Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Federal Health Care Innovation Panel Finds Canada's Medicare System Aging Badly

The Canadian Press, 17 Jul, 2015 12:54 PM
    OTTAWA — A federal panel given the job of recommending ways to improve health care across Canada is warning that the country's medicare system is aging badly.
     
    The Advisory Panel on Health Care Innovation was struck last June by Health Minister Rona Ambrose to help find ways to reduce health spending and improve accessibility to care.
     
    The panel says in a new report that there is "no doubt" a major renovation of the medicare system is overdue.
     
    It also suggests the inability of federal, provincial and territorial governments to collaborate has slowed recommendations issued by previous panels and experts.
     
    The panel was chaired by Dr. David Naylor, a physician, researcher and past president of the University of Toronto.
     
    Naylor says Canada has a good health care system that is innovative in spots but that it falls short of its potential given the talent that exists.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Chain Stops Selling Confederate Flags

    Canadian Chain Stops Selling Confederate Flags
    The decision, posted by The Flag Shop on its Twitter account, follows a statement by the chain's president saying she doesn't want to "react hastily" by pulling the flag from shelves.

    Canadian Chain Stops Selling Confederate Flags

    Toronto Police Arrest Two In Connection With Sina Parsi Death

    Toronto Police Arrest Two In Connection With Sina Parsi Death
    Police say both Clyde Marshall, a former resident of New Brunswick, and Sabrina Chouart of Gatineau, Quebec, are scheduled to appear in court on Tuesday.

    Toronto Police Arrest Two In Connection With Sina Parsi Death

    Regulation Of Exotic Animals Gets Greater Scrutiny In New Brunswick After Deaths

    Regulation Of Exotic Animals Gets Greater Scrutiny In New Brunswick After Deaths
    A task force appointed by the provincial government after two New Brunswick boys were killed by an African rock python in 2013 is calling for the immediate inspection of all sites where exotic animals are kept.

    Regulation Of Exotic Animals Gets Greater Scrutiny In New Brunswick After Deaths

    Man Who Rode Moose In B.C. Lake Not At Prosecution Risk In Other Provinces

    Man Who Rode Moose In B.C. Lake Not At Prosecution Risk In Other Provinces
    A man who jumped onto the back of a moose as it swam across a lake could face animal-harassment charges in British Columbia, but would likely escape the threat of prosecution for a similar stunt in another province given Canada's patchwork of animal-rights laws

    Man Who Rode Moose In B.C. Lake Not At Prosecution Risk In Other Provinces

    Nova Scotia Defends Halifax Prison Procedures In Lawsuit Over Man's Jail Death

    Nova Scotia Defends Halifax Prison Procedures In Lawsuit Over Man's Jail Death
    Elizabeth Cromwell sued the province earlier this month, alleging a lack of control over the potentially deadly drug led to the death of Clayton Cromwell on April 7, 2014.

    Nova Scotia Defends Halifax Prison Procedures In Lawsuit Over Man's Jail Death

    Federal Court Orders Public Safety Minister, Rcmp To Hand Over Gun Registry Data

    OTTAWA — A Federal Court judge has ordered that Public Safety Minister Steven Blaney and the RCMP commissioner immediately hand over an external hard drive containing a copy of all Quebec gun registry data.

    Federal Court Orders Public Safety Minister, Rcmp To Hand Over Gun Registry Data