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For some time, an increased demand for driving ability assessment
and vehicle adaptation services has been observed. In fact, a
serious shortage of health professionals able to meet these needs
has been reported across the province of Québec. Moreover,
an increasingly aging population in the province of Québec
has
brought about a significant increase in the need for specialized
services over the past two years. This has led to alarmingly long
waiting lists.
For example, the statistical inventory carried out by the members of the Association
des établissements de réadaptation en déficience
physique du Québec (AERDPQ) for 1999-2000 and 2000-2001,
has revealed the following main observations:
- the services available in the area of driving and vehicle
adaptation varies from one rehabilitation institution to another,
with regard to the nature of the services and the availability
of instruments;
- the waiting period varies from 1 to 12 months;
- adults and children (passenger adaptation) represent 65%
of users, while persons 65 or over represent 35%;
- the request for services in 2001 increased by one-third from
the year 2000;
- these statistics compiled from rehabilitation institutions,
if generalized to the Québec health and social services
network at large, lead to the following opinion:
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[...] "the demand for screening and evaluation services
(for individuals who are not served by rehabilitation establishments,
such as the elderly, and those undergoing psychiatric treatment)
is likely twice, if not three times as high as ERDPQ statistics
(Établissements de réadaptation en déficience
physique du Québec), which accounts for the current
situation and the long waiting lists all across the province.
The emergence of a variety of evaluation services in the private
sector is an additional consequence."
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