The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Compensati­on draws questions

Liberals call $400,000 program a ‘CERB for doctors’

- STU NEATBY stu.neatby@theguardia­n.pe.ca @stu_neatby

Liberal Robert Henderson dubbed a $434,000 line item reserved for compensati­ng doctors affected financiall­y by the COVID-19 pandemic as a “CERB for doctors” during question period last week in the provincial legislatur­e.

Henderson asked Health Minister James Aylward about the compensati­on package. A total of $434,000 was spent on doctor compensati­on before the end of March and an additional $1.9 million was budgeted on the same item between April 1 and May 15.

The Canada Emergency Response Benefit (CERB) is a federal program that currently provides financial assistance to workers affected by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

"Could you explain to this legislatur­e what are the specifics of this program? What is it designed to do?" Henderson asked.

Aylward said the physician compensati­on package was for physicians who were impacted due to the public health restrictio­ns imposed earlier in the pandemic, which restricted visits to clinics. Fee-for-service doctors are paid by the province on a per-visit basis.

"We worked with the Medical Society of Prince Edward Island, (which) represents the fee for service doctors and we came up with a program where they would still be compensate­d while this pandemic was going on," Aylward said.

"These physicians, in many cases, still had offices to maintain, rent-wise. They had staff as well that they still needed to maintain."

"So, you're sort of saying it's like a CERB program for doctors, is that it?" Henderson asked.

Henderson then asked what services were provided to Islanders as a result of the expenditur­e.

Aylward said the province’s master agreement with physicians obligates the province to help doctors financiall­y in certain circumstan­ces.

"That's what this government did. They took the responsibi­lities (seriously), so that when we came out of the pandemic, we still had a health-care system to go back to," Aylward said.

As of last fall, P.E.I. had 77 full-time equivalent physicians paid through fee-forservice, which represente­d about 34 per cent of P.E.I. doctors.

Aylward said the compensati­on package was offered partly out of a sense of loyalty to physicians in P.E.I.

"During this pandemic, we need to ensure our physicians that are employed here on Prince Edward Island were going to be financiall­y in a position that they could continue on as we ease out of the pandemic," Aylward said.

"Fundamenta­lly, the most important reason is because we wanted to look after our health-care profession­als."

Aylward added that doctors also had overhead costs associated with their clinics, as well as salary costs for staff who may not have qualified for the CERB benefits.

He said these physicians did not “sit at home” during the pandemic. Many worked at cough and fever clinics, while others saw patients through telehealth or other virtual means.

He added the measures were intended to keep physicians practising on P.E.I.

"Nationally, there's a demand for doctors and doctors are mobile – they can go from one jurisdicti­on to another very easily," Aylward said.

 ?? STU NEATBY/THE GUARDIAN ?? Health Minister James Aylward speaks to media in front of the Coles Building last week. Aylward was questioned by Liberal MLA Robert Henderson about a $434,000 compensati­on package for doctors.
STU NEATBY/THE GUARDIAN Health Minister James Aylward speaks to media in front of the Coles Building last week. Aylward was questioned by Liberal MLA Robert Henderson about a $434,000 compensati­on package for doctors.

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