Francophone group says province failing on health commitments - Action News
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New Brunswick

Francophone group says province failing on health commitments

A group lobbying for more health care services in French says the New Brunswick government isn't keeping up its end of a deal struck two years ago.

galit sant en franais has lawyers reviewing 2010 agreement

Dr. Hubert Dupuis says the group is considering its legal options. (Radio-Canada)

A group lobbying for more health care services in French says the New Brunswick government isn't keeping up its end of a deal struck two years ago.

galit sant en franais(The Committee for Equality of Health in French) dropped a lawsuitagainst the province in April 2010 after government officials promised equal treatment for the provinces two health districtsthe anglophone Horizon Health Network and francophone VitalitHealth Network.

But the groups president, Dr. Hubert Dupuis, says hes exasperated that nothing has changed since.

"The government has been dragging their feet and it doesn't seem to be on their agenda," he said.

"Lots of things seems to be on their agenda and this does not seem to be on their agenda."

Lawyers for galit sant en franais are currently reviewing the legal settlement and looking at legal options, he said.

'All francophone patients should be concerned that their francophone institutions are underserved as compared to the anglophone institutions.' Dr. Hubert Dupuis, galit sant en franais

"There's a whole panopoly of things we can do," said Dupuis.

"The lawsuit has been lifted. We did our share of the agreement. The agreement said that the government should do this and that and whatever, and our part was to lift the lawsuit. So it won't be a lawsuit."

But Dupuis said the province has not reciprocated. "We have a legal, binding agreement. It's just that the Government of New Brunswick is not holding up their end of the bargain."

Health officials told CBC News they were unable to comment.

Health Minister Madeleine Dubhas previously said the department would develop a five-year plan to meet the groups demands.

But Dupuis contends that has not happened.

Claims Horizon has more services

Dupuissaid most primary care services are on par between the two health authorities, but that the anglophone healthcare institutions under the Horizon Health Network have more tertiary care services and secondary care and specialized services.

"All francophone patients should be concerned that their francophone institutions are underserved as compared to the anglophone institutions," he said.

"I mean, just go visit The Moncton Hospital and the Georges Dumont hospital and youll understandquicklywhat is the difference."

The grouplaunched the lawsuitagainst the province in 2008 over itsmerger of eight regional health authorities into two, whichitclaimed diminished the rights of francophones.

The charter challenge argued the centralization of health authorities took away the status of Moncton's Georges-L. Dumont Hospital as a francophone institution.

The group had said the lawsuit didn't aim to impose duality in health care, which would mean separate health systems based on language. Instead, the objective was to restore a health authority that was clearly and legally francophone.

In April 2010, then-premier Shawn Graham said the provincial government would introduce a series of legislativeand administrative changes that would strengthen health care services for francophones and address the group's concerns.