Halton Hills Newspapers

Independent & Free Press (Georgetown, ON), p. 22

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

th ei fp .c a Th e IF P -H al to n H ill s | T hu rs da y, M ar ch 5, 20 20 | 22 Weekday Breakfast Special Available Tuesday to Friday • 8 am-12 noon Closed Mondays Seniors 2 eggs, 2 bacon, ham or sausage, homefries and toast $5.99 + hst 3 eggs, 3 bacon, ham or sausage, homefries and toast $6.99 + hst 118 Guelph St.,Georgetown | 905-873-3033 CORRECTION NOTICE In the circular beginning Friday, February 28, 2020, we are announcing the introduction of Cricut Joy™. The machine and materials will be available for purchase beginning Sunday, 3/1/2020. We omitted the machine & materials availability date in the ad and apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused. coupon We are Diesel Vehicle Specialists! Fleet Maintenance/Programs Available all auto & truck service Car & Truck, ATV, RV, Motorcycles, Snowmobiles & More! JuSt ASk! Best Pricing on All Products 20 Armstrong Avenue, Georgetown We have Anco All Season Wiper Blades! only $7.49/ea installed. Car & Truck, A Vehicles + TAX Most Vehicles $3995 only • Oil Change • Antifreeze Check • Lubrication • 52 point inspection • Battery & Wiper Blade Check • FREE FLUID TOP UPS WInTER Special!* * Up to 6 Ltr. Limited time offer • Upgrade to synthetic for $15 extra. , RV, Motorcycles, ✃ ✃ Certified Mechanics on Duty 905-877-1237 52 point inspection TIRES! All Sizes All Brands JOIN A WINNING tEAM! Mechanic, Construction & Office positions available. Silver 2018 Halton Hills Boost your starting power with DeKa Batteries! CORRECTION NOTICE In the circular beginning Friday, February 28, 2020, the Charisma™ and Impeccable® Yarn by Loops & Threads® on page 2 printed with the incorrect Reg. price. The correct Reg. price is 4.99 - 5.79. We apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused. The world has changed since I was a kid. iPads. Alexa. Google. Netflix. Apps. Smart homes. Electric cars. USB 3.0. Banking from your iPhone. Open source web browsers, operating sys- tems and encyclopedias. There is more comput- ing power in your hand right now than you had in your home in the entire de- cade between 1990 and 2000. I look at iTunes and re- member my first Walk- man. The time it took to re- cord my mixtape of Ma- donna, Depeche Mode and Nirvana. Of listening for the song on the radio, hit- ting record right when it started, hitting pause just as it ended -- but before the radio announcer's voice came on. I love that I can do so much on my phone. While some of it is surfing use- lessly on the sea of social media, I love that so much of it is actually productive. My phone is my office. I can attend meetings and seminars. Research. Scan. Fax. Write reports and cre- ate presentations. I can even remotely access pa- tient medical records while on house calls for my complex housebound pa- tients. Over the past couple of months, I've introduced virtual visits using OTN, the Ontario Telemedicine Network. I can now se- curely see patients over my phone -- while they're away for university, cook- ing dinner or even while they're taking a break at work. It's convenient. But it isn't appropriate for everything. My patient, a busy young mom of three, went to a walk-in clinic because it was more convenient. She was seen by a doctor via video. It was a random doctor, someone who didn't know her or her medical history. She came to see me right after because something about the interaction didn't sit right with her. Turned out to be a missed diagnosis. As a society, we are busier than ever before. We value convenience more than ever before. But health care is not convenient. And good care can't always be conve- nient. Continuity of care, having a doctor who knows you, understands you and knows your med- ical and social history mat- ters. It improves patient outcomes time and again. Access is important -- being seen quickly for ur- gent issues; being able to book a non-urgent ap- pointment within a week or two. But access to your own medical doctor makes a bigger difference to your health and your life than access to any random pro- vider. Knowing you, know- ing your health and social history, and knowing your patterns matters. Your health is worth the time and patience. Nadia Alam is a Georgetown physician and past president of the Onta- rio Medical Association. Her columns also appear on www.medi- um.com/@docschmadia. She can be reached at nadia.alam@oma.org. OPINION QUALITY HEALTH CARE CAN'T ALWAYS BE CONVENIENT HAVING A DOCTOR WHO KNOWS YOU AND YOUR MEDICAL HISTORY SHOULD NEVER BE UNDERRATED, SAYS DR. NADIA ALAM NADIA ALAM Column

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