"If the facts don't fit the theory, change the
facts"--Albert Einstein
Timothy Shire's concise introduction to my yesterday's write-up
"The Herd Mentality of our health researchers" states that it points
out the trend for evidence based researchers to demand restructuring
of restructuring of restructuring of restructured health care. This
is the state of ultimate dementia of our sacred health care
leadership: the demand of more money for health evidence based
research on behalf of our Big Brains and against the intelligence of
people at large.
In Saskatchewan, the health evidence based research is located
primarily in Saskatoon in the Big Brains of the Health Services
Utilization and Research Commission(1) (HSURC). These Big Brains
have been brightened up by the unidirectional source of light issued
by Saskatoon's Synchrotron and are demanding more money and more
money to shed further new light on how to fix the machinery of
health care in Saskatchewan, Canada and the World.
Big Brain Laurie Thompson says that the Saskatoon's Synchrotron
is a prime example on how to help secure federal money, and he wants
to help secure more funding so that his evidence based outfit can
provide a better research infrastructure which would trigger more
research as more time freed up from teaching and patient-care
duties(2).
Health care internationally renowned gurus include Steven Lewis,
Michael Decter, Michael Rachlis, Robert Evans, Morris Barer, Greg
Stoddart, and so many others(3). These gurus all agree that the
future of Canada's health care must be in further evidence based
health research and they all agree that the past health care
restructuring has been beneficial to the sacred cause and cows of
Canada's health care. These researchers not only are proponents for
maintaining the legislative principles of Canadian public health
care, but they want more and more money for research so that people
can navigate better in the systemic storm of health care
restructuring of restructuring of restructuring of restructured
health care(4).
References/endnotes
Relevant political and economics articles http://www.ftlcomm.com/ensign
1. Health Services Utilization and Research Commission (HSURC)
HSURC is an arm's-length, government-funded agency with a mandate to
assess Saskatchewan's health system and make recommendations for
evidence-based change. We are also the provincial health research
granting agency. HSURC was established by the province through an
order-in-council in February 1992. HSURC now has its own provincial
legislation, The Health Services Utilization and Research Commission
Act, which received royal assent from Saskatchewan's
lieutenant-governor on June 2, 1994. Our legislation empowers us to
do utilization research in addition to carrying on the granting
agency mandate inherited from the Saskatchewan Health Research
Board. http://www.hsurc.sk.ca/about/index.php3
2. Better health through research, by Laurie Thompson, A Closer
Look, Spring 2001, publication of HSURC
3. A Partial Diagnosis of Health Care Corruption: The Quality
Circle of the Big Brains Includes Our Renown Health Economists, by
Mario deSantis, March 9, 2000 http://www.ftlcomm.com/ensign/desantisArticles/2000/desantis135/DeclineHealth.html
4. Four Strong Winds, Excerpts from the May 12, 2000 talk by
Michael Decter to the 4th National Community Cancer Conference in
Victoria http://www.cancerbc.com/nccc/DecterStrongWinds.htm
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