{"id":3745,"date":"1965-02-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1965-02-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/february-1965-vol-46-no-2-careers-in-health-service\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:26:00","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:26:00","slug":"february-1965-vol-46-no-2-careers-in-health-service","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/february-1965-vol-46-no-2-careers-in-health-service\/","title":{"rendered":"February 1965 &#8211; Vol. 46, No. 2 &#8211; Careers in Health Service"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">If this monthly Letter had been                     written in 1865 rather than in 1965 a much smaller audience,                     just about fifty per cent, would have been around to read                     it.<\/p>\n<p> About one in every five of those missing would have died                     in babyhood from colic, whooping cough, typhoid fever, or                     one of the host of other diseases common to infants in those                     days. About one out of ten would have died before adolescence,                     a victim of diphtheria, scarlet fever, smallpox, measles,                     nutritional deficiencies, or a number of infections. About                     one of every twelve who survived to maturity would have died                     before the age of thirty, from tetanus, diabetes, appendicitis,                     or some other disease for which there was no effective treatment                     at the time. About one of every six would have died before                     the age of fifty from pneumonia, tuberculosis, typhoid fever                     or some other disease.<\/p>\n<p>Medicine and pharmacology have brought about the change.                     These professions existed since the dim past, but systematic                     research within them did not begin until about the mid-nineteenth                     century. Within these hundred years a revolution in health                     preservation and restoration has taken place.<\/p>\n<p>However, it was pointed out by Harry J. Loynd, President                     of Parke, Davis and Co., in a Newcomen Society meeting a few                     years ago, &#8220;As we eliminate one serious disease as a major                     mortality factor, we prolong the life of the average person                     so that he is a statistical probability for some other disease                     or physical deterioration which was not a major problem in                     the past.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Canadians are becoming more and more aware of the possibilities                     of increasing their happiness by maintaining good health throughout                     their lives. This is evidenced in a material way by the amounts                     they expend on personal health care. In 1961, says <em>Canada                     Year Book<\/em>, the amount was $1,652 million, equal to two                     and a quarter times the amount so spent in 1953.<\/p>\n<h3>Canada&#8217;s needs<\/h3>\n<p>Hippocrates, the Father of Medicine, who lived 2,400 years                     ago, put into words the culture of his time when he said that                     medicine&#8217;s ultimate goal is the best possible health.<\/p>\n<p>The best health service can be obtained only when there                     is a sufficient number of trained workers.<\/p>\n<p>One of the tasks given the Royal Commission on Health Services                     upon its appointment in 1961 was to ascertain how Canada stands                     with regard to the personnel required during the next few                     decades. Its report, published in 1964 (available from the                     Queen&#8217;s Printer, Ottawa) stresses the urgent need for recruitment                     and education. The Canadian Medical Association emphasized                     this in its brief to the Commission: &#8220;We would assign first                     priority to all measures designed to provide sufficient personnel                     of all categories with the best possible training.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It may be said that the current medical manpower situation                     is adequate under present conditions but that shortages will                     occur unless the output of medical schools is increased at                     once. The growth of population and the enhanced demand for                     health services necessitate an increase in the number of doctors                     relative to population, an increase in medical research, an                     increase in the number of qualified teachers, an increase                     in the financial assistance given to Canada&#8217;s twelve medical                     schools, and an increase in the number of schools.<\/p>\n<p>The existing schools are currently producing 850 physicians                     per year. The number of practitioners has been augmented by                     physicians from abroad, particularly from the United Kingdom,                     but, says the Royal Commission, &#8220;How long this country can                     expect other nations to pay for the education of physicians                     which we require is a matter which must concern us.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>In 1961 Canada had just over 21,000 physicians, or one to                     every 857 of the population. To provide the health service                     Canadians will need in the future, there must be a net increase                     in the supply of physicians of at least 19,350 before 1991.                     The Canadian Medical Association has set as its goal for 1975                     the training of 1,500 per year.