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Ontario signs $3B health-care deal with Canada to increase access to doctors, reduce wait times Canada
In image Doug Ford/ courtesy:X/@fordnation

Ontario signs $3B health-care deal with Canada to increase access to doctors, reduce wait times

India Blooms News Service | @indiablooms | 14 Feb 2024, 12:17 am

Toronto/IBNS: Ontario Premier Doug Ford has signed a $3.1-billion health-care deal with the federal government to increase access to primary care and reduce wait times.

The $3.1 billion promised covers the first three years of this agreement, ministry officials have confirmed.

Calling the deal “historic,” Ford said: “This new funding will bolster the significant work we are doing in Ontario… we know there is more work to do. That’s why today’s agreement is so important to strengthening our health-care system.”

Announced by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau later last week, it makes Ontario the fifth Canadian province to come to an agreement with Ottawa for its share of a $200-billion health accord.

The other provinces that have made this agreement include British Columbia, Prince Edward Island, Alberta, and Nova Scotia.

The announcement follows almost a year after the two governments reached a 10-year deal in principle to pay for health care in Ontario, with an additional $46 billion in funding to the Canada Health Transfer.

The federal government has been urged by Premiers to increase their annual health transfers up from 22 percent amounting to about $28 billion a year, with an additional five percent annually after that, to cover 35 percent of their health budgets.

“For generations, universally accessible health care has been a core part of what it means to be Canadian,” Trudeau reported telling reporters.

“It’s built on a promise that, no matter where you live or what you earn, you will always be able to get the medical care you need.”

Under the agreement, Ontario has pledged to add hundreds of new family physicians and nurse practitioners, as well as thousands of nurses and personal support workers to fill staffing shortages.

The funding will also be used to remove barriers for internationally trained doctors, add five new Youth Wellness Hubs, and address gaps in Indigenous healthcare services.

(Reporting by Asha Bajaj)

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