Journal Pioneer

Minister disagrees with health board plan

Health Minister says Health P.E.I. board planned to send patients home earlier, close hospital beds

- BY RYAN ROSS

Health P.E.I.’s board of directors had a plan to send people home from hospital early and close beds to try to save money, says Health Minister Robert Mitchell.

Earlier this week, Health P.E.I.’s entire board of directors resigned over what its chairman, Alex MacBeath, said were concerns about a new governance model the government announced.

Mitchell responded to those comments Thursday, saying he didn’t agree with the board’s management plan.

“It’s not a path that Islanders gave us a mandate to do when they elected us three years ago,” he said.

The board’s management plan included moving patients out of beds and sending them home several days sooner than currently happens, Mitchell said.

Those beds, Mitchell said, would then be closed, which would lead to job losses. Mitchell said he asked the board to find other ways to meet its budget after several years of overspendi­ng.

“Obviously, they haven’t done that for several budget cycles, which is concerning.” MacBeath also said the board’s recommenda­tion for a new CEO was one of the things Mitchell rejected.

However, Mitchell said Thursday that the province hired a recruitmen­t firm for the CEO search.

The day before the final interviews a representa­tive from the firm made a recommenda­tion to re-open the search because it only had one candidate at the end of the process, Mitchell said.

“I followed his recommenda­tion.”

Mitchell added the board seemed to be onside with continuing the search for a new CEO.

“That was the agreement that was made that day.” Legislatio­n to change the Health Services Act is working its way through the legislatur­e and includes requiring Health P.E.I. to submit an operationa­l plan to the health minister. The legislatio­n would also change the size and compositio­n of the board and give the minister additional oversight. MacBeath told The Guardian the changes in the legislatio­n were a step in the wrong direction.

Opposition Leader James Aylward said the bill has given more power to the minister.

“I don’t know exactly what’s happening behind the scenes, but obviously there’s some major disagreeme­nts and lack of confidence in this minister and this government if we see an entire board walking away,” he said.

Aylward questioned why Mitchell didn’t mention the board’s plan to cut beds when discussing the matter in the legislatur­e Wednesday.

“Obviously, if he knew of a strategic plan by Health P.E.I. and the board he should have come out and defended health care and Islanders right away on that,” he said.

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Robert Mitchell

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