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CMAJ
If economics truly is "the dismal science," then voters might well be tempted to conclude that politics is the dismal art.
As Canadians trekked to the polls on Oct. 14 to make their choices in the 40th general election, pollsters warned that all those voters seemed singularly unimpressed with their options — party leaders were largely uninspiring; campaigns lacklustre and strategies mediocre, if not incoherent. All parties seemed resolutely determined to avoid issues like health care. In fact, it barely made a ripple in the political pond throughout the 5-week campaign despite being consistently rated as a major public concern.
Small wonder, then, that many eligible voters did not make the trek, resulting in a historic low turnout of 59% as Prime Minister Stephen Harper and the governing Conservatives garnered 143 seats and earned their second consecutive minority. The Liberals plummeted to 76. The Bloc Quebecois held at 50, while the New Democrats rose to 37. The Green Party was shut out, while 2 independents were elected.
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There were 4 physicians in the House of Commons when it was dissolved. There will be 4 in the new Parliament — in fact, the same 4 stalwarts as in the previous one. All are Liberals and all are general practitioners:
It will be Bennett's fifth term in the House, while Martin, Fry and Patry have now successfully run 6 times.
Eleven other physicians who sought office saw their political aspirations scuttled:
Faring even less favorably than physicians were nurses. Of 22 candidates with a nursing background, just one, Conservative Cathy McLeod (Kamloops-Thompson-Cariboo), the former mayor of Pemberton, British Columbia, prevailed.
As health professionals, physicians and nurses will lag well behind lawyers (50) in Parliamentary representation. They also trailed political aides (32), teachers (17), farmers (16), journalists (7) and restauranteurs (5) but matched policeman (4) and chiropractors (4).
The 4 chiropractors all served in the past Parliament:
Dentist, Christian missionary and Conservative Harold Albrecht (Kitchener-Conestoga) was the only other health professional elected to Parliament.
But several other Members of Parliament do have at least a measure of experience in dealing with health issues. Re-elected were: Conservative Diane Finley (Haldimand-Norfolk), who helped establish the private ambulance services company Canadian Medical Response; New Democrat Peter Julian (Burnaby-New Westminster), executive director of the Western Institute for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing; New Democrat Brian Masse (Windsor West), a long-time activist for the disabled; and Bloc Quebecois Jean-Yves Laforest (Saint Maurice-Champlain), former psychomotor rehabilitation specialist at the Trois-Rivières Regional General Hospital.
Among newcomers to the House with a measure of health-related experience are: Liberal Kirsty Duncan (Etobicoke North), associate professor of health studies at the University of Toronto; and New Democrat Glenn Thibeault (Sudbury), a former manager of residential programs for the handicapped.
Almost as sparse as health profession representation in the House of Commons were actual health policy commitments made on the hustings, particularly from Harper's Conservatives, who essentially took no stance on 10 health issues during a CMAJ election survey (CMAJ 2008;179[8]:757-8).
Among the few commitments made by the Conservatives were modest measures to address the shortage of doctors and nurses, including:
Other Conservative commitments were extremely broad in nature. Harper's platform promises to "continue to take creative measures to tackle major lung, heart and neurological diseases." The new government also vows to end discriminatory life insurance practices and crackdown on tobacco advertising in print and electronic media reached by children.
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Can. Med. Assoc. J. 2008 179: 1093.
Can. Med. Assoc. J. 2008 179: 1095.
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