Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Premiers urge regular health-care reviews

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Feb, 2023 12:53 PM
  • Premiers urge regular health-care reviews

Canada's premiers wrote Thursday to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau asking for regular reviews to be established as part of health-care funding talks, saying the system needs predictability.

Ottawa has offered more than $46 billion to provinces and territories to augment the Canada Health Transfer but the country's premiers say they're "disappointed" with the amount.

"While this first step marks a positive development, the federal approach will clearly not address structural health-care funding needs, nor long-term sustainability challenges we face in our health-care systems across the country," the premiers wrote to Trudeau.

The letter said premiers are prepared to accept the offer for now, but further discussions are needed to establish longer-term predictability and stability in health care, they wrote.

They want a formal federal-provincial-territorial review process to look at bilateral funding deals the provinces made with Ottawa in 2017 to upgrade mental health and home care programs.

They want a similar process to review the new deal, which will include both a bump to the annual Canada Health Transfer and specific funding for priority areas like family doctors, surgical backlogs and health data systems.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford sent a separate letter Thursday urging the same reviews, but specifying that the review of the 2017 bilateral agreements should happen by March 31, 2026, and that the broader review should happen around the five-year mark of the Canada Health Transfer deal.

That larger review should consider what results have been seen up to that point in family health services, health workers and backlogs, mental health and substance use, and health system modernization, Ford wrote.

"Ontario is looking to ensure sustainability and certainty in federal health-care funding to support our ongoing work in improving health outcomes," he wrote.

"I believe that we will swiftly come to an agreement to ensure that our health-care system can meet the needs of Ontarians both now and into the future."

MORE National ARTICLES

NDP want emergency debate on private health care

NDP want emergency debate on private health care
It’s a top priority for the leader as members of Parliament return to the House Monday following a holiday break. Singh spent some of that time away holding round table discussions on health care in British Columbia to discuss emergency room overcrowding and worker shortages.

NDP want emergency debate on private health care

Canadian police chiefs speak out on Nichols' death

Canadian police chiefs speak out on Nichols' death
The condemnation of the actions that led to Tyre Nichols' death came as authorities in Memphis, Tenn., released a video of what happened. The footage shows officers holding Nichols down and striking him repeatedly as he screamed for his mother.    

Canadian police chiefs speak out on Nichols' death

Dix 'delighted' premiers will meet PM on health

Dix 'delighted' premiers will meet PM on health
Adrian Dix says the premiers had long been asking to meet Justin Trudeau as they call on Ottawa to boost its contributions through the Canada Health Transfer. Dix says a "major impediment" has been overcome simply by agreeing to sitting down at the Feb. 7 talks in Ottawa, as the premiers had been asking to meet for two years.

Dix 'delighted' premiers will meet PM on health

129 cattle seized from B.C. property: SPCA

129 cattle seized from B.C. property: SPCA
They were also suffering from a range of medical issues, including untreated eye infections, lameness, inflamed udders, overgrown hoofs and diarrhea. The statement says "numerous carcasses" of dead cows were also discovered on the property.

129 cattle seized from B.C. property: SPCA

FortisBC Holdings to collaborate with First Nation

FortisBC Holdings to collaborate with First Nation
FortisBC Holdings says it respects Snuneymuxw's rights in relation to the potential effects of the project and is committed to sharing project benefits with the First Nation. It says Snuneymuxw has committed to supporting the projects and participating in the required regulatory processes.

FortisBC Holdings to collaborate with First Nation

Is COVID-19 still a global health emergency?

Is COVID-19 still a global health emergency?
WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus will make the final call based on the advice the committee gives him. He warned earlier this week that he remains concerned about the impact of the virus, noting there were 170,000 deaths from COVID-19 reported around the world in the last two months.

Is COVID-19 still a global health emergency?