Nova Scotia plan to address challenges in health system panned for lacking detail
The highly anticipated plan for reforming Nova Scotia's ailing health system is "nothing new" and lacks detail, opposition parties said Friday, after the Progressive Conservatives released their strategy to fulfil their main election promise.
Originally scheduled to be released at the end of March, the government's 31-page "Action for Health" plan outlines six broad areas that need reform. The Tories say they also want to tackle three core issues -- recruitment and retention of health-care professionals, access to care, and replacement of outdated infrastructure.
However, there are no timelines or targets included in the four-year plan that is expected to run until 2026.
"It's a smattering of bullet points that have been put together for a marketing document," Liberal Leader Iain Rankin told reporters Friday. "A plan would have specific timelines on how they are going to action new items, so I'm very underwhelmed."
Health officials, however, said Friday they intend to establish benchmarks for such things as doctor recruitment and patient wait-lists for surgeries by early summer.
But NDP health critic Susan Leblanc said that isn't good enough.
"This plan came out three weeks late and now we're told that we need to wait again for benchmarks and targets," Leblanc said. "There's nothing new, there are action words but there's nothing to make them immediate."
The Tories were elected last August largely on a single-issue campaign of addressing problems in health care.
On Friday, Premier Tim Houston was adamant his government's plan will give "structure" to what needs to be done to improve the system.
"We are going to make significant improvements to health care," Houston said. "We are very focused on making sure Nova Scotians can access the care they need when they need it."
The broad reforms outlined for the system include making the province a "magnet" for health professionals by streamlining recruitment. The plan also calls for expanding virtual care to consultations with specialists and to be an option in emergency departments.
Houston said the utilization of virtual care as a way of accessing primary care will be a feature of the system for the foreseeable future.
The remaining areas outlined in the government's strategy include steps to expand the role of health professionals such as nurses and pharmacists, to build accountability at every level of the system and to support programs that promote health and well-being.
Houston said the proposed reform incorporates much of what was heard during a fall public tour by government officials, who sought feedback from nurses, doctors and other health professionals.
In their campaign platform, the Tories promised to increase the number of family doctors and nurses, bolster the mental health system and increase the number of long-term care beds in the province by 2,500. They also promised to reduce surgery wait times to the national average within 18 months.
The government's 2022-23 budget tabled in late March contains $5.7 billion for health care -- an increase of $413.4 million compared to last fiscal year's spending. Within that fiscal envelope is $17.5 million to perform an additional 2,500 surgeries.
Currently, the province has a backlog of about 27,000 surgeries, many postponed because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Other pressing issues are doctor shortages that have seen the province's primary care wait-list balloon to just over 88,000 people as of April 1 and an acute-care bed-occupancy rate that was at 106 per cent earlier this week.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 22, 2022.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Appeals court overturns Harvey Weinstein's 2020 rape conviction from landmark trial
New York’s highest court on Thursday overturned Harvey Weinstein’s 2020 rape conviction, finding the judge at the landmark #MeToo trial prejudiced the ex-movie mogul with improper rulings, including a decision to let women testify about allegations that weren’t part of the case.
BREAKING Honda to get up to $5B in govt help for EV battery, assembly plants
Honda is set to build an electric vehicle battery plant next to its Alliston, Ont., assembly plant, which it is retooling to produce fully electric vehicles, all part of a $15-billion project that is expected to include up to $5 billion in public money.
1 arrested in northern Alberta during public shelter order
Residents of John D'Or Prairie, a community on the Little Red River Cree Nation in northern Alberta, were told to take shelter Thursday morning during a police operation.
Secret $70M Lotto Max winners break their silence
During a special winner celebration near their hometown, Doug and Enid shared the story of how they discovered they were holding a Lotto Max ticket worth $70 million and how they kept this huge secret for so long.
Remains from a mother-daughter cold case were found nearly 24 years later, after a deathbed confession from the suspect
A West Virginia father is getting some sense of closure after authorities found the remains of his young daughter and her mother following a deathbed confession from the man believed to have fatally shot them nearly two decades ago.
New deep-water channel allows first ship to pass Key bridge wreckage in Baltimore
The first cargo ship passed through a newly opened deep-water channel in Baltimore on Thursday after being stuck in the harbor since the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed four weeks ago, halting most maritime traffic through the city's port.
First in Canada procedure performed at London, Ont. hospital
A London man has become the first person in Canada to receive a robotic assisted surgery on his spine. Dave Myeh suffered from debilitating, chronic back pain that led to sciatica in his right now and extreme pain in his lower back.
Monthly earnings rise, payroll employment falls: jobs report
The number of vacant jobs in Canada increased in February, while monthly payroll employment decreased in food services, manufacturing, and retail trade, among other sectors.
Doctors say capital gains tax changes will jeopardize their retirement. Is that true?
The Canadian Medical Association asserts the Liberals' proposed changes to capital gains taxation will put doctors' retirement savings in jeopardy, but some financial experts insist incorporated professionals are not as doomed as they say they are.