Federal budget misses opportunity to set a new course for health care, says Canadian Medical Association

OTTAWA, ON, April 20, 2021 – Today, Dr. Ann Collins, president of the Canadian Medical Association released a statement on behalf of the CMA to say yesterday’s federal budget contained welcomed measures aimed at addressing some of healthcare’s most immediate challenges, but it also “missed an opportunity to more broadly reimagine a system that currently finds itself in crisis.”

Collins says in the news release the CMA welcomes “much-needed investments to help provinces and territories clear the backlog of medical procedures caused by the pandemic, new programs to support mental healthcare needs, as well as funds to improve the safety of long-term care.”

Dr. Ann Collins, CMA
Dr. Ann Collins, president of the Canadian Medical Association, says the 2012 federal budget missed an opportunity to more broadly re-imagine a health system that currently finds itself in crisis. Canadian Medical Association

“These are critically urgent needs that will provide short-term relief, as will the continued federal investments and leadership in managing Canada’s pandemic response, detailed in the budget,” said Collins.

Canada’s national voice of the medical professions says that these proposed measures are “simply not enough to tackle the systemic problems that have plagued health care in Canada for decades.”

“As provinces and territories continue to struggle with the ever-increasing cost of providing care,” Collins advises that “the federal government must follow through on its own promise to work with premiers on revisiting the Canada Health Transfer. Without this collaboration, our healthcare system, which has been put through the ultimate stress test, will struggle to recover,” says Collins.

The CMA president says that Canada’s medical professionals are also disappointed that Canada’s 2021 budget fails to address the problems faced by the nearly five million Canadians who must navigate medical issues without consistent access to a family doctor or primary care provider.

“The federal government has committed on numerous occasions to ensuring each Canadian has access to a primary care professional, but we have yet to see any real commitment to this ongoing issue,” said Collins in her CMA statement.

“Small cracks have become gaping holes,” said Collins. “This has been an enormously difficult year for patients and healthcare providers alike as they have been trapped in a system that has been neglected for too long.

“Building resiliency for the future must include real commitments to health care. If anything, this pandemic has shown us where the problems are, but we must address them before it’s too late,” Collins warns.

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