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New National Report Outlines the Huge Cost of the Failed Health Accord
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Edmonton, AB, October, 2017 -
As Health Ministers from across Canada meet in Edmonton, Canada's
Health Coalitions released a report showing the recent bilateral health
schemes pushed through by the Trudeau government have come at a huge
cost. The report "Health Accord Breakdown: Costs and Consequences of the Failed 2016/17 Negotiations"
calculates that the failure of the Health Accord will mean a health
care funding shortfall of $31 billion for the provinces with no concrete
targets to improve public health care for Canadians and no plan to
bridge the fiscal gap. Calling the rhetoric around health transformation
and target funds for home and mental health care "more PR than
substance", the coalitions also tallied the non-monetary costs of the
lost Health Accord: the grave problems of under capacity in public
hospitals, long-term and community care; long-waits; growing inequities
and problems with access to care that will continue without any national
plan to address them.
The report includes a province-by-province breakdown of the
shortfall between the funding contained in the bilateral deals and the
level of funding required just to ensure that our current basket of
public health care services remain for the next 10 years. The numbers
are substantial. For worst-hit provinces, the gap ranges from $3.4 to
$13.6 billion.
"The Trudeau government's bilateral health funding schemes
represent a fundamental break both with their election promises and with
the previous Liberal policy. Instead of a revitalized federalism,
building from the 2004 Health Accord's reinvestments and the groundwork
that was laid to restore health services and set measurable targets for
progress, the Trudeau Government has aligned itself with the
retrenchment policies of the Harper era," says Natalie Mehra, co-author
of the report and Executive Director, Ontario Health Coalition. "A
fundamental policy rethink is needed."
"Patients are going to notice the effect of these cuts. It's
only a matter of time until the Health Accord will have to be
negotiated," says Adrienne Silnicki, co-author of the report and
Director of Policy and Advocacy, Canadian Health Coalition. "A Health
Accord should be seen as an opportunity to protect, strengthen and
expand our public health care system. It is too important to give up for
another decade."
Health Coalitions across Canada are calling on the federal,
provincial, territorial to return to the negotiating table. To safeguard
public health care for all, the federal government must agree to pay
their fair share, and commit to meeting the real costs of health care.
This requires at least a 5.2 per cent CHT escalator. To strengthen
public health care, the federal, provincial, and territorial governments
must reaffirm their commitment to the Canada Health Act and the Federal
government must properly enforce the Act. Both levels of government
must commit that public health care funding is spent on public health
care and must build capacity to reduce wait times and implement national
standards so people across Canada can access equitable high quality
public health care services. To expand public health care, federal
leadership is needed to create a national drug plan, a seniors' care
plan and improve mental health care.
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For more information, please contact: Natalie Mehra, Executive Director and report co-author, Ontario Health Coalition 416-441-2502 or ohc@sympatico.ca;
Adrienne Silnicki, National Director, Policy and Advocacy and report
co-author, Canadian Health Coalition 613-402-6793; Sandra Azocar,
Executive Director, Friends of Medicare (Alberta) 780-423-4581; Chris
Parsons, Provincial Coordinator, Nova Scotia Health Coalition
902-406-9422; Nat Lowe, Organizer, British Columbia Health Coalition
604-349-9079; Mary Boyd, Chair, P.E.I. Health Coalition 902-892-9074;
Craig Yeo, Alternatives North craig.yeo@gmail.com
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