Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Critics Say Government Should Pay Air Ambulance Bill After Hospital Service Cuts

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Aug, 2015 01:46 PM
  • Critics Say Government Should Pay Air Ambulance Bill After Hospital Service Cuts
TORONTO — Critics say the Ontario government should pay the bill when patients are forced to take air or ground ambulances because their local hospital doesn't offer the service or treatment they need.
 
The Liberals made a deliberate decision to allow only certain hospitals to offer services such as neo-natal or cardiac care, which forces patients in northern Ontario to travel great distances, said New Democrat health critic France Gelinas.
 
Hospitals in northern and rural Ontario are "shells of what they used to be," and offer very little in the way of actual services for many patients, said Gelinas.
 
"They stabilize you long enough for Ornge (air ambulance service) to ship you out," she said. "This has become our hospital service in northern Ontario, and hospital services are covered by medicare and should be covered by the government."
 
The recent case of an Alberta woman hit with a huge bill for an Ornge air-ambulance ride from Timmins to Sudbury highlights the problem, said Gelinas. Staff at the Timmins hospital advised Amy Savill to fly to Sudbury because they were unable to care for her safely after she went into labour prematurely.
 
"Timmins should have had a neo-natal unit to handle the needs of her newborn baby," said Gelinas.
 
Ornge could not comment on a specific case, but said a one-hour flight on a helicopter ambulance would cost between $8,000 and $10,000.
 
The Progressive Conservatives said the government should pay the tab because its policy forces patients to fly to distant hospitals.
 
"They should have allocated for these types of situations to arise," said PC critic Bill Walker. "Ten thousand dollars would cripple most people."
 
The Ontario Council of Hospital Unions said Savill's air-ambulance ride was a direct result of the Liberal government's "aggressive" downsizing of obstetric services.
 
"No Canadian should be forced to personally bear the cost of a deliberate policy of centralization of birthing services," said union president Michael Hurley. 
 
The Liberals turned some hospitals into "centres of excellence" that specialize in services no longer offered by hospitals in other communities, said Gelinas. Hospital and physician services are supposed to be free to all Canadians, she added.
 
"You've changed the model in Ontario to fly everybody, so the transportation costs becomes part of that and should be covered by medicare," said Gelinas. "This is now part of medically necessary hospital services."
 
The Ministry of Health said funding was not the issue in Savill's case because the Timmins and District hospital never had a level 2/3 neonatal intensive care unit that was needed to deliver and care for her premature baby.
 
"The suggestion that Timmins could have done this before any alleged cuts is simply inaccurate," the ministry said in a statement.
 
Ontario residents with a valid OHIP card pay $45 for an ambulance as long as a doctor deems it medically necessary, but if not, it's a $240 co-payment for each land ambulance service — or the actual cost of each air ambulance trip.
 
Out of province residents also pay the actual cost of an air ambulance unless its between two Ontario hospitals and they return to the first one within 24 hours.
 
The Ministry of Health always recommends Ontario residents buy private travel insurance when leaving the province, even when staying within Canada.
 
The Canadian Automobile Association says insurance would help in emergencies with the costs of such things as drugs, laboratory and diagnostic services outside of hospitals as well as with devices such as crutches and prosthetics.
 
But the Travel Health Insurance Association cautions coverage "would be subject to insurance policy wording and exclusions, such as premature birth and pre-existing condition clauses."
 
Health Minister Eric Hoskins said coverage of air ambulance services for patients travelling outside their home province is something he will raise with his counterparts across the country.

MORE National ARTICLES

Community Rallies To Save Beached Whales On Nova Scotia's Cape Breton Island

Community Rallies To Save Beached Whales On Nova Scotia's Cape Breton Island
A resident of a small community on Cape Breton's west coast says about 25 people rallied to try and save 16 beached pilot whales today after they became stuck on the rocky shores of St. George's Bay.

Community Rallies To Save Beached Whales On Nova Scotia's Cape Breton Island

Search Ends Tragically For Bryce Gray Missing In Northwestern B.C. Lake

Search Ends Tragically For Bryce Gray Missing In Northwestern B.C. Lake
The body of a teenager has been pulled from a lake in northwestern B.C., ending a nearly week-long search.

Search Ends Tragically For Bryce Gray Missing In Northwestern B.C. Lake

Two Dead, Three Wounded In Toronto's Muzik Nightclub Shooting

Two Dead, Three Wounded In Toronto's Muzik Nightclub Shooting
Two people are dead and three others are in hospital following an overnight shooting that began inside a packed Toronto nightclub that was hosting the official after-party of rapper Drake's annual OVO Fest.

Two Dead, Three Wounded In Toronto's Muzik Nightclub Shooting

Firefighters, Hydro Crews Team Up To Rescue Injured Skydiver Near Vernon

Firefighters, Hydro Crews Team Up To Rescue Injured Skydiver Near Vernon
VERNON, B.C. — A skydiver is OK after dangling unconscious from power lines for more than 30 minutes near Vernon, B.C.

Firefighters, Hydro Crews Team Up To Rescue Injured Skydiver Near Vernon

PM Harper Unveils Big-Budget Campaign Promise: $1.5 Billion Home Renovation Tax Credit

PM Harper Unveils Big-Budget Campaign Promise: $1.5 Billion Home Renovation Tax Credit
PM has delivered the first big-budget promise of the Conservative election campaign: a permanent home-renovation tax credit that will cost taxpayers $1.5 billion a year once implemented

PM Harper Unveils Big-Budget Campaign Promise: $1.5 Billion Home Renovation Tax Credit

Saanich Police Cruiser Slams Into Vehicle To End Early-Morning Chase

Saanich Police Cruiser Slams Into Vehicle To End Early-Morning Chase
A section of a busy Vancouver Island highway connecting Victoria and Swartz Bay was closed for hours on Tuesday morning when Saanich police brought a vehicle pursuit to a crashing end.

Saanich Police Cruiser Slams Into Vehicle To End Early-Morning Chase