The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Wisdom in room going unnoticed

Meeting heard of lack of consultati­on with frontline health workers and community members

- BY SUSAN HARTLEY

Caring for our health-care system is a complex, multi-faceted task, just as caring for our own health is.

While having a consistent relationsh­ip with a family doctor is essential, there are many resources, beyond family doctors, that we might access to support our health and our family’s health. In the same way, a healthy health care system is best achieved when decision makers think more broadly, more holistical­ly, and, above all, more sustainabl­y; when they look beyond the usual short term or singular remedies.

At the public forum on health care in Montague, I asked Minister Robert Mitchell what plans his department had, beyond doctor recruitmen­t, to ensure sustainabl­e (long term) and accessible acute care for Islanders. I wasn’t the only person at the forum asking that question. The response we were given was that the government is busy recruiting — a confusing response after Minister Mitchell’s comment that if physicians indicate they would like to come to rural P.E.I. then the community needs to step up to sell the job like a tour operator sells the Island to a tourist.

There was wisdom in that room last week, and that wisdom sadly seemed to go unnoticed.

I found the simple, shortsight­ed solutions and cries for more of the same coming from politician­s to be devaluing and disrespect­ful of the intelligen­t, resourcefu­l and invested people in the room.

Community members spoke of the relationsh­ip between health, business, education, and rural developmen­t, while Minister Mitchell stayed solidly within his silo, commenting at one point that his thing isn’t education, it’s health.

Community members spoke of collaborat­ive models and going beyond the same old, same old solutions for the challenges in acute care. They offered solutions, identified problems with profession­al territoria­lity, pointed out when the statistics being offered were inaccurate or misleading, and concerning­ly, spoke of the lack of consultati­on with frontline health workers and community members.

The same old reactive approach to addressing health-care shortfalls came from both the red and blue parties, and as someone who was there to listen and learn from the community, I tend to believe my frustratio­n is shared.

Community members have ideas, see the interplay between all aspects of life and community, know their needs best, and above all, want health for their families. Good solutions — long-term, sustainabl­e solutions — will come from good, open, and honest dialogue with Islanders. I did not see the opportunit­y for that at the Montague meeting, but I did see the desire.

 ?? GUARDIAN FILE PHOTO ?? P.E.I. Health Minister Robert Mitchell
GUARDIAN FILE PHOTO P.E.I. Health Minister Robert Mitchell

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