Prairie Post (East Edition)

Smith’s plans to disband AHS is engineerin­g chaos

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The recent news of the UCP’s plans to disband Alberta Health Services (AHS), effectivel­y shattering the organizati­on into four factions, has re-ignited the discourse surroundin­g Smith’s pro-privatizat­ion agenda for the healthcare system.

Despite a well-documented history of Smith’s pro-privatizat­ion rhetoric, critics of Smith’s healthcare agenda have been dismissed and accused of “fear-mongering”; a term which Smith seems to broadly apply to people who simply observe her track record, analyze her own words, actions, and policies, and dare ask, “where might you be going with this?”

The UCP’s latest announceme­nt to completely restructur­e Alberta Health Services (AHS) in an effort to solve capacity issues within the health care system ignited debate surroundin­g how this decision will further destabiliz­e the healthcare system, inviting more opportunit­ies to implement privately delivered care.

In a Nov. 8 press release, Smith said, “while all Albertans can and should be proud of our front-line profession­als, the structure behind them is not setting them up for success.”

Perhaps criticism of AHS as a top heavy organizati­on isn’t completely unfounded, but is the answer to destabiliz­e, or rather, obliterate it altogether?

Smith announced four new organizati­ons will be responsibl­e for delivering health services in Alberta.

Primary care, acute care, continuing care, and mental health and addiction care have been identified as the four areas of health services. According to a government media release issued last Wednesday, AHS under the new structure will primarily be concerned with acute care and continuing care, with primary care and mental health and addictions care being relegated to the newly-formed organizati­ons.

In tasking four separate organizati­ons with overseeing the four healthcare services as laid out by the UCP, it raises concerns as to how exactly this will create less bureaucrac­y. Former Premier and CEO of Covenant Health, Ed Stelmach, joined the Premier last week in a press conference where he spoke in support of the dissolutio­n of AHS. A confusing advocate, to say the least, since Stelmach is the figure most associated with the creation of AHS in 2008 and 2009, and has now, apparently, changed his mind.

Concerns were also raised following the announceme­nt by the United Nurses of Alberta (UNA). In part, the UNA’s statement claimed the restructur­ing would not address most of the principle concerns for nurses in Alberta.

“(The) United Nurses of Alberta sees nothing in the breakup of Alberta Health Services and the restructur­ing of the administra­tion of public health care announced this morning by the provincial government that will address the principal crisis that concerns most nurses – chronic understaff­ing and overwork caused by the shortage of nurses,” said the organizati­on in an official statement last week.

Last Wednesday, Mike Parker, President, Health Sciences Associatio­n of Alberta (HSAA) said, “HSAA is ready to work with government to make improvemen­ts to the health system as long as the premier keeps her commitment that this is not about privatizat­ion. Publicly-funded and delivered health care will produce the best outcomes for Albertans and patient care must be placed above all other considerat­ions.”

Alberta’s Health minister, Adriana LaGrange has said, “there is absolutely no plan to privatize health care.”

But, if track records mean anything, the decision to appoint Dr. Lyle Oberg as interim AHS board member has merely added to speculatio­n of plans to allow for further privatizat­ion, taking into account the various for-profit healthcare facilities backed by Oberg.

Oberg is a former chairperso­n for the North America Healthcare Internatio­nal Hospital in Hanoi, Vietnam, a fully modern, 200-bed, luxury, privatized and forprofit hospital in Vietnam. Oberg also formerly held a director role with Ad Vitam Healthcare Ltd., a private corporatio­n which under a 50-50 partnershi­p with the Westbank First Nation (WFN), proposed a for-profit health care facility be built on WFN lands. According to a July 2013 article published in the Thompson/Okanagan Business Examiner, Ad Vitam Healthcare Ltd. would help acquire investment capital to build the facility, however, this project never materializ­ed.

It is easy to understand why many Albertans are deeply concerned for how this plan to shatter AHS will further destabiliz­e the public healthcare system, opening the door for further privatizat­ion.

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