<\/p>\n<p>This presents a problem of national concern. Education in                     medicine cannot be given with excessive haste. It takes a                     minimum of seven years for the educational preparation of                     a physician. Unless expansion of facilities and students takes                     place at once, Canada&#8217;s proportion of physicians to population                     will deteriorate after 1971.<\/p>\n<h3>Choosing a career<\/h3>\n<p>There are many reasons prompting students to consider medicine                     as a career. Possibly the greatest is an inherent desire to                     know more about science and its application to health, associated                     with a genuine interest in serving others.<\/p>\n<p>The doctor has chosen a life of dedication to the prevention                     and treatment of illness and the rehabilitation of patients,                     a career of great personal satisfaction. He makes his contribution                     to medical science, and plays an important part in elevating                     health standards within his community. He contributes his                     intelligence and skills in public health and industrial medicine,                     and promotes health education.<\/p>\n<p>This extraordinarily wide choice of activity gives an outlet                     for every ability and interest, ranging through general practice,                     a specialty, research, medical teaching, government medical                     service at home or abroad, and administration.<\/p>\n<p>The remuneration may appeal to some. The average annual                     income of doctors is somewhat above the Canadian professional                     average. It stood at $16,323 in 1960, compared with engineers                     and architects $15,670; lawyers and notaries $14,597; dentists                     $12,238, and accountants $11,446.<\/p>\n<p>No youth should enter upon the study of medicine with the                     thought of graduating to a life of ease. In its booklet called                     <em>Doctors of Tomorrow <\/em>the Canadian Medical Association                     warns, in the words of Sir William Osler, one of the great                     Canadian physicians of the century: &#8220;The master word in medicine                     is work&#8221;.<\/p>\n<h3>Education in medicine<\/h3>\n<p>No medical student in Canada may dash through his training                     in a year or two. The fundamental purpose of medical education                     is to produce fully qualified physicians. The graduate is                     not a technician, but a professional man, an artist, a humanitarian.                     The profession demands academic achievement of the top quality.<\/p>\n<p>Every province has a medical act which sets up a licensing                     authority to make sure that the high standards are maintained.<\/p>\n<p>Applicants for admission to Canadian faculties of medicine                     are not scarce. &#8220;We are,&#8221; points out Dr. A. D. Kelly, General                     Secretary of the C.M.A., &#8220;in a phase of rapid expansion of                     the undergraduate population, and medicine currently gets                     its share. As a matter of fact there are probably three well                     qualified applicants for every place which exists in the existing                     expanded freshman classes.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The fact that more qualified young people are offering themselves                     for medical education than can be accommodated in the existing                     schools is confirmed by statements made by medical leaders                     in September.<\/p>\n<p>Medical and dental schools are so undermanned that qualified                     students must go to the United States or Europe; the University                     of Toronto turned down two of three qualified pre-medical                     students; Laval University&#8217;s faculty of medicine had to refuse                     275 qualified applicants in the 1964-65 term, and Dean                     Rosaire Gingras predicts that more than 3,000 will be refused                     admission in the next decade unless more money and badly-needed                     teaching structures are made available.<\/p>\n<p>With these facts in mind, the Royal Commission reached the                     conclusion that the problem facing the Canadian people is                     not solely the financing of physician services, but the staffing                     of the full range of essential services- mental, medical,                     dental, hospital, pharmaceutical, nursing, prosthetic, home                     care, and optical. It proclaimed the need for expanded educational                     facilities in all health areas.<\/p>\n<p>The Royal Commission suggested that government funds be                     provided for expansion to capacity of existing university                     schools of nursing and the establishment of ten additional                     schools; expansion and renovation of facilities of existing                     medical schools to the extent of fifty per cent of the cost,                     and half the cost of construction of new medical schools at                     seven additional universities; half the cost of facilities                     for new university hospitals or for the expansion of existing                     teaching hospitals to a maximum of ten beds per student; immediate                     provision of half the cost of constructing or renovating hospital                     out-patient departments; half the cost of expansion and                     renovation of five existing dental schools, and half the cost                     of construction of five new dental schools.