Calgary Herald

Funding freeze would close some doctors’ offices, medical body says

- ELISE STOLTE POSTMEDIA NEWS WITH FILES FROM SARAH O’DONNELL, POSTMEDIA NEWS

EDMONTON — A continued freeze on physician compensati­on would mean some doctors’ offices will have to shut their doors, warned the head of the Alberta Medical Associatio­n Tuesday.

Dr. Michael Giuffre sent a letter to Premier Alison Redford, whose government is in the midst of a longrunnin­g contract dispute with the province’s 10,000 physicians.

Alberta’s doctors have been without a contract for two years, and are asking for a one per cent increase above inflation. The money — paid as a fee for service — covers office staff, overhead and physician’s pay.

Redford has said no increase in fees should be expected in the province’s tight March budget.

Giuffre sent the latest letter to Redford and posted it online, saying, “Make no mistake; if this is the government’s course, it will have serious and negative implicatio­ns for patient care. If medical practice costs continue to rise in concert with flat or declining revenues, there is only one unavoidabl­e outcome: some medical practices in Alberta will no longer be viable; offices will close and patients will be without care.”

Giuffre was unavailabl­e for clarificat­ion Tuesday.

Minister Fred Horne said any talk of a freeze in the budget is speculatio­n, and that the province is still at the negotiatin­g table.

As for losing doctors’ offices, “I’m not sure what they’re basing this claim on,” Horne said. “I’m not sure how a claim like this actually advances the discussion or helps the province in a time when we’re going to be facing a very significan­t shortfall of revenue.”

The government has said it is working through a $6-billion budget shortfall.

In the past, Redford and Health Minister Fred Horne have said doc- tors in Alberta are paid 20 to 29 per cent more than the national average. In his letter, Giuffre said that’s not true. The latest data from the Canadian Institute for Health Informatio­n show payments for doctors in Alberta are 14 per cent higher than the national average, he said. Giuffre said the bigger payment is needed because of higher overhead and salary costs.

Horne said the two numbers measure different things. The 29 per cent, which increased to 30 per cent in a new CIHI report released three weeks ago, measures average feefor-service payments. The 14 per cent refers to all forms of physician payment, including lump-sum payments.

Wildrose health critic Heather Forsyth called it a “spitting match” and said Giuffre was calling Redford a liar. “It’s just beyond my comprehens­ion what the government has done to the docs in this province and it’s very sad,” she said Tuesday.

 ?? The Associated Press/files ?? The Alberta Medical Associatio­n says the province’s doctors need to be paid more because of higher overhead and salary costs.
The Associated Press/files The Alberta Medical Associatio­n says the province’s doctors need to be paid more because of higher overhead and salary costs.

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