I would like to make a couple of comments on one point that I forgot to bring up in my presentation.
I heard that in Manitoba there is a very good program. They have their own exam. I'm not sure if my information is up to the mark, but Dr. Martin may be able to supplement it. You take their exams, you pass their exams, you work one year in a rural area--wherever they send you--and then you are a licensed physician. I know persons who are doing orthopedic surgery after that process. People say that Manitoba and Alberta have the best prospects, Manitoba because of that so-called streamlined approach and Alberta because Alberta has more money.
That is one point to remember, because if one province comes up with a better idea, that idea should be promoted. Instead what the regulatory bodies are doing, or whoever is in charge, is creating bogus--I am sorry to use that word--barriers. One of them is the clinical assessment test. As a physician I am willing to volunteer here and ask one of the physicians in the panel to perform a physical examination of the chest on me. I bet that if you brought a second physician from the university, they can fail each other. There are physical examination textbooks that are five pages and others that are 500 pages.
My question is this: if I am a physician and I have a licence and I take a responsibility for treating you as a patient, I can choose to listen to your heart for ten minutes or I can put it on your clothes. This is against the classic teachings of medicine, but how many physicians actually do that? There are lots.
Another example is that they are teaching us to start interviews in a really artificial way, by asking, “Tell me what you feel”, or “Do you have any idea of this disease?” How many times has each of you gone to the doctor and seen that kind of approach? We are forced to do it. Last year almost everyone from Edmonton, except one person, failed this exam.
If you come with something that is important to you, at least provide one month of training on something like ACLS or CPR. Teach it and then examine it. Any physician will tell you that in the United States, basically... There are published articles on sensitivity and specificity of physical examinations. It is next to zero. This is not something I say, and I never promoted it when I was supervising medical students, but that is a different issue.
I just wanted to raise the issue of Manitoba because I forgot to bring it up.
Would you please repeat the last question that you had?