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In March 2018, a series of news articles sparked reports that a group of doctors in Canada were resisting and protesting against a pay increase offered to them by the provincial government in Quebec: It is true that hundreds of doctors signed the petition, but the group opposing the deals makes up only a small fraction of all the doctors in the province of Quebec, a piece of context not mentioned in most reports. On 25 February 2018, MQRP (which stands for Médecins Québécois pour le Régime Public, or Quebecois Doctors for the Public Plan, a group of 500 Quebecois doctors dedicated to retaining the province's universal public health system) published an open letter explaining their opposition to pay hikes negotiated between doctors' unions and the provincial government. As of 21 March, the letter had garnered 944 signatures from people describing themselves as doctors or medical students. It's not clear whether or how MQRP is able to prevent someone who is not a registered medical professional from signing the online petition, so we can't be sure how many of the names listed under the letter actually belong to health professionals. Even if they all do, the 944 names listed on 21 March 2018 would still make up only 4.5 percent of the total number of doctors in Quebec. (According to the Collège des Médecins du Quebec, the standards-setting professional body for doctors in Quebec, there are nearly 21,000 active, registered doctors in the province as of 1 January 2018.) Canada's CBC News reported that the provincial government had struck two major pay deals with doctors: The group has scheduled a protest in Montreal on 24 March, listing among its demands the cancellation of the doctors' pay increases, as well as a public consultation on the terms and payments granted to doctors by Quebecois society.
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