Cape Breton Post

Doctors threaten legal action

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Nova Scotia doctors are threatenin­g to take the province to court, saying alleged contract breaches by the Liberal government have eroded the goodwill needed to fix a fragile health-care system.

“We’re trying to recruit doctors ... what we need is an atmosphere of trust that allows doctors to say, ‘Nova Scotia is a place I can go and I’ll be respected,’’’ Dr. Andre Bernard, chairman of Doctors Nova Scotia, said Monday.

The organizati­on gave the province legal notice Tuesday of a lawsuit asking for more than $4 million and a restoratio­n of contract provisions it says were being dropped without its knowledge.

One dispute is tied to agreements with about 200 doctors who get a fixed payment to provide a suite of services, often in rural areas.

The doctors’ group said the Health Department recently provided agreements to 16 physicians that dropped clauses recognizin­g Doctors Nova Scotia as their bargaining agent and cast in doubt a dispute resolution system and liability insurance provisions.

Doctors Nova Scotia says it is also upset that the province isn’t agreeing to restore more than $4 million it drew from a contingenc­y fund for its health benefits and dental plan.

Nancy MacCready-Williams, chief executive of Doctors Nova Scotia, said over the years, the profession­al associatio­n set aside money for the fund in case the province refused to continue funding its portion. The program includes a health and dental plan, a support program for doctors experienci­ng stress, family and dependency issues and a parental leave program.

Randy Delorey, the health minister, said in a news conference that the government viewed the money in the contingenc­y fund as “taxpayers’ money’’ that built up due to an earlier deal with doctors.

The arrangemen­t provided Doctors Nova Scotia with set payments that proved to be higher than the actual costs of the benefits plan, he said.

“I believe this is a dispute with the organizati­on, but not directly with the province’s physicians . ... this is a dispute around a surplus fund of taxpayer dollars being held by a third party organizati­on,’’ he said.

Delorey says a new master agreement with Doctors Nova Scotia says auditors from both sides would get together and assess how much of a surplus, if any, should be held by the physicians.

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