<\/p>\n<p>As to the aid to be given students, it is suggested by the                     Royal Commission that the professional training grant be increased                     to provide for an annual grant, on application, of $2,000                     to every Canadian medical student with satisfactory performance                     in his third and fourth medical years.<\/p>\n<p>These recommendations are significant in that they suggest                     the provision of large amounts of federal funds for the support                     of education in the health professions, a departure from the                     traditional concept that education is almost exclusively a                     provincial responsibility. They reflect both the public interest                     in health and increasing awareness that the nation&#8217;s health                     is of vital concern to Canada.<\/p>\n<p>When he addressed the National Conference of Canadian Universities                     and Colleges in October, the Prime Minister said: &#8220;At the                     points where research and education touch there is an overlapping                     involvement of federal and provincial responsibilities, just                     as there is where responsibility for employment overlaps with                     responsibility for technical and vocational education. The                     latter is a case where we have, I think, developed satisfactory                     forms of federal-provincial co-operation. I hope                     we can have the same success in the areas of research and                     advanced studies.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Teamwork in health<\/h3>\n<p>While the doctor is the most important part of health service,                     he is not alone in providing it. The care of the people&#8217;s                     health is essentially a team undertaking.<\/p>\n<p>As an example of the co-operative effort required from                     professional and expert people engaged in diverse activities,                     consider the many facets of our campaign against typhoid fever.                     Immunization, provided by physicians, gives protection to                     individuals; filtration of water, carried out by specially                     qualified engineers, removes disease-producing pollution;                     chlorination is the chemist&#8217;s contribution toward destroying                     harmful germs, and pasteurization purifies milk.<\/p>\n<p>But though the practitioner may call upon colleagues for                     advice and help, the ultimate responsibility for the patient                     is his. The nation cannot do without a large body of well-educated                     and competent general practitioners. It is upon them that                     the patients rely.<\/p>\n<p>What the family physician lacks in depth &#8211; the special knowledge                     which makes the specialist necessary for special cases &#8211; he                     more than makes up for in breadth. He deals ably with everything                     from the common ailments of children to the rheumatism afflicting                     aged people. He sees the patient as a person living under                     certain conditions, and not merely as a case in the appointment                     book. He judges the nature, cause and seriousness of the patient&#8217;s                     illness, and either gives him the correct treatment or refers                     him to the appropriate specialist.<\/p>\n<p>Medical science has become so diversified that medical practice                     has had to develop specialties, of which the Royal College                     of Physicians and Surgeons recognizes thirty.<\/p>\n<p>In order to become a specialist it is necessary to spend                     from three to five years in intensive specialist training                     and practice before taking the qualifying examinations. This                     is not to say that the specialist narrows his interest to                     a small exclusive field. He cannot function effectively in                     medicine if all he brings to it is his specialty. Dr. Will                     Mayo, of the famous Mayo Clinic, insisted that specialization                     should go no further than the addition of a major interest                     to general practice.<\/p>\n<p>Advances in knowledge and techniques demand wider and deeper                     knowledge every year. Take as an example the steadily lengthening                     span of human life and the consequent aging of the population.                     Fifty years ago Canada had 203,537 persons seventy years of                     age and over; at the latest census she had 904,052, an increase                     of 344 per cent. This, of course, poses new medical problems,                     and more and more physicians are studying it under the name                     geriatrics.<\/p>\n<h3>The medical and related specialties<\/h3>\n<p>Within the broad categories of surgeon and physician there                     are many particular areas of professional endeavour. Psychiatrists                     specialize in diseases of the mind. Radiologists or radiotherapists                     are physicians specially trained in the diagnosis and treatment                     of diseases by X-ray radiation. The ophthalmologist or                     oculist is a medical doctor who has taken post-graduate                     work in eye surgery and diseases.