February 7, 2023
Today, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his provincial and territorial counterparts discussed actions needed to improve the health care system while adapting to the changing needs of Canadians.
The Government of Canada intends to work collaboratively with provinces and territories on four shared health priorities to improve integrated health care for Canadians:
Helping Canadians age with dignity, closer to home, with access to home care or care in a safe long-term care facility is another area of priority.
Canadians and their families deserve timely access to the health services they need, when and where they need them. The federal government will continue to work with provinces and territories, in the best interest of Canadians, their families and health workers to deliver concrete results for Canadians and improvements to the health care system.
Upholding the Canada Health Act (CHA) remains critical to protect Canada’s publicly funded health care system. The Government of Canada will continue to make sure provinces and territories respect the principles of the CHA by ensuring all Canadians have equitable access to medically necessary care based on their needs, not their ability to pay.
The Government of Canada announced today an investment of $196.1 billion over 10 years, including $46.2 billion in new funding, for provinces and territories to improve health care services for Canadians. This funding will be distributed partly through the Canada Health Transfer (CHT) and partly through tailor-made bilateral agreements with provinces and territories that allow for flexibility for jurisdictional health care system needs. In addition, it will invest $2.5 billion over 10 years to support Indigenous priorities and complementary federal support, for a total of $198.6 billion over 10 years.
These investments, on top of already significant funding, will further help provide Canadians with health care that includes:
Collaborative work is already underway with provinces and territories to help support access to home care and long-term care. This includes existing investments of $6 billion for home and community care and $4 billion to improve the quality and safety of long-term care. Included in the investment announced today is an additional $1.7 billion over 5 years to support wage increases for personal support workers and related professions.
The Canada Health Transfer (CHT) is the largest major federal transfer to provinces and territories ($49.4 billion in 2023-24). Since 2004-05, through cash and tax point transfers, the federal government has supported, on average, 32% of provincial and territorial health expenditures.
To access their share of the federal funding, including the guaranteed 5% growth top-up payments to the CHT, for the next five years, provincial and territorial governments are asked to commit to improve how health information is collected, shared, used and reported to Canadians to promote greater transparency on results, and to help manage public health emergencies. This will include an agreement to develop and use comparable indicators through the Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI) and its data partners, starting with the indicators outlined below. A broader suite of indicators, including for Indigenous Health, will be developed in collaboration with provinces and territories, experts, CIHI and Indigenous Peoples.
Building on the work by federal, provincial and territorial officials over the past several years on health data and digital strategies, provinces and territories will also be asked to agree to adopt common standards and policies related to data. Canadians should be able to access their own health information and benefit from it being shared between health workers across health settings and across jurisdictions.
Today, the Government of Canada announced that it would provide $25 billion over 10 years to provinces and territories to support shared health priorities through tailored bilateral agreements.
The Government of Canada recognizes that provinces and territories have their own unique circumstances. As such, the bilateral agreements are intended to be flexible, and tailored, so that provinces and territories can address the unique needs of their populations and geography.
As part of these agreements, provincial and territorial governments are asked to develop action plans that will describe how funds will be spent (incremental to existing spending) and how progress will be measured. As there is no health without mental health, an integrated, inclusive approach to investments in health service teams, the health workforce, and data and digital tools will help to meet the health and mental health needs of Canadians.
While investments are to be centered around the four shared health priorities, jurisdictions will have flexibility in designing their action plans, including the addition of targeted results with indicators that are tailored to their jurisdiction's needs and circumstances. Action plans with targeted results and indicators will be made available publicly by both federal and provincial and territorial governments, and provinces and territories would publicly report on results to their own residents.
Additionally, provinces and territories are being asked to streamline foreign credential recognition for internationally-educated health professionals, and to advance labour mobility, starting with multi-jurisdictional credential recognition for key health professionals.
The bilateral agreements will mutually respect each government's jurisdiction, and be underpinned by key principles, including:
Provinces and territories are further being asked to commit to negotiate and implement action plans for the remaining four years of funding for Home and Community Care and Mental Health and Addiction Services ($11 billion over 10 years), as well as the $3 billion investment announced in Budget 2021 to improve safety in long-term care.
To provide additional support for Indigenous health priorities:
The Government of Canada will also commit to dedicated action to advance and integrate our shared health priorities, and support collaboration, in areas such as immigration, credential recognition, official language minority communities and data infrastructure and standards. This includes the following additional funding:
What is measured, matters. By collecting and sharing health information the same way, Canadians can see the progress being made by each jurisdiction to deliver results on the shared priorities in health care for their populations.
The federal government is prepared to measure and report annual progress on the following common indicators with disaggregated data and is asking the provincial and territorial governments to do the same as part of their data commitment.
CIHI will lead a process with provinces, territories and experts to review and refine these existing common indicators and develop a broader list, including new indicators. This will enable jurisdictions and CIHI to report to Canadians based on comparable indicators and data on how health care is delivered across Canada and how it is performing and how it compares internationally. Bilateral agreements will include indicators tailored to provincial and territorial needs.
($ Millions) | NL | PE | NS | NB | QC | ON | MB | SK | AB | BC | NU | NT | YT | CA |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Canada Health TransferFootnote 2 | ||||||||||||||
Growth since 2022-23 | 1,192 | 623 | 3,305 | 2,358 | 26,717 | 57,963 | 4,838 | 4,243 | 18,917 | 21,449 | 127 | 151 | 171 | 142,054 |
CHT top-up for pediatric hospitals and emergency roomsFootnote 3 | 27 | 9 | 52 | 42 | 447 | 776 | 72 | 61 | 233 | 273 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2,000 |
CHT 5% guaranteeFootnote 4 | 210 | 76 | 439 | 341 | 3,702 | 6,827 | 619 | 530 | 2,109 | 2,436 | 17 | 20 | 20 | 17,346 |
Total CHT | 1,428 | 708 | 3,797 | 2,741 | 30,866 | 65,566 | 5,529 | 4,834 | 21,260 | 24,158 | 147 | 173 | 193 | 161,400 |
Tailored Bilateral Agreements | ||||||||||||||
Bilateral agreements | 749 | 288 | 1,014 | 900 | 4,842 | 8,413 | 1,220 | 1,114 | 2,923 | 3,321 | 70 | 73 | 73 | 25,000 |
Sub-total: CHT and bilateral agreements | 2,177 | 996 | 4,811 | 3,641 | 35,708 | 73,979 | 6,749 | 5,949 | 24,182 | 27,479 | 217 | 246 | 266 | 186,400 |
Personal Support Workers Wage Support | ||||||||||||||
PSW | To be determined | 1,709 | ||||||||||||
Other Bilateral Agreements | ||||||||||||||
Mental health and substance use | 31 | 11 | 62 | 49 | 527 | 938 | 86 | 73 | 282 | 334 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 2,400 |
Home and community care | 31 | 11 | 62 | 49 | 527 | 938 | 86 | 73 | 282 | 334 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 2,400 |
Long-term care | 43 | 19 | 81 | 65 | 646 | 1,149 | 110 | 95 | 350 | 413 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 3,000 |
Sub-total | 105 | 40 | 206 | 162 | 1,700 | 3,026 | 282 | 240 | 914 | 1,081 | 14 | 15 | 15 | 7,800 |
Territorial Health Investment Fund | ||||||||||||||
THIF | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 75 | 50 | 50 | 175 |
TOTAL | 2,282 | 1,036 | 5,016 | 3,803 | 37,409 | 77,006 | 7,031 | 6,189 | 25,096 | 28,560 | 306 | 311 | 331 | 196,084 |
|
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.