Close X
Wednesday, December 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

Angela Merkel Asked For Quick Face Time With Harper, As Her Meeting With Putin Looms

Angela Merkel Asked For Quick Face Time With Harper, As Her Meeting With Putin Looms
OTTAWA — The Canadian Press has learned that German Chancellor Angela Merkel has asked Prime Minister Stephen Harper for a short meeting in Ottawa on Monday night as she continues her frenzied transatlantic shuttle diplomacy on the Ukraine crisis.

Angela Merkel Asked For Quick Face Time With Harper, As Her Meeting With Putin Looms

Searchers To Be Able To Reach Site Of Missing Search And Rescue Technician

Searchers To Be Able To Reach Site Of Missing Search And Rescue Technician
LAKE LOUISE, Alta. — After days of waiting for the avalanche risk to subside, Parks Canada searchers were finally scheduled on Sunday to set foot on the snow that buried a fellow rescuer in Banff National Park.

Searchers To Be Able To Reach Site Of Missing Search And Rescue Technician

Universities Want Quebec To Make It Easier To Hire Foreign, High-skilled Talent

Universities Want Quebec To Make It Easier To Hire Foreign, High-skilled Talent
MONTREAL — Quebec universities say they're having trouble recruiting foreign professors due to a French language requirement they say hinder their ability to attract high-skilled, international talent.

Universities Want Quebec To Make It Easier To Hire Foreign, High-skilled Talent

John Baird's Departure Sparks Wave Of Speculation. Who Is Next?

John Baird's Departure Sparks Wave Of Speculation. Who Is Next?
OTTAWA — If outgoing minister John Baird felt 20 years was long enough for this political go-around, then what must equally seasoned Justice Minister Peter MacKay be thinking?

John Baird's Departure Sparks Wave Of Speculation. Who Is Next?

Parti Quebecois Leadership Front-runner Says Referendum Will Be Decided In 2018

Parti Quebecois Leadership Front-runner Says Referendum Will Be Decided In 2018
LAVAL, Que. — Pierre Karl Peladeau has announced he will wait until the next Quebec provincial election in 2018 to decide whether a Parti Quebecois government will hold a referendum on sovereignty in its first term.

Parti Quebecois Leadership Front-runner Says Referendum Will Be Decided In 2018

Retrial Date Set For Journalist Mohamed Fahmy, Family Calls It 'Worst Nightmare'

Retrial Date Set For Journalist Mohamed Fahmy, Family Calls It 'Worst Nightmare'
Canadian journalist Mohamed Fahmy is set to face a retrial on terrorism-related charges in Cairo this Thursday, a development his family called their "worst nightmare."

Retrial Date Set For Journalist Mohamed Fahmy, Family Calls It 'Worst Nightmare'