Sandor Demeter
Class of 2023
Sandor Demeter is a physician with more than 30 years of experience in public health and diagnostic imaging. He is an associate professor at the University of Manitoba with research interests in health policy, technology assessment and economics and has graduate degrees in public health and health physics. Sandor is a member of the Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health’s Expert Review Panel. He is interested in the provision of health-care services as shaped by the pillars of the Canada Health Act and the constant funding, and ideological, dance between federal and provincial decision makers. Twitter: @Codeblue99me. Blog site: https://www.codeblue.me/

A Knee-jerk Reaction

Shared Health responsible for sorry state of PET scans
Positron emission tomography – a game changer for cancer patients

A prescription you can’t fill at a pharmacy

Your Teeth Can Reveal How Much Radiation You’ve Been Exposed To

A long, difficult walk for care

Clerkship changes bad for health system

Could Australia’s recent radiation scare happen in Canada?

Shared Health unable to handle even the small things

Lung-cancer screening – primum non nocere (first, do no harm)!

Myths in Canadian health care
Digital access needed for health information

Could Australia’s recent radiation scare happen in Canada?

Crucial diagnostic equipment sits idle

Manitoba dead last in colon-cancer screening

Your teeth can reveal how much radiation you’ve been exposed to

‘It can be a relentless drum beat’: Why the stress on medical imagers should be better understood

THE HOME SHOW (PART TWO)

THE HOME SHOW (PART ONE)

Newfoundland and Labrador first province to impose a sugar tax to combat obesity and diabetes. Will it work?

Indigenous-led solutions counter a diabetes epidemic

Let’s stop the bickering: Canadians are weary of finger-pointing amid the health-care crisis

Behind the scenes: The increasingly complex – and common – radiation treatment for cancer

New drug to treat prostate cancer may be out of reach for most Canadians

Canada flexing its nuclear muscles in medicine, energy production and nuclear waste management
