Toronto Star

Ottawa to pay for birthing travel companions

Government alters rules to aid indigenous women who must leave community to give birth

- KRISTY KIRKUP

OTTAWA— Health Minister Jane Philpott says Ottawa will now pay for someone to travel with indigenous women who need to leave their communitie­s to give birth — a change to what she called an “extremely unhelpful” policy.

In an interview with The Canadian Press, Philpott said she heard a “cry loud and clear” from indigenous health experts who were urging the federal government to allow pregnant aboriginal women to leave home with an escort.

“It is a major policy change for us,” Philpott said. “It requires significan­t resources in order to be able to do that, but it is . . . a wise investment.”

Health Canada said Sunday that it’s difficult to provide a precise cost estimate for the change because it is a demand-based program but it estimates $22 million will be spent in the 2017-2018 budget year.

Indigenous women without proof of a medical need to have someone escort them have long been forced to have their children alone and far from their land, language and heri- tage, the minister continued.

“There are a whole bunch of negative outcomes of that,” Philpott said. “What happens at birth has an impact on the rest of peoples’ lives for the whole family. So to have a positive, healthy birthing experience is extremely critical.”

Philpott said northern Manitoba doctors told her of women so terrified of travelling alone that they would hide to avoid having their pregnancy discovered, only to present themselves at the last minute in communitie­s ill-prepared for births.

Too often, the cries heard in aboriginal communitie­s were cries of death, not birth, she added.

“That set me on a path to be able to return the cries of birth in communitie­s as much as possible,” she said, noting a recent $83-million budget investment for maternal and child health for First Nations and Inuit.

She also noted the need to transform the delivery of health in communitie­s, saying a number of indicators clearly show considerab­le gaps between health outcomes of indigenous and non-indigenous people.

Philpott said recommenda­tions from the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission, which spent six years studying Canada’s residentia­l schools, included acknowledg­ing the state of indigenous health and the fact it’s the result of decades of illinforme­d government policies.

Dr. Michael Kirlew, a family physician in Sioux Lookout, Ont. and Wapekeka First Nation, said he welcomes the change.

“I’m happy the change has been made, but I am shocked that in 2017 we are still talking about women and escorts and pregnancy,” Kirlew said.

Indigenous people needing to leave communitie­s for end-of-life care still have to travel alone, he added.

“That means escorts for the end of life are still viewed as compassion­ate reasons to have them there,” Kirlew said. “Having an escort or having someone there — that is basic care.”

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