Ontario will spend $90M in bid to end hallway care in flu season
TORONTO — Ontario will spend $90 million this year to fund hundreds of hospital beds ahead of flu season, a measure the province's health minister said will help address the issue of socalled hallway medicine.
Christine Elliott said the funding will help Ontario's hospital system deal with overcrowding that has resulted in patients being treated in unsuitable spaces.
“It's unacceptable to see our loved ones treated in hallways and in storage rooms in our hospitals,” Elliott said Wednesday.
“It's no way to treat our loved ones.”
The government will fund 1,100 hospital beds in total, including more than 400 opened under the previous Liberal government that will have their funding renewed.
Some will turn into permanent beds, though the government could not say how many.
In October last year, the Liberals gave hospitals an additional $100 million before flu season to create roughly 1,200 more hospital beds.
The Progressive Conservative government could not immediately say how many of those beds — which are meant to bring temporary relief to hospitals at a busy time of year — are still operating.
The government also said it will continue an expansion of the province's long-term care beds planned by the previous Liberal regime, adding 6,000 new beds as part of a five-year plan to build capacity.
“These are meaningful early actions we are taking to end hallway health care,” Elliott said.
Premier Doug Ford said the additional beds mark just the first step in addressing the longterm needs of the health care system.
“With an aging population, time is of the essence,” he said.
“That's why I've asked Minister Elliott to focus on building a strong, vibrant and sustainable health care sector that puts the needs of Ontario's patients first.”
Interim Liberal leader John Fraser said the Tory government is simply maintaining the flu season support his party brought in.
“I don't see where there is new capacity being built in there,” he said, noting the Tories have announced roughly the same number of beds his party did last year. “There's nothing new here.”
NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said last year's Liberal commitment, and the latest spending by Ford's Progressive Conservatives, falls far short of the $300 million she said is needed to help address hospital overcrowding.
“This is not going to affect in any way the hallway medicine that is being experienced by people in our province,” she said.
Doris Grinspun, CEO of the Registered Nurses' Association of Ontario, said the additional funding won't solve the root problems that have caused hospital overcrowding.