Edmonton Journal

Health care in a ‘crisis,’ CMA boss insists

- EMMA GRANEY

With the premiers set to meet in Edmonton this week, the Canadian Medical Associatio­n is pushing for national health guidelines.

That national vision is necessary to stave off further degradatio­n in the quality of Canada’s health care, CMA president Dr. Granger Avery said.

Canadian health care has been steadily going downhill for the past 30 years. It’s currently ranked 10th out of 11 similar public systems around the developed world, yet spends the sixth-highest amount of money.

In short, Avery said, it is “an expensive system that doesn’t actually give people what they need.”

In Avery’s view, Canadian health care is now at a crossroads — either it can continue along the path it’s on and keep going downhill, or government­s can come together to institute a national set of guidelines and help it turn a corner.

“Not only is this really important, but it is actually an opportunit­y for Canada to stand out in the world and say, ‘Hey, we can figure this out, and if you want, you can copy what we’re doing here,’” he said.

PUSHING THE PREMIERS

With the federal government missing numerous opportunit­ies to implement national standards over the years, the CMA will push hard for change in Edmonton this week at the Council of the Federation meetings.

Health care raises its head at the national event every year, but Avery is hopeful 2017 will mark a turning point. There are so many crises in the system right now, he said, that avoidance is no longer tenable.

As a small sample, Avery lists long surgery waiting times, the scores of Canadians without a general practition­er, seniors who can’t afford the drugs they need, the opioid crisis and myriad issues with Indigenous health.

Those individual problems are relatively simple to wrap one’s head around, he said, but systemic change is daunting.

“That piece, that daunting task, revolves around how we make the decisions (and) … the actual structure of decision-making is the most important thing,” he said.

“There’s no doubt that it’s a crisis, and the reason government­s haven’t really addressed this properly is because of the size of it.”

Avery wants government leaders to come together at the Council of the Federation meetings and start nailing down an agreement across the country to address standards, the way health care is envisioned and designed, and management oversight. If that change doesn’t happen, he can imagine a dark future for public health care.

“I don’t want to be Chicken Little here,” he said, “but we are actually getting worse, not better, and that’s despite spending all of this money.”

 ?? CNW GROUP/ CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATIO­N ?? CMA president Dr. Granger Avery says our “expensive” health-care system doesn’t give Canadians what they need.
CNW GROUP/ CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATIO­N CMA president Dr. Granger Avery says our “expensive” health-care system doesn’t give Canadians what they need.

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