Make us your homepage



  Top100  


  Classifieds  


  News  


  Help  


  Contacts  

Search: 

 



News

News category


N.L. government thrown into 'disarray' by cancer tests, inquiry told

07.05.2008 22:00 Health - Source: cbc.ca

John Abbott testified that he feels he lost his job as deputy minister of health over the cancer testing controversy.John Abbott testified that he feels he lost his job as deputy minister of health over the cancer testing controversy.(CBC)

A former senior civil servant says the Newfoundland and Labrador government was enveloped in confusion in the days following the May 2007 revelations of mishandled breast cancer testing.

John Abbott, who resigned as deputy minister of health within two weeks of the scandal erupting, also told Justice Margaret Cameron's inquiry into flawed hormone receptor testing that he believes he lost his job over the issue.

"For those who may recall, that particular session, it was quite, quite heated," Abbott told the inquiry, describing proceedings in the house of assembly after CBC News had reported on court documents that showed Eastern Health knew the error rate of hundreds of retested breast cancer samples was several times higher than it had said publicly.

"The current and former ministers were being asked questions," Abbott testified Tuesday. "Different ministers were answering questions. The government was seen as in, you know, on this issue, in disarray, and certainly gave that appearance.

"We had — which was [something] I had not really ever seen this before — that we had three ministers up asking questions on health-related [matters]."

Abbott, who has been testifying since last Wednesday at the Cameron inquiry, said he always felt that Eastern Health, the semi-autonomous health authority that manages the St. John's pathology lab, ought to have handled problems with hormone receptor testing on its own.

Eastern Health began retesting samples in 2005, when it discovered that at least one breast cancer patient had been given a false negative report on hormone receptor tests, which are used to determine if a patient can benefit from the potent antihormonal therapy Tamoxifen.

The inquiry has been told that Eastern Health, as the retesting program launched, decided not to inform the public, and hold off on telling patients until it had results. However, the retesting program took months longer than expected, and the inquiry has also been told of Eastern Health's reluctance to share information — including external reviews of the lab — with others.

Caught in crossfire

Abbott said he felt that the Health Department should not have taken a role in the issue.

However, when the issue exploded in the legislature in May 2007, Abbott was caught in the crossfire. He came in for sharp criticism because he had not shared an August 2006 briefing note prepared for Premier Danny Williams with Tom Osborne, the health minister at the time.

Osborne testified last month about the anger he felt when he finally saw that memo in May 2007, during a briefing Abbott and others made to cabinet.

Abbott took responsibility for the mistake.

"From the premier's perspective, and from the minister's perspective, obviously they needed to be kept informed around a sensitive issue," he said.

By the end of that month, Abbott was told by the clerk of executive council, Gary Norris, that Williams wanted a change in the Health Department.

"He felt it was appropriate in that same vein that I also not be no longer associated with this issue in the department. And that was basically how it was presented to me," Abbott testified.

Abbott was offered the job of deputy minister of tourism. He declined it, and instead returned to the private sector, where he resumed a consulting business.

The inquiry is examining what went wrong with hundreds of hormone receptor tests between 1997 and 2005. It so far has focused on how officials dealt with the issue from 2005 to the present.

Post a commentPeople have commented on this storyRecommend this storyPeople have recommended this storyStory Tools: E-MAIL | PRINT | Text Size: SMLXL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

Story comments (0)

Sort:Most recent | First to last | Most recommended

Post your comment

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are pre-moderated/reviewed and published according to our submission guidelines.

