radiesthesia or selective eating might or might not be affected
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by this clause, according to interpretation.
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27.01A - (c) has the potential of causing any substance,
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including foods, to be classified as drugs. The federal Ministry
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of Health has been busy strong-arming manufacturers into having
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their products classified as drugs, and given a Drug
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Identification Number (DIN), and we can look forward to an
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intensification of this process. It is then only a short step to
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making all "drugs" prescription drugs, which is good business for
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medical prescribers and the pharmaceutical industry.
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Clause (c) (V) is probably not worth the paper upon which it is
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printed. What is a food, what is a botanical, what is a food
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supplement? These people are pretty tricky with definitions and
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they have not finished with us yet. What is garlic or
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preparations made from or including garlic? Etc.
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27.04 - There is probably no circumstance in which there is no
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potential for harm, especially when "harm" includes (and note it
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is not limited to) what is included in what the Review wants to
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pass off as a definition.
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27.06
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For the purpose of section 27.01 any act done by a person in the
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course of,
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(a) treating himself or herself; or
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(b) rendering first aid or temporary assistance in an emergency
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without a fee; or
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(c) administering household remedies to members of the person's
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household; or
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(e) engaging in a program of studies to become a member of a
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regulated health profession to which the act or acts are
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licensed, by a student under the supervision or direction of a
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member, provided the program is designated in the regulations
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passed pursuant to the Act governing the health profession as an
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educational program the successful completion of which qualifies
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persons for registration; or
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(e) treating human ailments by the use of prayer or spiritual
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means in the exercise of a religion in accordance with the tenets
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of an established church, if the person is an adherent of the
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religion; or
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(f) engaging in an activity exempted by regulation; or
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(g) deleted.
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shall be deemed not to be a contravention of section 27.02 or
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27.04.
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COMMENT: Here we see some hopeful words buttered with vagueness.
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(b) is reasonable and unobjectionable, and so is
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(d) so far as it goes but you are out of luck if your educational
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establishment is one which does not belong to a regulated
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profession.
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(a) sounds reasonable at first, but consider: it would be
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virtually impossible to make a charge stick as the person is not
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likely to give evidence against himself. "Yes, Your Honour. I
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confess I did examine myself when I had a headache. I asked
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myself a number of questions about my condition and made an
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assessment and arrived at a diagnosis which I passed on from the
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left side of my brain to my right side. I am not quiet sure about
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that, perhaps it was the other way around. First, I prescribed
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myself a couple of aspirins, but I asserted my rights as a
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patient and refused to take them. I reassessed my problem and
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prescribed for myself 20 minutes of meditation, followed by half
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an hour walking by the river." Verdict: Guilty of practising
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without a licence. Sentence; $25,000 fine and two years (less a
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day) in the slammer.
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The most probable scenario is that he would likely find that he
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had difficulty in procuring the substances he wanted
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(homeopathics, botanicals, vitamin/mineral supplements,
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glandulars). Thus, the individual is legally free to diagnose,
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assess and treat himself... if he can find the tools and
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substances which he requires. If this proposed legislation is
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enacted, it is likely that it will become increasingly difficult
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to obtain those items in Ontario. It will become necessary to
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import them from a more enlightened province or from outside
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Canada, as is the case now with some substances banned from sale
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by the federal Ministry of Health but not from individual use.
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(c) is another mystery clause, requiring interpretation. First,
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who qualifies as a member of the person's household? Candidates
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would be spouse and children, in-laws by blood or marriage (how
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many removes do we go?), friends and employees living en famille.
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How does a "common law" relationship fit in here? Second, what is
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a household remedy?
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Supposing that is defined, there is still the problem of
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obtaining these items if all botanicals, homeopathics, vitamins,
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etc. are classified as drugs. Perhaps the legal draughtsmen are
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referring to items which would come under 27.01A (c) (v) and
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(vii), which means choice will be limited to officially approved
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remedies. Which means that the person, even if he/she can find
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out who is member of the household, will still be restricted in
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choice of remedies and thus deprived of free choice. In any
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event, it seems to this writer that the clause should be void of
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uncertainty. It is remarkable how this document will switch from
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such precision of wording as to amount to overkill to vague
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generalities, or insert qualifications, definitions and such at a
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distance.
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(e) is the one instance when a nod is made in the direction of
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freedom of choice. This time, the qualifiers are brought into the
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same clause. What is an established church? In some jurisdictions
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(for example, in the United Kingdom, there is an established
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church, the Church of England; no other church, no matter how
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large or small, is "established") there is a state church which
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is called "established", but in jurisdictions such as Canada
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where there is separation of Church and State here is no
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established church in that sense.
