Close X
Saturday, October 5, 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

Workers, Families Take WorksafeBC To Court Over 2012 Mill Explosions

Workers, Families Take WorksafeBC To Court Over 2012 Mill Explosions
The separate fires in Burns Lake and Prince George killed a total of four workers and injured 42 others.

Workers, Families Take WorksafeBC To Court Over 2012 Mill Explosions

Lululemon Athletic ups Q4 guidance; shares soar in after-hours trading

VANCOUVER — Shares in Lululemon Athletica inc. (Nasdaq:LULU) rose sharply in after-hours trading Monday after the Vancouver-based activewear retail announced improved guidance for its fiscal fourth quarter.

Lululemon Athletic ups Q4 guidance; shares soar in after-hours trading

Stephane Dion Says He's Concerned For Security Of Human Rights Sources In Saudi Arabia

Stephane Dion Says He's Concerned For Security Of Human Rights Sources In Saudi Arabia
Dion is responding to the growing clamour over the government's decision to allow an Ontario company to sell $15 billion worth of light armoured vehicles to Saudi Arabia in spite of its questionable human rights record.

Stephane Dion Says He's Concerned For Security Of Human Rights Sources In Saudi Arabia

Crown Prince Of Morocco Really Doesn’t Like His Hand Kissed

Crown Prince Of Morocco Really Doesn’t Like His Hand Kissed
In a video that has been widely shared, Prince Moulay Hassan snatches his hand away every time someone tries to kiss it.

Crown Prince Of Morocco Really Doesn’t Like His Hand Kissed

B.C. Resident Diagnosed With Zika Virus After Returning From El Salvador

B.C. Resident Diagnosed With Zika Virus After Returning From El Salvador
The Public Health Agency of Canada says a B.C. resident who recently travelled to El Salvador has contracted a dengue-like virus transmitted through mosquito bites.

B.C. Resident Diagnosed With Zika Virus After Returning From El Salvador

Canada's Economic Growth Hit Hard By Falling Oil Prices: Finance Minister Bill Morneau

Canada's Economic Growth Hit Hard By Falling Oil Prices: Finance Minister Bill Morneau
ill Morneau told several hundred people attending a Halifax Chamber of Commerce luncheon that his department's projections on growth since the 2015 budget have fallen due to oil prices that are less than half those of 2014. 

Canada's Economic Growth Hit Hard By Falling Oil Prices: Finance Minister Bill Morneau