Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Aboriginal children suffer as governments shuffle files: report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Feb, 2015 11:38 AM
  • Aboriginal children suffer as governments shuffle files: report

A study suggests that aboriginal children often get poorer health care than other kids because of disputes between governments about who pays the bill.

Vanda (WAHN'-dah-nah) Sinha (SIHN'-hah) of McGill University says it's hard to put numbers on the problem because nobody is tracking it.

But she says a survey of front-line workers turned up plenty of stories about children suffering as their files are shuffled between federal, provincial and First Nations governments.

Sinha says the federal government has told the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal that such bottlenecks don't exist — or, if they do, they aren't Ottawa's problem.

She says Prime Minister Stephen Harper's Conservatives are trying to solve the problem by defining it so narrowly it disappears.

The study was done by the Assembly of First Nations, the Canadian Paedeatric Society and several universities.

MORE National ARTICLES

Avian Influenza Hits Another Backyard Coop In B.C.: Industry Group

Avian Influenza Hits Another Backyard Coop In B.C.: Industry Group
An outbreak that began last December hit 11 commercial chicken and turkey farms in Abbotsford, Chilliwack and Langley, as well as a backyard coop in Langley.

Avian Influenza Hits Another Backyard Coop In B.C.: Industry Group

Five Arrested In 2012 Prince George, B.C., Murder After Rigorous Probe

Five Arrested In 2012 Prince George, B.C., Murder After Rigorous Probe
PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — Mounties have arrested five people in the 2012 murder of a 22-year-old man, after a lengthy probe involving hundreds of officers in B.C. and Alberta.

Five Arrested In 2012 Prince George, B.C., Murder After Rigorous Probe

Assisted Suicide Advocate Honours 'Trailblazer' For High Court Victory

Assisted Suicide Advocate Honours 'Trailblazer' For High Court Victory
VANCOUVER — An advocate for doctor-assisted suicide is celebrating the Supreme Court of Canada decision on doctor-assisted suicide by remembering the British Columbia woman whose cause he championed more than 20 years ago, when she took her dying breath.

Assisted Suicide Advocate Honours 'Trailblazer' For High Court Victory

New B.C. Rates For Groundwater Introduced, To Take Effect In 2016

New B.C. Rates For Groundwater Introduced, To Take Effect In 2016
VICTORIA — Companies will pay little more than a toonie to bottle as much groundwater as can fill a 25-metre swimming pool when new fees take effect in British Columbia next year.

New B.C. Rates For Groundwater Introduced, To Take Effect In 2016

YouTube Hit 'Do Something' Is An Anthem For Suffering Leaf Fans

YouTube Hit 'Do Something' Is An Anthem For Suffering Leaf Fans
TORONTO — The legions of suffering Toronto Maple Leafs fans now have their own anthem.

YouTube Hit 'Do Something' Is An Anthem For Suffering Leaf Fans

Saudi blogger spared flogging for at least another week: Amnesty International

Saudi blogger spared flogging for at least another week: Amnesty International
Saudi Arabia has again delayed a planned flogging of a blogger, according to a report from Amnesty International.

Saudi blogger spared flogging for at least another week: Amnesty International