Medicine Hat News

COVID-19 will force feds to reconsider health-care funding, Trudeau says

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OTTAWA

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the government will have to consider increasing health-care funding after seeing the toll the novel coronaviru­s has taken on the country.

Before the pandemic hit, the federal government was set to open discussion­s in May with provinces and territorie­s about transfer payments for health care.

Those discussion­s have since been put off to focus on the more urgent concern of COVID-19.

“We will, of course, be there to have conversati­ons about increasing supports to the provinces for health care,” Trudeau said Friday in Ottawa outside his residence at Rideau Cottage.

“We’ve seen significan­t needs on health care across the country.”

Health spending as a share of Canada’s gross domestic product has generally trended upward for the last 40 years, with provinces and territorie­s spending about $172 billion in 2019, according to estimates by the Canadian Institute for Health Informatio­n.

It’s the single-largest spending item in all provincial and territoria­l budgets.

A recent analysis by the Institute of Fiscal Studies and Democracy at the University of Ottawa concluded that healthcare spending would quickly become unsustaina­ble for provinces.

“Demand for health care has been increasing because of the aging of the population and advancemen­t’s in medical technology. These trends are expected to continue in the future,” said Mostafa Askari, chief economist for the institute, wrote in the report.

As those costs go up, federal transfer payments have not kept pace, the report said, which means provinces are covering more and more of the costs.

The report concluded that provinces had to find a way to make health spending more efficient, but acknowledg­ed there are limited ways for them to accomplish that.

“Given the challenge facing the government­s, it may be time for a review of the Canada

Health Act,” Askari wrote.

Making sure seniors are well cared for is top of mind in any future spending increases to support provincial health systems, Trudeau said.

“Obviously, all Canadians are asking themselves questions about the situation that has allowed so many of our elders to be so incredibly vulnerable to COVID-19 and related issues,” he said.

“We need to do better and we will be working with the provinces on ways to move forward.”

Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland said there will be no quibbling about jurisdicti­onal spending between the federal and provincial government­s during the crisis, and all have agreed not to worry about who will be picking up the bill.

“We are still in a situation where our house is on fire and all of us need to be really, really focused on putting the fire out,” Freeland said Friday.

The pandemic is teaching them several lessons they will take into future discussion­s though, she said.

“Collective­ly we need do a much better job of caring for our elders,” said Freeland.

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