One Tier Medicine Goes on Trial
Mark Stabile, Colleen M. Flood & Katie Kontic, “One Tier Medicine Goes on Trial” (2006) Rotman Magazine.
Mark Stabile, Colleen M. Flood & Katie Kontic, “One Tier Medicine Goes on Trial” (2006) Rotman Magazine.
Presentation with Mark Stabile on Public/Private Financing (six-country study) with Janet Minor, Michele Sanborn, Lauren Montrose, Carol Appathuri and Aviva Rubin, Ontario Ministry of Health. December 18, 2006, Toronto, Ontario.
Colleen M. Flood, “Kiwi model best in world” (2006) Toronto Star.
Colleen Flood, the Canada Research Chair in Comparative Health Law and Policy at the Faculty of Law, was appointed the Scientific Director of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research’s Institute of Health Services and Policy Research.
Presentation on “Seeking the Grail: Financing for Quality, Accessibility and Sustainability in the Health Care System”, (with Mark Stabile and Carolyn Tuohy) for the conference on Social Insurance for Health Care: Economic, Legal and Political Considerations, School of Public Policy & Governance, University of Toronto. November 9, 2006, Toronto, Ontario.
Faculty seminar on “The Canadian Institutes of Health Research: Funding Research and Researchers and Opportunities for Legal Scholars”, Faculty of Law, University of Toronto. October 23, 2006, Toronto, Ontario.
Presentation at “Tribute to Frank Iacobucci”, Faculty of Law, University of Toronto: The Contextual Turn: Iacobucci’s Legacy and the Standard of Review in Administrative Law (with Lorne Sossin). October 19-20, 2006, Toronto, Ontario.
Keynote speaker “Seeking the Grail: Financing for Quality, Accessibility and Sustainability in the Health Care System”, for the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority Annual General Meeting. October 17, 2006, Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Presentation on “The Foundation of Medicare” to the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute Board of Directors. October 12, 2006, Toronto, Ontario.
Colleen M. Flood & Lorain Hardcastle, “Kiwi No-Fault for Medical Error? Should We Try It?” (2006) Toronto Star. Courtesy of the U.S. media, we hear many horror stories about medical malpractice doctors ordering unneeded tests and procedures, astronomical jury awards, and doctors in high-risk specialties unable to pay insurance premiums.