How sick must you be to earn a better diet?

Greetings!  I’m Nico Trimoff, manager of transcription and accessibility services at www.sterlingcreations.ca.
Today, I have an interesting article to share with you; one that should make you sit up and take note.
Please take a moment to read.
Enjoy your day!
 
 
How sick must you be to earn a better diet?

 
Catherine Porter
The Toronto Star , Dec. 12, 2009
 
Graphic: Dr. Roland Wong sees it as his duty to help the poor. “If you don’t
help them, who the hell is going to help?” Dr. Roland Wong sees it as his
duty to help the poor. “If you don’t help them, who the hell is going to
help?”
 
There is a little strip of paper taped to the door of Dr. Roland Wong’s
dimly lit basement office. It reads:
 
“Special diet forms will no longer be filled when the clinic reopens on Nov.
1, 2009.”
 
Still, people arrive while I sit in the meagre waiting room, like me hoping
to see the doctor. A Somali mother; an Iranian student; a Chinese man on
lunch break. I want to talk to Wong about the trouble he is in. They want
him to fill out the forms that have landed him in trouble.
 
“Look at this,” Wong says, opening the beige paper the Somali mother has
handed him. “It’s so complex, especially for a layperson, especially for
someone whose English is not so good. What the hell is dysphagia? Or
mastication?”
 
He stops for a minute and asks her gently: “How are your teeth?” They are
fine, she says. But she has stomach problems. She’s on medication.
 
“You must go to your family doctor. Get him to go over this with you
slowly.”
 
Wong cares about poor people. His practice is in Chinatown. He has a lot of
poor patients. He knows that a welfare payment of $572 a month is not enough
to pay for rent, transportation and food in this city. So he’s done what he
can – he’s filled many forms for the province’s special dietary allowances,
ticking boxes for cardiovascular disease (which earn them an extra $10),
soya allergies ($83), diabetes ($42), chronic constipation ($10) and, yes,
“dysphagia/ swallowing or mastication difficulties” for people with no teeth
($25, plus a one-time $75 for a blender).
 
Word got out. A pilgrimage of poor people poured into his office, travelling
from Belleville, Kitchener, Windsor. So many came, he had trouble tending to
his regular patients. He started turning them away and instead worked at two
clinics set up by the militant anti-poverty group, the Ontario Coalition
Against Poverty.
 
There are three conclusions you could make here. Either these sick poor
people don’t have family doctors, which is often the case. Or their doctors
aren’t filling out the forms, because they are intimidated by the province’s
strict policy around them.
 
Or these poor people aren’t sick. They’re thrifty. They know a good bargain
when they see it.
 
Facing a surge in special diet allowances – from $5 million in 2003 to $67
million today – the authorities suspected the latter.
 
Wong now faces a hearing before the College of Physicians and Surgeons. He
could lose his medical licence, or have it restricted.
 
The police have launched an investigation,too.
 
Wong says he hasn’t bent the rules. Even at a clinic with 100 people a day,
he’s done one-on-one consultations, asking people about their bowels, their
allergies, their medication. Some diagnoses are clear – you have diabetes,
show me your pills. Some, less so. “Chronic constipation – who can define
it, except me?” he says. “Soya allergy – it’s not a clear medical condition.
I do the best to my abilities. If they lie to me, I can’t change that. I
have
to trust the patient to a certain extent.”
 
If they aren’t really sick, chances are good they will be soon. People from
“food-insufficient households” are more likely to suffer from heart disease,
high blood pressure, food allergies and depression, according to Statistics
Canada’s national health study. One-fifth of the poor suffered from three or
more chronic conditions.
 
In Ontario, poor women are four times as likely to get diabetes as rich
women.
 
There are many reasons for this. One of them is they don’t eat well. They
can’t afford to.
 
I met a 60-year-old woman on Friday who had eaten nothing but fried potatoes
for three days. There’s a picture of her with all the food she ate over a
week: flour, onions, a single red pepper, a can of pineapples from the food
bank. Including the pitcher of tap water, there were 13 items on her little
kitchen table. I include more ingredients in a single Sunday night meal. She
already has diabetes, although she doesn’t get the special allowance. The
city’s medical Officer of health, Dr. David McKeown, recognizes this.
 
He’s called on the province to boost welfare rates by $100 a month so people
can eat.
 
I look at it this way: today, there are 134,000 people getting extra petty
cash from the province for food. That’s only 16 per cent of the people
receiving social assistance. Where are the other 84 per cent?
 
Where are their doctors?
 
We are robbing them of food.
 
Last week, the provincial government announced it had finally formed a panel
to review its welfare system. While they study, people eat nothing but
potatoes.
 
Raising rates will save us hospital bills in the long run. It will also make
us kinder.
 
“Why are you in the medical profession?” Wong says. “If you don’t help them,
who the hell is going to help them? This is a fundamental social issue,
where the province has to raise the (social assistance rates) to help folks.
It’s not something that can be corrected by one physician.”
 
I don’t know if Dr. Wong is bending the rules or not. But I think doctors
across the province should be bending them.
 
Catherine Porter’s column runs on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. You can
reach her at cporter @ thestar.ca
 

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About Donna Jodhan

Donna Jodhan is an award winning blind author, advocate, sight loss coach, blogger, podcast commentator, and accessibility specialist.
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