Close X
Friday, October 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Health Ministers Set Tone For Future Agreements

Darpan News Desk, 20 Jan, 2016 12:36 PM
  • Health Ministers Set Tone For Future Agreements
VICTORIA — British Columbia Health Minister Terry Lake says talks between federal, provincial and territorial leaders could pave the way for future health-care agreements.
 
Two days of talks are scheduled to begin today in Vancouver.
 
A sign of warmer relations between the federal government and the provinces and territories came Tuesday when federal Health Minister Jane Philpott announced Ottawa is joining a provincial program that buys drugs in bulk to save costs.
 
Michael Prince, a health policy expert at the University of Victoria, says the previous Conservative government was not hands-on when it came to intergovernmental issues like health care.
 
He says the Liberals are signalling they want to engage with the provinces, but he warns that health issues always boil down to dollars.
 
Lake says he's not expecting huge breakthroughs on funding formulas and drug policies, but the two days of health talks starting today could pave the way for agreements in the fall.

MORE National ARTICLES

That's Some Bling: Vancouver Company Recovers 1,111-carat Diamond In Botswana

That's Some Bling: Vancouver Company Recovers 1,111-carat Diamond In Botswana
Lucara Diamond Corp. says it recovered a 1,111-carat diamond measuring 65 millimetres by 56 mm by 40 mm.

That's Some Bling: Vancouver Company Recovers 1,111-carat Diamond In Botswana

Vancouver Crackdown On Illegal Street Vendors Displaces Homeless: Advocates

Vancouver Crackdown On Illegal Street Vendors Displaces Homeless: Advocates
Dozens of homeless people in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside are being displaced by a heavy police presence during the city's push to relocate illegal sidewalk vendors to sanctioned markets, advocates say.

Vancouver Crackdown On Illegal Street Vendors Displaces Homeless: Advocates

Two New Brunswick Police Officers Charged In Man's Shooting Death

Two New Brunswick Police Officers Charged In Man's Shooting Death
Michel Vienneau of Tracadie-Sheila was fired on in his vehicle near the Bathurst train station on Jan. 12.

Two New Brunswick Police Officers Charged In Man's Shooting Death

Hijab Day At Halifax Library Aims To Address Misconceptions

Hijab Day At Halifax Library Aims To Address Misconceptions
HALIFAX — Members of Halifax's Muslim community are confronting misconceptions about their faith by holding an information session about the hijab this weekend.

Hijab Day At Halifax Library Aims To Address Misconceptions

B.C. Government To Boost MRI Scans By 65,000 Over Four Years To Rid Backlog

B.C. Government To Boost MRI Scans By 65,000 Over Four Years To Rid Backlog
Premier Christy Clark says British Columbians have been enduring waits of up to eight months for MRI scans, but that's about to change.

B.C. Government To Boost MRI Scans By 65,000 Over Four Years To Rid Backlog

Guelph, Ont., Artist Patrick Cruz Wins $25,000 RBC Canadian Painting Competition

Guelph, Ont., Artist Patrick Cruz Wins $25,000 RBC Canadian Painting Competition
He took the $25,000 honour on Wednesday for his work entitled "Time allergy."

Guelph, Ont., Artist Patrick Cruz Wins $25,000 RBC Canadian Painting Competition