
Doctors Manitoba issues new guidance in bid to end sick notes
Doctors Manitoba has launched a campaign to call for the end of sick notes, saying the move would reduce unnecessary medical visits and free up care for those in need.
On Tuesday, the organization announced its 'Sick of Sick Notes' campaign, which includes guidance for employers, a new website, and a social media video.
As part of this guidance, Doctors Manitoba suggested that employers remove sick notes as a requirement, update contracts and employee handbooks, and implement alternatives to manage absenteeism. Additional guidance and resources will be added to the campaign's website in the future.
The organization noted that some employers, including Canada Life and the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority, have already eliminated sick note requirements for short-term illnesses, adding that ending the practice would free up more than 300,000 appointments per year at doctors' offices and emergency rooms.
'Many visits to get a sick note are actually medically unnecessary, with no symptoms to verify and no new medical care required,' said Dr. Nichelle Desilets, president of Doctors Manitoba.
'Those visits cost taxpayers about $8 million per year. In other words, we are all paying for sick notes, whether it's through our taxes or by waiting longer for the care that we need to seek.'
CTV News reported last year on a Doctors Manitoba report that called for major changes to the way sick notes are issued in the province, saying they are a waste of time. According to the report, over 600,000 sick notes are requested each year, which results in 36,000 hours of physician time.
Doctors Manitoba recently submitted recommendations to the provincial government, calling for regulatory changes.
'Manitoba is one of only two provinces in Canada that hasn't taken any legislative action to limit the use of sick notes,' Desilets said.
'We've consulted with hundreds of employers, and we've heard a strong, consistent message that is that they want to be on a level playing field.'
CTV News reached out to the province for more information.
• With files from CTV's Charles Lefebvre.
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Murphy later partnered with Elebute, a fellow uWaterloo alum with a background in biomedical and mechanical engineering, as well as business, to found CELLECT Laboratories Inc. Ibukun Elebute and CT Murphy. (Ibukun Elebute and CT Murphy. Image courtsey: CELLECT Laboratories Inc.) In the last two years, their nanomaterials research has won over $150,000 in funding at pitch competitions worldwide. 'I think it's been a very recent advent of people actually looking into women's health and realizing what a massive disparity there is,' Murphy said. 'Women are desperate for proper health care that is made for them, by them and that they can trust (…) this technology is not only wanted, but desperately needed.' 'It's clear that we are not building in isolation,' said Elebute. 'We're standing on the shoulders of a growing community that's pushing for real change in women's health, and that makes all the difference.' 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Despite a decade data showing it to be more effective than cytology, federal screening guidelines recommend against HPV testing. Dr. Wilkinson says those guidelines are 12 years out of date. 'We're not even optimally using technology that's already proven and known,' she told 'Cervical cancer is almost entirely preventable, yet each year in Canada, many women die from it or undergo difficult treatments with lifelong side effects. We must modernize our national guidelines to include HPV vaccination, HPV cervical screening and self-screening, so that cervical cancer can be eradicated in Canada.' Current initiatives don't address all issues While Murphy and Elebute acknowledge the importance of recent modernization initiatives, they say the current self-testing model does not fully address the issues they aim to tackle. 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