The difference between a safe, supported transition and a dangerous one often comes down to whether the system is a partner in your care – or leaves you to navigate it alone.
When a child’s promise of a future is abruptly shattered by a terminal illness, the child and its family have to decide ...
Medical learners who leave home deserve recognition and structured support, as the value of training lies not only in ...
Alberta’s model may offer useful insight into whether a province can strengthen its public system by formally incorporating ...
Health care collapse is only one story. The deeper story lives underground, in the quiet places where resilience begins.
Unequal access to pet care in rural and Indigenous communities has led to dogs being shot when they pose a risk to the public ...
As medical students, we hope for a future where fewer of our patients suffer from preventable tobacco-related illness. A ...
Self-regulation can work if we stop running quality assurance like licensing compliance and start running it like ...
More and more people are turning to Artificial Intelligence to ask about health. The challenge is how to use it without ...
Public health care, paid for by the public and created by the public, should serve the public. Bill 11, as written, serves a different purpose.
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