|
December 6, 2002
Romanows report:
Whats in it
A commitment to public
health care, equal access for all
Roy Romanow, head
of the royal commission on the future of Canadas health care system, inside
Pangnirtungs nursing station during a vist last April.
(FILE PHOTO)
|
NUNATSIAQ NEWS
If you favour a health-care
system thats publicly funded and available to everyone regardless of ability
to pay, then youll like Roy Romanows report on health care in Canada.
But if you favour public-private
partnerships, for-profit medical clinics, user fees for patients, or the creation
of a parallel private system for those who can afford it, then youll find
the Romanow report a big disappointment.
The head of the Commission
on the Future of Health Care in Canada states emphatically in his report, released
Nov. 28, that health services provided by private businesses are better or more
efficient than services funded by taxpayers.
Here are the highlights:
Federal, provincial
and territorial governments should create a "Canadian Health Covenant"
pledging their commitment to a universally accessible, publicly funded health-care
system.
Ottawa should spend
$1.5 billion to improve access to health care in remote and rural areas of Canada
this could include money for capital purchases, telehealth projects,
new programs, and more money to pay nurses and doctors in remote regions.
Ottawa should spend
$1.5 billion to reduce waiting times for diagnostic services such as MRI scans.
This would include money to buy more MRI and other scanning devices for use
in publicly funded hospitals and clinics so that affluent people will
be less likely to buy their way into better health care by paying cash to for-profit
diagnostic clinics.
Ottawa should spend
$2.5 billion a year to shore up primary care delivery. "Primary care"
is the jargon word used to describe the "first-contact" care that
people get from doctors or nurse practitioners.
Ottawa should spend
$2 billion over two years to create a national home-care program Romanow
also says home care should be listed as an insured service and people who quit
work to look after sick family members should get EI and other benefits.
Ottawa should spend
$1 billion to help people pay for highly expensive prescription drugs that force
them to make a choice between life-saving prescriptions and things like food
or rent this should benefit lower-income non-Inuit in Nunavut who arent
covered by employee drug plans.
Scattered pots of
funding for aboriginal health care within territories and provinces should be
gathered together into consolidated pools but Romanow doesnt directly
address Inuit complaints about high costs in the Arctic, especially the cost
of medical travel.
Ottawa must pay
at least 25 per cent of territorial and provincial health insurance costs
at least $6.5 billion a year more by 2005-06. Romanow says the money should
be paid out to the provinces and territories through a new program called the
"Canada Health Transfer" that means it would be earmarked for
health only.
Federal, provincial
and territorial governments should create a body called the "Canadian Health
Council" to act as a watchdog over the performance of the health system,
and to resolve disputes.
|