CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne
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During the CMA's recent annual meeting in Winnipeg, General Council delegates agreed that as far as Canada's health care system is concerned, maintenance of the status quo is impossible. Some delegates were motivated by the principle of professional autonomy, while others approached the issue from a public-policy perspective. ⋯ But delegates barely resisted the pull of a vocal group of physicians who favour giving Canadians the right to choose regulated private insurance for all medical services. The compromise position, for now at least, is that delegates want the CMA to lead a public debate on the future of health care.
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To document the criteria used to declare brain death in a pediatric critical care unit (PCCU). ⋯ Pediatricians in this large tertiary care referral centre are using clinical criteria based on the 1987 guidelines of the CMA to diagnose brain death in pediatric patients, including neonates. When clinical criteria cannot be fully applied, ancillary methods of investigation are consistently used. Although the soundness of this pattern of practice is established for adults and older children, its applicability to neonates and infants still needs to be validated.
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To determine the preferences of program directors for various grading systems and other criteria in selecting students for residency training positions through the Canadian Resident Matching Service (CaRMS). ⋯ More value was placed by program directors on a numeric or other more discriminating grading system than on the pass/fail system. Although the grading system provides only one type of screening mechanism it raises the question of whether there should be a policy for uniform grading practices for all Canadian students.