Ontario to stop paying for high-dose opioidsOntario will become the first province to stop paying for high-dose opioid medications under its public drug plans, as part of a measure aimed at combatting the widespread abuse of prescription painkillers. Lack of binding arbitration is a hole in the Ontario deal Marijuana legalization is bad for kids Colorado doctors warn that legal pot leads to unintentional poisoning of children Record number of doctors seeking aid is good thing, experts say Ontario: Time to get on board with expanded scope The evidence shows pharmacists can effectively assess and prescribe for minor ailments. So why is my province lagging behind the rest of Canada in this regard? Virtual care tools: Why aren't we using them? Health authority offers incentive to Nanaimo hospital doctors to keep troubled EHR system afloat Offer tied to MDs refraining from commenting publicly Concerned Ontario Doctors march on Ministry of Health and OMA offices to protest tPSA COD petition for general member meeting collects all 2,500 required signatures; may result in the first meeting of its kind since 1991 Press review – July 22, 2016 Epclusa for chronic hepatitis C Once-daily combo tablet provides high cure rates for all six hepatitis C genotypes. First Previous 2154 2155 2156 2157 2158 Next Last