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(f) leaves open the possibility of some professions or techniques
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being let in by a narrow back door, and as they slop in they will
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be handed a stick-on label which says "activity exempted by
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regulation". If an :activity", such as acupuncture, has the
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potential of being allowed by regulation it should either be
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regulated as a full-fledged profession or incorporated into
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another regulated profession.
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27.08
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Subject to the approval of the Lieutenant Governor in Council,
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the Minister may make regulation,
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(a) specifying potentially harmful forms of energy; and
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(b) exempting persons or activities from the prohibitions
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contained in section 27.01(1) through (13), and attaching
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conditions to any such exemption.
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COMMENT: This provides the Minister with the opportunity to make
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regulations which could work for or against alternative and/or
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supplementary medicine. With alternative and/or supplementary
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medicine. With sufficient political clout, this could give
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opportunities for advancement. Without that clout, there would be
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no gains. The opposite also applies, of course.
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27.09
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Where the Minister proposes to make a regulation pursuant to
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section 27.08, the Minister shall refer the proposal to the
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Advisory Council and shall give written notice thereof to the
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Council of every health profession listed in Schedule A, and
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every Council with respect to such proposal within 30 days of the
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notice or within such other period as the Minister may specify.
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COMMENT: This is very neat. Everything is clear, above-board, and
|
||
democratic, It just happens that a big part in deciding who shall
|
||
be let into the privileged club of the regulated will be played
|
||
by those already in. It needs no imagination to be clear who will
|
||
oppose those professions which are perceived as threat to the
|
||
medical monopoly. Pressure should be exerted to see that this
|
||
section is amended, and a more open method used.
|
||
|
||
29.03
|
||
No person shall
|
||
(a) hold himself or herself out as,
|
||
(i) registered by or with a College, or
|
||
(ii) the holder of a certificate of registration issued by a
|
||
College, or
|
||
(iii) a member of a College; or
|
||
(b) use a title protected in any Act governing a health
|
||
profession or group of health professions; or
|
||
(c) take or use any name, title or description implying or
|
||
calculated to lead people to infer that the person is qualified
|
||
or recognized by law as a member of a health profession; unless
|
||
the person is authorized to do so pursuant to an Act governing a
|
||
health profession or group of health professions.
|
||
|
||
COMMENT: The first two parts of this section are unexceptional
|
||
and are the usual thing required to protect a professional title.
|
||
|
||
However, clause (c) is a different matter. The significance of
|
||
this clause cannot be emphasized too strongly. It is another
|
||
example of the Draconian and overwhelmingly all-enveloping nature
|
||
of this proposed legislation. The Review says in a not: "The
|
||
majority of participants said... the additional restriction
|
||
should apply to all health professions. The Review agrees with
|
||
this view... It is important for members of the public to be able
|
||
to distinguish all regulated health professionals."
|
||
|
||
This provision could lead to all kinds of trouble in finding a
|
||
designation for a health care person which did not suggest he or
|
||
she is engaged in a health profession. Of course, the Review
|
||
takes the impertinent, and incorrect, view that only those who
|
||
are regulated are health professionals. All others are relegated
|
||
to being health care providers. Perhaps this demeaning
|
||
description will have to be incorporated into the occupation
|
||
title if a person is to avoid being found guilty and subject to
|
||
another penalty, in this case $5,000 for the first offence, and
|
||
$10,000 thereafter.
|
||
|
||
29.08
|
||
No person, association or corporation, except those Colleges
|
||
designated in Schedule A to this Act, or except as provided by
|
||
another statute, shall pass himself, herself or itself off or
|
||
hold himself, herself or itself out in a manner that implies or
|
||
is calculated to lead people to infer that the person or
|
||
association is governed by this Act or regulates health care
|
||
providers according to law.
|
||
|
||
COMMENT: This is another section which could hold dangers for
|
||
professional associations or schools trying to carry on a
|
||
legitimate function. All trainers, teaching establishments and
|
||
professional associations will need to take professional legal
|
||
advice to ensure that they do not fall into a trap.
|
||
|
||
The penalty: $10,000 for first offence, with a fine of $20,000
|
||
for each subsequent offence.
|
||
|
||
29.10
|
||
Any person who contravenes an order of a Council, Discipline
|
||
Committee or the Health Professions Board restricting or
|
||
prohibiting the disclosure, publication, or broadcasting of
|
||
matters, information or identities, is guilty of an offence and
|
||
on conviction is liable for the first offence to a fine of not
|
||
more than $10,000 and for each subsequent offence to a fine of
|
||
not more than $20,000.
|
||
|
||
COMMENT: The final note of the Review team explains why this
|
||
section was added. It refers to "restricting publication or
|
||
broadcasting of matters disclosed...", but no reference is made
|
||
to confidentiality. This is the note:
|
||
|
||
"New; added at the suggestion of participants who pointed out the
|
||
need for and enforcement power relating to orders restricting
|
||
publication or broadcasting of matters disclosed at Council,
|
||
Discipline Committee and Health Professions Board proceedings."
