Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Quebec Becomes Latest Province To Cut Annual Physical Exams For Healthy Patients

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Jun, 2016 11:24 AM
  • Quebec Becomes Latest Province To Cut Annual Physical Exams For Healthy Patients
MONTREAL — Healthy Quebecers may now have a harder time booking routine annual physical exams after the province became the latest jurisdiction Wednesday to implement rules to eliminate the once-standard practice.
 
Under the regulations, doctors will be able to bill the health-care system for a full annual exam only for patients over the age of 5 who are vulnerable or have health problems, a spokeswoman for Health Minister Gaetan Barrette said.
 
"This change supports the College of Physicians guidelines on best practices in medicine, namely that it is not necessary to conduct an annual review with a patient who does not have a health problem," Julie White said in an email.
 
"That said, the healthy patients can be examined in the context of a follow-up visit with their doctor or another doctor."
 
The changes come after an agreement between the province and Quebec's general practitioners aimed at reviewing the billing code for doctors.
 
In revising its guidelines, the province is following the lead of several others including British Columbia, Newfoundland and Labrador, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia in introducing measures to cut funding for annual checkups.
 
In 2012 Ontario also brought in new rules geared to "modernizing" the annual health exam and personalizing it to individual needs to reduce unnecessary tests.
 
Quebec's changes are based on a growing body of evidence that systemic checkups for healthy patients are unnecessary and don't help to prevent disease, according to the president of the province's federation of general practitioners.
 
 
"To systemically send someone who is 25, 30 years old and with no symptoms or risk factors to a doctor doesn't hold water," Louis Godin said in a phone interview.
 
He said doctors can still agree to give checkups to healthy patients who ask for them, but they will now be billed to the system as "follow-up visits" and may be less thorough than exams for sick patients.
 
The president of one patients' rights group criticized the new approach as "short-sighted."
 
Jerome Di Giovanni says it's a mistake to wait to treat people once they're sick instead of focusing on promoting long-term health.
 
He said annual checkups can help to reinforce healthy habits, make sure people are sticking to treatment plans and weed out potential problems down the line.
 
"What costs less? Screening out a disease at its beginning or waiting for someone to be gravely ill and who has to go to the emergency room?" said Di Giovanni.
 
"We talk a lot about prevention, but in Quebec we invest very little."
 
The Quebec College of Physicians has recommended against having annual physicals for asymptomatic adults with no risk factors and believes the new guidelines will free up resources in the health system.
 
"If you do a whole bunch of useless tests every year, doctors' agendas are filled and they're not seeing sick people, they're seeing healthy people," said college president Charles Bernard.
 
"We can't use resources blindly, doing things just to do them."

MORE National ARTICLES

Sentence Ending For Medicine Hat Woman Who Murdered Her Family When She Was 12

Sentence Ending For Medicine Hat Woman Who Murdered Her Family When She Was 12
The woman is now 22, but can't be named under the Youth Criminal Justice Act.

Sentence Ending For Medicine Hat Woman Who Murdered Her Family When She Was 12

Edmonton Won't Try To Lasso More Canadian Finals Rodeo Events: Mayor

Edmonton Won't Try To Lasso More Canadian Finals Rodeo Events: Mayor
A deadline to bid for a 10-year contract to hold the Canadian Finals Rodeo has come and gone.

Edmonton Won't Try To Lasso More Canadian Finals Rodeo Events: Mayor

PM Justin Trudeau Apologizes For Blaming Opposition Parties For Electoral Reform Delay

Justin Trudeau has apologized for suggesting opposition parties are to blame for the delay in setting up a parliamentary committee on electoral reform.

PM Justin Trudeau Apologizes For Blaming Opposition Parties For Electoral Reform Delay

Self-Driving Cars Could Be On Roads In 5 Years

Self-Driving Cars Could Be On Roads In 5 Years
 Fiat Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne says working with Google convinced him that self-driving technology is closer than he thought and could be on the road in five years.

Self-Driving Cars Could Be On Roads In 5 Years

Justin Trudeau Invited 44 People, Including Mom, To Accompany Him To Washington

Justin Trudeau Invited 44 People, Including Mom, To Accompany Him To Washington
OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau took a small army of 44 people with him for a three-day visit to Washington last March, at a cost of more than $25,000.

Justin Trudeau Invited 44 People, Including Mom, To Accompany Him To Washington

Western Premiers Meet, Discuss Pushing Feds To Restore Disaster Funding

As wildfires burn uncontrollably across northern Alberta, government leaders in Western Canada are meeting to discuss pushing Ottawa to reverse historic funding cuts to disaster-mitigation programs.

Western Premiers Meet, Discuss Pushing Feds To Restore Disaster Funding