National Post

Saskatchew­an, Ottawa reach health deal

Agreement also in place on private MRIs

- Jennifer Graham

• The united front that provinces wanted in negotiatin­g a national healthfund­ing deal with Ottawa weakened Tuesday when Saskatchew­an struck an agreement with the federal government.

The deal holds the healthtran­sfer increase to either three per cent or the threeyear moving average of nominal GDP growth — whichever is higher.

It also includes an additional $ 348.8 million over 10 years for investment­s in home and mental- health care for Saskatchew­an. The federal government says it expects mental- health services for children and youth will be improved and the number of hospital patients who could be better cared for at home or in the community will be reduced.

Saskatchew­an Health Minister Jim Reiter suggested there wasn’t much choice but to sign the deal.

“The federal government made it very clear that they weren’t going to have a first ministers meeting on this and that they weren’t going to budge off those numbers,” Reiter said at the Saskatchew­an legislatur­e.

“There’s some very significan­t stresses in mentalheal­th and home care in this province, and we thought it was time to get on with the work.”

Late last year, the federal government offered to increase health- transfer payments by 3.5 per cent annually and fork out another $ 11.5 billion over 10 years in targeted funding, primarily for home care and mental health.

The provinces and territorie­s rejected the offer, which Ottawa said was only on the table for one day.

Saskatchew­an Premier Brad Wall said the provinces were hoping to pressure the federal government into increasing the annual health transfer at a rate of at least 5.2 per cent each year.

Almost immediatel­y after the offer was rejected, New Brunswick signalled that it would negotiate a bilateral deal. Newfoundla­nd and Labrador and Nova Scotia have since reached deals. So have the Northwest Territorie­s, Nunavut and Yukon.

“I think that united front went by the wayside long before our announceme­nt today,” said Reiter.

Saskatchew­an’ s deal would improve if any other jurisdicti­on were to reach an agreement with better terms.

Reiter also announced that Ottawa is letting Saskatchew­an continue with private MRI scans — at least for one year. Saskatchew­an’s legislatio­n allows MRIs paid for privately as long as the clinic does a second scan at no charge for a patient on the public wait list.

“It’s a year to prove that it works, that it conforms to the Canada Health Act,” said Reiter. He said the policy has led to 2,200 MRI scans — all provided at no cost to the taxpayer — and that 1,100 people have been taken off the wait list.

Federal Health Minister Jane Philpott said last fall that the plan was bad policy, bad medicine and violated the Canada Health Act. She told Saskatchew­an to stop or risk losing health-care funding.

THEY WEREN’T GOING TO BUDGE OFF THOSE NUMBERS.

 ?? MORRIS LAMONT / POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Allison Stacey plastered her front lawn with signs protesting the deal she says she got from a contractor who was hired to renovate her home in London, Ont.
MORRIS LAMONT / POSTMEDIA NEWS Allison Stacey plastered her front lawn with signs protesting the deal she says she got from a contractor who was hired to renovate her home in London, Ont.

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