It was early this morning when my wife Sharon coming back from work
at Nipawin Hospital mentioned that some patients relayed the message
that health care should have more front line workers and less middle
management. Prior to that, and this same earlier morning, I was
reflecting on social concerns and specifically made reference to the
ongoing abuse of the private contract, on the inadequacy to have
corporations being socially responsible beyond the provision to
increase shareholders' profits, and on the recent announcement that
more money is being spent again and again to implement a Telehealth
system in Nipawin and Cumberland House.
We live in a social context where our hegemonic leadership are
purposefully reinforcing their own demented mentality to all the
rest of us people at large; and most of us either refrain from
voicing their discontent for losing their jobs, or accept the fact
that social changes are impossible to make. And as I am concerned, I
feel that social changes for the better are possible if and only if
we are able to express ourselves and become part of a civil society,
that is responsible to ourselves and to others.
I don't buy the story that our health care problem is rooted on
having too many middle managers and not enough front line staff
doing the real work. In this hegemonic leadership we do what we are
told to do, and therefore we have created a top down hierarchical
chain of command system, where one level, after enriching itself,
'passes the buck' to the lower levels of chain of command.
Therefore, it is evident that the problem is not too many middle
managers, the root problem resides in our demented leadership at the
top of our hierarchical chain of command system; after all, these
middle managers have been hired by their senior executives.
One more evidence of our demented leadership comes today as we
learn that Ottawa Hospital supervisor and former conservative
cabinet minister Dennis Timbell is making $1,500 a day, a pay
equivalent to Ottawa Hospital president and CEO David Levine, who
earns $350,00 a year. And we must recall that Ontario Minister of
Health Tony Clement fired the volunteer hospital board and replaced
it with the top dog supervisor Dennis Timbell to reverse the
hospital's fiscal crisis. Yes, there is a hospital's fiscal crisis,
but this crisis doesn't touch the pocket of our top dogs as they
continue to bark for more money for their pockets.
Our Canadian premiers met in Victoria last week, and they
promised to deliver health care making use of jointly cost and
benefit analysis to look into more efficiencies in the medicare
system. And as an after effect of this promise we have the promise
of a newer and more efficient Telehealth system for Nipawin and
Cumberland House at a cost of some $2.8 million. In March of last
year I stated: "the Telehealth system linking Nipawin to Cumberland
House is supposed to be operational to day, March 15, 2000, but
referring to the past experiences of our Big Brains I doubt about
it." Well, I was not wrong, our Big Brains have more money to dig
deeper holes in the ground, yet they threaten Ottawa they would
establish their own health system if they don't get more money.
Our health care system is not a matter of being either public or
private. Our health care system is corrupted, and the solution to
better health care is a change of mind rather than more money.
Some references
Related social and economic articles published by Ensign
Premiers threaten health coup. Provinces could set their own
standards of care if Ottawa doesn't cough up $7-billion Ian Bailey
and Robert Benzie, August 4, 2001 National Post http://www.nationalpost.com/home/story.html?f=/stories/20010804/637277.html
"Tele-health" coming to Nipawin, Cumberland House, CBC Canada,
August 3, 2001 http://sask.cbc.ca/cgi-bin/templates/view.cgi?/news/2001/08/03/telehealthiac010803
Timbrell salary $1,500 per day, Joanne Laucius, The Ottawa
Citizen, August 4, 2001 http://www.ottawacitizen.com/city/010804/5038662.html
A question for Minister of Health Pat Atkinson: How much money is
Telehealth costing? March 16, 2000 - By: Mario deSantis http://www.ftlcomm.com/ensign/desantisArticles/2000/desantis140/Telehealth.html |