<\/p>\n<p>Osteopathy, which has been practised in Canada since 1899,                     is a school of medicine which stresses the importance of physical                     structure and body mechanics in the cause, diagnosis, prevention                     and treatment of disease. Podiatry is a branch of medical                     science dealing with the care of the human foot.<\/p>\n<p>Dentistry is one of the most populous specialties, and yet                     Canada had in 1961 only one dentist to every 3,037 persons                     compared with one to every 1,900 persons in the United States.                     Canadians put less than two cents per capita per year into                     dental research, but at the same time they spend about $5                     per capita on treatment, most of which goes to repair damage                     already done. The Royal Commission said there should be 14,420                     dentists by 1991, and recommended expansion of present schools                     and the establishment of four new schools, with an increase                     of 624 teachers.<\/p>\n<h3>Many auxiliaries<\/h3>\n<p>There are many auxiliary medical services for which well-educated                     and highly trained men and women are needed. They provide                     the physician, surgeon, and specialist with assistance that                     will release his own hands and his own time so that he may                     devote himself more fully to performing those professional                     services which specifically require his special skills and                     knowledge. A few examples will be given.<\/p>\n<p>Dietitians plan daily menus and special diets containing                     the proper proportions of various food elements. Pharmacists                     are persons qualified to prepare and dispense medicines. The                     medical laboratory technologist performs diagnostic tests                     in a hospital or medical laboratory. The radiological technician                     prepares patients for X-ray examination or treatment                     and operates the equipment.<\/p>\n<p>The physical therapist is concerned with the rehabilitation                     of the sick and injured, using electricity, massage, exercise,                     and other non-medicinal treatments. Occupational therapy                     is the administration of medically prescribed activities using                     creative, manual and industrial arts and techniques to assist                     in the restoration of disabled persons. Speech therapists                     and audiologists in Canada number only one to every 280,000                     of population, whereas the desirable proportion would be one                     to 25,000 population. Prosthetists and orthotists deal respectively                     with the fitting of artificial limbs and the provision of                     supportive apparatus.<\/p>\n<p>In twenty years the number of nurses registered in Canada                     increased by 50,000 to a total in 1961 of 78,340, but there                     is a serious shortage. Before 1971 the supply of qualified                     nurses must increase by more than 20,000 if present standards                     are maintained, and an increase of nearly 42,000 would be                     desirable if improved standards of patient care are provided.<\/p>\n<p>Dental hygienists are graduates of approved courses in dental                     hygiene and are registered and licensed to practise under                     the supervision of a dentist. A great demand exists in Canada,                     where there are only about seventy. Dental technicians are                     those who alter, repair or make artificial devices used by                     dentists.<\/p>\n<p>In the public health field, whose ramifications require                     a book to describe (<em>The Federal and Provincial Health Services                     in Canada<\/em>, published by the Canadian Public Health Association,                     Toronto, in 1959), there are food and drug inspectors, sanitary                     inspectors, the radiation protection division, and many other                     professionally and technically trained men and women.<\/p>\n<h3>Research and education<\/h3>\n<p>Anyone employed in one of these many health services must                     keep up with the advancing front of medicine, participate                     in research, and pass along his knowledge to those who will                     succeed him.<\/p>\n<p>In hospitals, universities, institutes and foundations,                     men and women are pushing back the curtain of the unknown,                     uncovering new knowledge and applying things already known                     to new purposes of healing.<\/p>\n<p>But there is not enough research being done. The C.M.A.                     told the Royal Commission: &#8220;Of all the shortages that impede                     the expansion of research activity in Canada, the greatest                     and the most difficult to solve is the shortage of individuals                     with the necessary ambition, temperament and education to                     undertake medical research.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The support and training of devoted enthusiasts is of the                     greatest importance in medical schools for the new knowledge                     acquired, for the future supply of teachers and for the quality                     of medical care.<\/p>\n<p>Medical research is not something remote from everyday life.                     How else than by the research of interested and capable men                     and women could it have been learned that antitoxin is effective                     in treating those who have diphtheria, that toxoid can immunize                     persons against diphtheria, and that the Schick test tells                     whether or not a person is susceptible to diphtheria? Forty                     years ago the deaths were 1,281 out of 9,033 cases of diphtheria:                     in 1962 there were only nine deaths and the number of cases                     per 100,000 of population was too small to record.