|
||
|
||
So much for freedom of information, so much for the liberty of
|
||
the individual, so much for freedom of choice.
|
||
|
||
CONCLUSIONS
|
||
The comments in this paper are not, and should not be construed,
|
||
as professional advice. For legal advice, consult a lawyer. This
|
||
work has been prepared as a working paper for the ACCPM as one of
|
||
the tools which it will use in deciding its policy, and possibly
|
||
its strategies and tactics, in relation to these legislative
|
||
proposals. As such, it has attempted to point out matters of the
|
||
greatest importance, and to point at danger signs, whilst trying
|
||
to put the whole matter into the perspective of events connected
|
||
with the health scene.
|
||
|
||
What has been happening in Canada has also been going on in the
|
||
United States, in Europe and elsewhere. Matters such as control
|
||
over foods, supplements and so on, as well as attempts to wipe
|
||
out whole professions, have cropped up around the world and
|
||
continue to do so. This is just one aspect of a wide-spread and
|
||
ongoing struggle between the old ways and the new paradigm.
|
||
|
||
A similar struggle in the State of Washington led to an important
|
||
new law for naturopathic medicine which resulted in their being
|
||
in an improved position, not obliterated. A similar situation
|
||
occurred in South Africa when an attempt was made to wipe out all
|
||
alternative or complementary medicine. A struggle led by the
|
||
Homeopathic and Chiropractic associations resulted some eight
|
||
years ago in a situation where the alternative professions are on
|
||
a parity with the conventional medical profession.
|
||
|
||
It follows that we need to look hard at all that is going on now,
|
||
and find a way to bring the whole of the thinking public into the
|
||
struggle. It is not just the professionals who are in danger of
|
||
losing their livelihoods (that is important to them personally,
|
||
and it is important to those who will be deprived of their
|
||
services) but every citizen will be worse off for losing a bit
|
||
more liberty.
|
||
|
||
Governments and dominant medicine appear to treat alternative
|
||
professionals as some kind of weirdos, of no-account. They seem
|
||
to have overlooked the fact that millions of people, and in ever-
|
||
increasing numbers, are turning to these professionals, and they
|
||
are prepared to put their money into that care, as mostly it is
|
||
not covered by insurance schemes. Those of us who care about
|
||
alternative, complementary and preventive health care and
|
||
teachings should remember that we are not a small isolated group.
|
||
Let us get the public on our side.
|
||
|
||
What are the prospects for the alternative health care
|
||
professions if this legislation goes through? The answer, in two
|
||
words, is NOT GOOD!!
|
||
|
||
The ACCPM deduces from its study of the proposals, and offers for
|
||
the consideration of its readers, the following:
|
||
|
||
Whilst it may not be an offence to diagnose one's self or members
|
||
of one's household (undefined), it will be a close call, and
|
||
effectively every person in this province will be affected, and
|
||
restricted in free choice of health care. If the powers that be
|
||
are allowed to get away with this, the net will tighten. From the
|
||
study of the proposals, we believe that naturopaths,
|
||
nutritionists, homeopaths, herbalists, rolfers, acupuncturists,
|
||
reflexologists, etc. will be wiped off the professional map in
|
||
Ontario. We also believe that mutual support activities in groups
|
||
of patients will be found to be illegal (unless they are all
|
||
related and/or live together!)
|
||
|
||
Furthermore, we believe that multi-level marketing concerns which
|
||
deal in nutrients and supplements will probably be adversely
|
||
affected, as will health food stores. With more and more
|
||
"substances" being declared to be "drugs" it will not be long
|
||
before only the pharmacist will be able to sell/dispense these
|
||
items. For some time there have been rumours of moves to put all
|
||
vitamins on prescription. The time will soon come if this
|
||
legislation goes through, when if you want these items you will
|
||
have to get them for a more enlightened province or from outside
|
||
the country.
|
||
|
||
What will happen to the hundreds of practitioners? Some will
|
||
retire. Some will change to another occupation. All those will
|
||
have sacrificed many years of education and many more years of
|
||
valuable and irreplaceable experience on the altar of medical
|
||
monopoly. Others will relocate to other provinces, to the United
|
||
States or to some other countries where freedom of choice in
|
||
health care still prevails.
|
||
|
||
In the name of defending the public good, they are at it again,
|
||
trying take away our liberty.
|
||
|
||
We have to fight back with care, with cunning, with all the help
|
||
and advice we can get, with courage and determination.
|
||
|
||
Whilst our ultimate victory is inevitable, we want to win now, in
|
||
our lifetimes. We have seen it done elsewhere.
|
||
|