Medicine Hat News

Tight budget, health-care changes to dominate next sitting

- COLETTE DERWORIZ

Alberta politician­s are set to return to the legislatur­e this week for a spring sitting that is expected to see the first steps on sweeping structural reforms to a health-care system grappling to find and keep family doctors.

The sitting begins Wednesday and is to be followed Thursday by the release of the 2024 provincial budget, which Premier Danielle Smith has signalled will not keep pace with Alberta’s growth.

Dr. Paul Parks, who speaks for physicians as head of the Alberta Medical Associatio­n, says they need solutions immediatel­y.

“Time truly is critical and of the essence (for family medicine) right now,” said Parks. “We’re waiting with bated breath to see what happens.”

Parks has said Alberta’s billing system has not kept up with office and administra­tion costs for family physicians, a problem made worse by inflation, forcing more and more to decide whether to stay in general practice or switch to a specialty.

The United Conservati­ve Party government committed late last year to spending $200 million to help family doctors keep the lights on while a new funding agreement with physicians is hammered out.

Alberta is not the only province dealing with a physician shortage, but the problem has had a disastrous knock-on effect through its health system as more patients without primary care seek aid in crowded emergency department­s.

Parks said it’s only got worse in Alberta after other Canadian provinces brought in new funding models for family doctors that had significan­t increases.

“We do not have an Alberta advantage, specifical­ly when it comes to primary care and family medicine access. We have a distinct disadvanta­ge right now,” he said.

The province has yet to release a list of bills to be introduced in the sitting but has indicated legislatio­n is coming to begin the promised dismantlin­g of Alberta Health Services — the $17-billion agency tasked with delivering front-line care provincewi­de.

AHS is to be replaced by four agencies while being reduced to the role of service provider in acute care.

The model has raised concerns that the four areas — primary care, acute care, continuing care, and mental health and addiction — could fail to be integrated and put care at risk.

Parks said he’s extremely concerned about a restructur­ing in the middle of a health-care crisis.

“That’s the black box we’re really worried about,” he said.

“As an example, they’re going to create a primary care organizati­on, but what does that look like if you don’t have family medicine specialist­s and rural generalist­s to base it on?

“And what is that structure going to look like, and what’s the governance, and what’s it going to look like for patients as they move between the organizati­ons?

“All those unknowns are growing.”

Smith warned in a televised address last week that softening oil prices mean provincial funding won’t keep pace with population growth.

She said spending cuts won’t be needed but the government would need to show some restraint. Priority would be given to health, education and social supports, she added.

Smith also reiterated she he won’t be immediatel­y following through on a 2023 election campaign promise to make changes to tax rules to help families keep more cash in their pockets.

Government house leader Joseph Schow was not made available to comment on the spring sitting, but his office emailed a statement Monday.

“Alberta’s government is looking forward to continuing to deliver on its mandate received by voters, and I will have more to share on the spring session in the coming days.”

Opposition NDP house leader Christina Gray said she expects between eight and 10 bills to be introduced.

Gray said the NDP will push the UCP to fulfil its promises and fix chaos and overcrowdi­ng in health care and education.

“The government of Danielle Smith is letting down Alberta families,” Gray said in an interview.

Any changes to the health-care system, she said, would need financial resources.

“We’re really concerned about what we are going to be seeing from this government,” she said.

Gray said the NDP would also continue to challenge recently announced changes by Smith to rules for transgende­r youth.

Smith has promised restrictio­ns on youth changing their names or pronouns at school, as well as on hormone treatment and surgery for gender affirmatio­n.

The premier also said there would be a clamp down on transgende­r female athletes competing in women’s and girls’ sports.

These legislativ­e changes are expected in the fall. But, Gray said, “Because they are of such urgent importance to Albertans, we will have to be talking about it (now).”

The NDP also finds itself in new territory for the first time in a decade.

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Paul Parks

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