<\/p>\n<p>Research that brings about so great improvement as that                     &#8211; and it has been repeated in many other areas of disease                     such as smallpox, tuberculosis, diabetes, whooping cough and                     scarlet fever &#8211; should not be allowed to lag. Canada&#8217;s expenditure                     on medical research through the Medical Research Council in                     1964-65 is $6.9 million. On the basis of gross national                     product, compared relatively with the United States, it would                     be $90 million, and on the basis of relative population it                     would be $126 million.<\/p>\n<p>Even if Canada were to decide that pure research can be                     left to scientists abroad, it is still necessary to have research-trained                     groups in every field of medicine at Canadian medical schools                     so that the knowledge acquired from other countries can be                     apprehended, evaluated, and conveyed to Canadian practitioners                     by way of medical education.<\/p>\n<p>It is observable, says the C.M.A., that where research is                     neglected the level of medical services is likely to be low.                     &#8220;In a few years,&#8221; said Edward Dunlop, Executive Director of                     the Canadian Arthritis and Rheumatism Society, &#8220;unless the                     Canadian government changes its philosophy regarding support                     for medical research&nbsp;&#8230; our medical schools would be                     staffed by second-class teaching and second-class                     graduates. These graduates would be capable of practising                     only second-class medicine and the Canadian people would                     receive only second-class medical care.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>The challenge of today<\/h3>\n<p>The physician has three important functions: to provide                     medical care to ailing patients, to teach, and to carry out                     medical research. &#8220;These,&#8221; says the Canadian Medical Association,                     &#8220;are a trinity: unique, interdependent and indivisible.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It goes without saying that the first obligation of the                     physician is to his patient, but there is a tradition in medicine                     that whenever possible physicians should devote part of their                     time to teaching. In Canada today much of the teaching in                     medical schools is undertaken by part-time faculty members                     who are practising in the community.<\/p>\n<p>That research of many sorts is of pre-eminent importance                     was recognized by a Canadian Medical Association conference.                     It recommended that the Medical Research Council be broadened                     to include all fields of health research and renamed the Health                     Sciences Research Council. This Council would be the Government&#8217;s                     principal adviser in the planning and support of health research                     and the allocation of research funds. Its services would be                     available to provincial governments, voluntary health associations                     and universities.<\/p>\n<p>If Canada is to meet her requirements she needs in her universities                     an average, per year for seven years, of forty new basic science                     teachers and seventy full-time clinical teachers, as                     well as replacements for members of the faculties who may                     emigrate, retire or die. Without an adequate supply of teachers                     in our medical schools, said the Royal Commission, any proposals                     for the expansion of medical care services in Canada face                     serious obstacles.<\/p>\n<p>Canadians today desire the best health it is possible for                     them to enjoy. In this they are merely following the yearning                     of mankind since time immemorial, but science has fashioned                     an environment in which it is possible for them to make their                     wishes come true.<\/p>\n<p>To attain that goal, health service still has rivers to                     cross and mountains to climb. We have progressed a long way                     from the healing art of primitive peoples, but who is to say                     when the end of progress may be? The challenge of today is                     for individuals to make the most effective use of what we                     have and know, and for our institutions to provide the necessities                     of what may be.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[45],"class_list":["post-3745","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-45"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>February 1965 - Vol. 46, No. 2 - Careers in Health Service - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/february-1965-vol-46-no-2-careers-in-health-service\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"February 1965 - Vol. 46, No. 2 - Careers in Health Service - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"If this monthly Letter had been written in 1865 rather than in 1965 a much smaller audience, just about fifty per cent, would have been around to read it. 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