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Ontario Government Seniors' Strategy Attacks Universality for Seniors' Health Care; Thin on Improvements to Access

Jan 10 2013 12:00AM

Marketwire

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TORONTO, ONTARIO -- (Marketwire) -- 01/10/13 -- Attn: Assignment Editor

The Ontario Health Coalition, representing more than 400 organizations dedicated to protecting public health care, warns that the Ontario government's proposed Seniors' Strategy threatens the core principle of universal health care for all.

"Universality is a core principle for health care. As more and more services are moved out of hospital it is imperative that Ontarians insist that the Ontario government not abandon this principle in home and community care," said Natalie Mehra, director of the Ontario Health Coalition. "The proposal to create a means-tested home care system explicitly threatens privatization rather than upholding the equity principles of the Canada Health Act when it comes to home and community care services for the elderly."

"We are strongly opposed to this approach," added Derrell Dular, managing director of the Older Canadians Network and board member of the Ontario Health Coalition. "We have a means-tested system for funding care. It is called the tax system. Our tax system should be used so that health care is funded in a progressive way according to our ability to pay and corporations should pay their fair share. The burden of care should not put on the sickest individuals when they are elderly or dying. Such an approach is dangerous and violates core values of Ontarians."

Though there are a number of positive proposals, the Seniors' Strategy proposals released yesterday by the Minister of Health misses key opportunities to set clear goals to improve access to care, including:

--  The summary and recommendations released to date fail to recognize than    many Ontarians already have insufficient home care, or in the worst    cases, no access at all. There is no proposal to improve existing access    to home care beyond already-announced funding. Ontarians currently do    not have a clear right to access home care services and many patients    continue to be offloaded from hospitals without adequate care in place    due to funding shortfalls and staffing shortages. In recent months a    number of Community Care Access Centres (government agencies responsible    for the funding and provision of home care) have reported that they are    wait-listing even high needs clients. Care is severely rationed leaving    seniors with no option but to pay out-of-pocket or go without. According    to the 2010 Provincial Auditor's report, more than 10,000 Ontarians are    on wait lists for home care. The Auditor further found that home care    services are inequitable across Ontario and wait lists are    inconsistently tracked, a situation that continues today.--  More than 20,000 Ontarians are waiting for placement in a long-term care    home, according to Ministry of Health data, and Health Quality Ontario    reports that wait times have quadrupled since 2005. Wait lists numbering    20,000 or more have persisted since the late 1990s. The summary and    recommendations release yesterday do not address the long wait lists for    Ontarians who have already been assessed as needing long-term care home    placement.--  The report fails to address longstanding problems such as: Ontario's    poorly organized home care which is run through an expensive competitive    bidding system rife with duplication and privatization; inadequate care    levels in long-term care homes; the shortage of acute care and complex    continuing care beds for seniors in hospitals; and, the ongoing cuts to    and privatization of outpatient hospital services such as physiotherapy,    occupational therapy, speech pathology and chiropody required by the    elderly.


The coalition is producing an analysis of the Ministry's Seniors' Strategy recommendations that will be available on our website at www.ontariohealthcoalition.ca.



Contacts:
Ontario Health Coalition
Natalie Mehra
(cell) 416-230-6402 or (office) 416-441-2502

Ontario Health Coalition
Derrell Dular
(office) 416-260-3429
www.ontariohealthcoalition.ca





Source: Marketwire


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