Provinces, federal government fail to make progress on health-care funding

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After more than two days of meeting, provincial health ministers and the federal health minister have been unable to come up with next steps on health care funding.

In a statement from the Council of the Federation, released while the ministers were still meeting, the organization representing premiers expressed disappointment with the lack of a federal response on the critical issue of sustainable health funding.

The provinces have been asking the federal government to agree to a meeting that would include Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the premiers.

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The premiers say despite ‘repeated invitations’ and efforts by premiers to engage with the prime minister, he has not engaged in a meaningful dialogue.

Currently, the federal government covers 22 per cent of health care spending and the provinces are asking for this to increase to 35 per cent.

“Provinces and territories are working hard to improve the health services that Canadians rely on that have been under heavy strain through the COVID-19 pandemic,” the statement from the Council of the Federation reads.

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“Substantive resources are required to support and accelerate this essential work, and provinces and territories need a predictable federal funding partner.”

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The provincial health ministers were optimistic they could make some inroads on negotiations that have seemingly hit a roadblock.

On Monday, federal health minister Jean-Yves Duclos told reporters Ottawa is willing to provide additional health-care dollars to provinces and territories.

In exchange, the jurisdictions must commit to expanding the use of common key health indicators and to building a “world-class” health data system for the country.

The federal government has also not ruled out working with individual provinces on health care funding.

The premiers are still optimistic about working with federal counterparts to discuss supporting immigration of trained health professionals, but noted the federal government’s primary role in supporting health care is with long-term, sustainable funding through the Canadian Health Transfers.

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“The prime minister must meet with premiers to ensure provinces and territories have the resources and flexibility they need to make significant improvements in health care services and to deliver the care that Canadians deserve,” Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson said in a release.

“Canadians should be able to receive high quality health services now and for the future. It is time for the Prime Minister to honour his commitment and come to the table.”

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