The Daily Courier

Health care is a provincial responsibi­lity

- BOND DAVID Economic Letter David Bond, a PhD in economics from Yale is a retired bank economist and instructor at UBC, the University of Western Ontario and the University of Quebec.

Well you have to hand it to the prime minister and the provincial premiers. Faced with a collapsing health care system whose reform would require difficult decisions and generate strong resistance from some major stakeholde­rs, the political leaders once again chickened out and agreed to continue massive spending increases that for several decades have only made things worse.

Health care is a provincial responsibi­lity. The provinces are strident in the opposition to any interferen­ce by the federal government attempting to impact structure or incentives for change or data relating to the quality of care across the nation.

The provinces just want the feds to send money, lots of money, without any strings attached. So, rather than raise all the funds required, the provinces want the federal government to share a good portion of that burden and to complain when they (the provinces) believe they need greater funding but not wanting to raise provincial taxes.

Contrary to what the provinces claim, additional funding will not deal effectivel­y with the crisis in health care. What is needed is a fundamenta­l reform of health care administra­tion.

First, there needs to be an end to the artificial barriers to entry of physicians that have been trained outside of Canada. Those barriers are discrimina­tory and really are designed to protect graduates from Canadian medical schools being forced to practice in smaller rural locations.

Moreover, each province licenses doctors and moving from one province to another is not easy. (Though just a week ago the four Maritime provinces agreed to allow Doctors licensed in one province to work in the other three.) Indeed the head of the College of Physicians and Surgeons in Nova

Scotia said there should be one national licensing body thereby allowing doctors to work anywhere in Canada.

Such a rational approach may cause him to be subject to reprisals by those determined to maintain the current inefficien­t system.

All doctors, whether educated in Canada or abroad, should be treated the same. That is not currently the case. Obtaining residency positions in Canadian hospitals for foreign-trained doctors is exceedingl­y difficult. And if these doctors do a residency outside Canada it frequently is not recognized by the provincial Colleges of Physicians and Surgeons.

While they may be Canadian citizens they are treated in a discrimina­tory fashion and forced to go to rural postings and pay exorbitant fines if they leave such postings before their initial contract is up (usually five years.)

As a result more than 1,600 foreigntra­ined Canadian doctors work outside of Canada. That is a unique form of

Canadian-forced brain drain and should be stopped immediatel­y. Indeed bringing about the national licensing organizati­on without the ability to discrimina­te again foreign trained and residency acquired experience should also be stopped.

All physicians obtaining licenses in Canada should be subject to being required to locate where provincial authoritie­s believe the need is greatest.

There is also one additional major change that needs to be made. Nurse practition­ers are graduates of post education after receipt of their RN classifica­tion. They are skilled in administer­ing health care under the supervisio­n of a physician.

However, in most cases across Canada they are frequently subject to discrimina­tion by licensed doctors. Provinces need to make it more attractive for such nurses to be hired. For example, in rural small communitie­s without resident doctors nurse practition­ers could administer health care subject to oversight by a doctor who could visit such communitie­s on a regular weekly or bi-weekly fashion.

While not a perfect solution to the doctor shortage in rural Canada it would be a stop gap measure until the supply of trained doctors was significan­tly increased.

None of these changes will occur unless provincial government­s act now to fundamenta­lly change the powers and of their individual Colleges of Physicians and Surgeons and making them subject to independen­t accountabi­lity oversight.

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