Ottawa Citizen

DOCTORS: JOB ACTION ‘ON THE TABLE’

- DAVID REEVELY

Ontario’s doctors are talking about a job action in the new year, escalating their argument with the province over how and how much they should be paid.

“Right now, everything’s on the table. We’re in the process of consulting our members,” said Dr. Virginia Walley, the president of the Ontario Medical Associatio­n, in a Wednesday afternoon interview. “We want to keep front and centre our concerns about patient care. We’re considerin­g all potential moves. The disrespect the government has shown to the profession really has backed us into a corner.”

So far it’s just a threat — the threat of a threat, in fact.

But it’s a sign that a year of angry rhetoric between the OMA and the government is getting the two sides no closer to a settlement.

A quick sketch of the situation: Ontario spends about $11 billion a year on doctors, a quarter of its health budget, which is the province’s single biggest spending area.

The details of that spending are a rat’s-maze but much of the money goes out in fees-for-service, where one procedure, one appointmen­t, one task brings a doctor a number of dollars defined in a massive Physician Services Agreement that’s like a labour agreement for the OMA’s 42,000 members.

The last agreement expired in 2014 and attempts to bargain a new one have failed. The government wants a hard cap on total physician billings and to “modernize” (that is, cut) what it pays for some procedures that technology has made a lot easier. The OMA wants intractabl­e disputes sent automatica­lly to binding arbitratio­n as a preconditi­on for negotiatin­g anything else. And a lot more money.

The health ministry has imposed freezes and clawbacks and cuts. The two sides, negotiatin­g in secret — a sub-mess of its own — reached a tentative deal last summer that included a hard cap on billings that would increase every year, plus numerous side payments. Doctors rejected it nearly two-to-one in a mass vote, repudiatin­g their own leaders’ recommenda­tion.

The associatio­n is splintered into factions with wildly divergent interests, from do-it-all doctors in the North to specialist­s in private practice in downtown Toronto. They’re well-educated and hardworkin­g and they’re accustomed to deference and respect because they literally save people’s lives. It’s their job, in their various areas of expertise, to know what’s best. They’re not easy to employ or to represent.

Since the August vote, the OMA has not obviously gotten its act together. The same leaders, like Walley, are in place, chastened and stiffer of spine. Negotiatio­ns over a new agreement have not resumed.

In mid-December, the provincial government made a new proposal in public that was similar to the deal the doctors rejected in the summer, except that it offered raises to several thousand doctors who work in “family health teams,” effectivel­y on salaries, and took a percentage clawback off solo doctors’ billings over $1 million. And over the proposed four-year term, it included nearly $1-billion less in pay.

“You can imagine how our members are viewing the government’s most recent ‘proposal,’” Walley said. “It is in fact less than what was on the table in the summer. You can imagine the frustratio­n that’s growing in physicians’ minds.”

Hoskins has asked the associatio­n to forswear any job action that would affect patient care, which the associatio­n has not done. Like anybody on the public payroll, there’s only so much they can do in a labour dispute that doesn’t involve damaging public services. They’ve tried demonstrat­ions and ad campaigns.

The challenge for each side here is to not be seen as the villain.

The provincial government has focused on the highest-billing specialtie­s, the ones whose fees really do need to catch up to the times, by emphasizin­g that single doctors who know exactly what to do, and who are willing to work some really long hours, can bill millions of dollars in a year.

The OMA never misses a chance to emphasize how many of its members are family doctors, the people Ontarians see all the time for checkups and blood-pressure medication and shoulder aches and kids’ ear infections. When I asked Walley the standard reporter’s question near the end of our talk, whether there’s anything else I should know, she praised the doctors working over the holidays, pulling extra shifts to keep Ontarians healthy.

The government’s money is limited and the doctors’ anger is real. Both sides have positions founded on right: billings do need modernizin­g, and we do need to pay more than we do for the care we want. More importantl­y for the purposes of actually getting this settled, both sides are certain of their own rightness. So expect this thing to get worse before it gets better.

It is in fact less than what was on the table in the summer. You can imagine the frustratio­n that’s growing.

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 ??  ?? Dr. Virginia Walley
Dr. Virginia Walley

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