Home Economics‘Canada Strong’ means equal access to quality healthcare across the country too

‘Canada Strong’ means equal access to quality healthcare across the country too

by Louise Binder

Unless you have been living under a rock for some time, you know that Canada has been under siege by our American neighbours for the past year, both economically and politically. It has been gratifying, and somewhat comforting, to see the hard work at the federal and provincial/territorial levels to counter these threats with numerous tactics.

One of the strategies has been a commitment to remove trade barriers deemed unnecessary and economically damaging between the provinces and territories. It is good to know that we will soon be able to buy products from other provinces with fair and equitable pricing.

Imagine if we employed the same lens for publicly funded healthcare across Canada. Yet no one seems to be talking about creating equitable access to health treatments across the country, no matter where they live or what their personal financial situation may be.

Shouldn’t healthcare be as accessible across the country as Canadian goods? And isn’t quality, accessible healthcare just as important a strategy to keep Canada strong economically?

Healthcare delivery, including providing treatments, is generally seen as a cost centre without recognizing it is also a strong positive driver for the Canadian economy. Healthy people help to make Canada strong by increasing productivity in the workplace, allowing Canadians to fulfill necessary family duties – which impacts the health of all of our communities — without stress and hardship, and provides a stimulus to the economy through increased spending (a long-term investment).

The healthcare sector also provides quality jobs in many areas of the economy, including in research and development, direct care, medical technology and biomanufacturing. This in turn has a positive effect on other ancillary sectors creating spillover benefits to all areas of the economy.

Why not create a harmonious health system, remove red tape and create cost savings by having provinces/territories in partnership with the federal government work together to create a single list of treatments covered by medicare instead of making province-by-province decisions about what treatments to reimburse under our publicly funded health plan?

As long-time cancer patient advocates, we have seen people saved by access to health treatments through publicly funded plans – and lost to us for lack of such access. Many others have been bankrupted paying out-of-pocket for treatments and costs, including travel and accommodation, because a treatment is not available in their home province but available in another province (or even in another country).

It shouldn’t matter where you live in Canada – medicare should cover health services and treatments equally across the country. If we can come to national agreements on goods, we can do it on healthcare.

Sound impossible? We’re doing the impossible now, pivoting from an over-reliance on American trade, and looking to ourselves to be leaders of our own economic destiny.

And we aren’t starting from scratch. We already have pan-Canadian health technology assessment bodies. We negotiate for public drug plan pricing together. The beginning of national pharmacare has been in the works for some time now.

Yet, even after all of the work of these expert bodies to provide advice on treatment coverage across provinces, we stall when it comes to action. It’s time for the provinces and territories to come together on healthcare.

The federal government can help make it happen, just as they have on inter-provincial trade.

It’s also about our values as Canadians. The unequal access to health treatments across provinces breaches the spirit of the five principles underlying the Canada Health Act (CHA). In this legislation, we are promised universality, portability and accessibility as well as comprehensiveness and public administration. Unequal access to treatments across provinces is simply not in line with these principles.

Provinces will argue that the CHA is solely about hospital and physician services. But this legislation was enacted before the development of a vast number of health innovative treatments and testing that we have today. We can get with the times.

If we want to ‘build Canada strong’ this means healthcare too. Our mindset about the provision of health treatments must fundamentally change.

There is never a better time than now as we strive to make our country strong and united. The provision of equal access to necessary health treatments across Canada should be our goal because it is in line with our intention to make Canada strong economically – and upholds the social values we hold dear.

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Photo courtesy ofJimj wpg, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

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