Comment:Characters allowed: 2500PostSubmission policy

Related

Internal Links

Forgot to tell minister about cancer test details, ex-deputy saysDon't let cancer inquiry be 'for nought,' judge saysEastern Health should have dealt with cancer tests alone: former deputy minister

Video

Azzo Rezori reports for CBC-TV (Runs: 1:48)Play: QuickTime »Play: Real Media »

Inquiry

ARCHIVE: Read previous coverage of the Cameron inquiryIN DEPTH: Misdiagnosed: Anatomy of Newfoundland's cancer-testing scandalIN DEPTH: Hormone receptor testing

Health Headlines

New research into mad cow-linked prions reveals silver lining00Prions — infectious agents that cause diseases like the human variant of mad cow disease — also have protective properties, new research suggests. Ottawa announces $298M in health research00Federal Health Minister Tony Clement on Wednesday announced $298 million in funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) for 764 health research projects across the country. Vitamin D improves outcomes in chronic kidney disease cases: study00Taking vitamin D may cut the risk of premature death by one fourth in patients with moderate-to-severe chronic kidney disease, a new study finds.C. difficile linked to dozens of deaths at Ontario hospital00Hospitals in Ontario will be ordered to report any outbreaks of C. difficile after a Burlington hospital reported that dozens of people died following an outbreak of the bacteria.Ottawa high school student's flu glue wins national prize00A 17-year-old Ottawa high school student has won a national student biotechnology competition by making a molecule that flu viruses stick to, which could potentially be used to diagnose or eventually prevent flu infections.

Health Features

HEALTH CAREGoing digitalOnline health records: Convenience vs. privacy HEALTH AsthmaHEALTHSpecial needsChildren with disabilities continue to face social barriers HEALTHVision careOpening our eyes to children's health issuesHEALTHLightning ProcessControversial training program comes to Canada

People who read this also read …

  Add comment

Name: 
E-Mail: 
Comment: 
Enter code: 



« May 2008
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
   1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 

Last added news

Williams out of bounds with cancer inquiry criticism: Gomery 13.05.2008 14:01 Danny Williams was wrong to critique the tone and speed of the judicial inquiry investigating flawed breast cancer testing, John Gomery says.

Health Canada issues lobster tomalley advisory 13.05.2008 14:01 Health Canada is advising people to limit their consumption of tomalleys, the loose, green substance found inside cooked lobsters, out of concern for possible toxic contamination.

Williams rejects bullying accusations over cancer inquiry 13.05.2008 10:00 Premier Danny Williams denies that he is trying to intimidate Newfoundland and Labrador's breast cancer inquiry, even as he criticizes how the inquiry is operating.

Despite criticism, electroshock therapy commonly used in depression 12.05.2008 22:00 Despite protests calling for a ban on the treatment, electroshock therapy is frequently used to treat depression.

Judge grills lawyer as N.L. probes cancer inquiry rules 12.05.2008 18:02 The judge hearing Newfoundland and Labrador's breast cancer inquiry demanded Monday to know who ordered a government lawyer to ask for clarification on the role of inquiry lawyers.

Quarantined train arrives in Toronto, no infectious disease on board 12.05.2008 14:02 A train that had been the subject of a medical emergency after one passenger was found dead and several others fell ill has arrived in Toronto with officials saying there were no infectious diseases involved, just a series of unfortunate coincidences.

Talks set Monday after Sask. nurses vote to strike 12.05.2008 10:00 Health region management and the union representing Saskatchewan's registered nurses are heading back to the bargaining table.

Assisted Living experiences a rebound 12.05.2008 01:00 Menomonee Falls - Publicity can affect a company's stock price in different ways. A case in point is Assisted Living Concepts Inc. (ALC) of Menomonee Falls, which produced the second-best return of any public Wisconsin corporation in April, according to calculations by Bloomberg News.

Breast cancer inquiry could ruin N.L. health system: minister 10.05.2008 18:01 Newfoundland and Labrador's breast cancer inquiry could destroy the province's health care system if it runs too long, the justice minister warned Friday.

High health costs due to power of care systems, study says 10.05.2008 04:00 High health care costs in the Milwaukee area stem from the market power of health care systems, according to a study by the Wisconsin Policy Research Institute.

All news | News archive | RSS feed

Home    |    Add your site    |    Member login    |    Lost id    |    Contact Us    |    Help   |    Advertise    |    Privacy Policy

© Top100biz Inc., 2004-2005. This site is powered by AlphaStoreDesign.com