Federal government, P.E.I. sign deal in principle for health care funding - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 12:26 PM | Calgary | -10.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

Federal government, P.E.I. sign deal in principle for health care funding

Details of a new bilateral health-care funding deal between the federal government and P.E.I. have been released. The agreement in principle includes $288 million for shared health-care priorities and an one-time top up of $9 million to the Canada Health Transfer.

Province getting $288M in new funding over next decade, plus $9M one-time topup

Three men in suits sit in front of a table with microphones on it. The flags of P.E.I. and Canada are behind them.
Premier Dennis King, left, sits beside federal Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs Dominic LeBlanc and Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos at a news conference about the pending deal on Wednesday evening. (Shane Hennessey/CBC)

The federal government and the province ofPrince Edward Island have signed a bi-lateral agreement on health-care funding.

Some details of the "agreement in principle" announced Thursdaywere discussed at aWednesday evening news conference that included representatives from both levels of government.

It boils down to$966 million over the next decade,$288million of which is new funding, and $9 million through an immediate, one-time Canada Health Transfer top-up to address urgent needs.

P.E.I. Premier Dennis King told reporters someof the funding will go toward establishing a morecollaborative health-care model.

He said the provinceshares priorities the federal government outlined on the deal, including recruitment of health-care professionals, and clearing surgery backlogs.

"The system needs to change and adapt," King said. "We all know that change is hard. It takes time and energy, but in signing this deal, it provides our province with the financial stability needed to continue to make the necessary changes and innovations, many of which are underway."

Exterior sign, says walk-in clinic
A total of 27,681 people on P.E.I. have signed up with the province as needing a family doctor or nurse practitioner, out of a population of about 173,000. Until they get one, they must depend on a combination of walk-in medical clinics, emergency rooms, and virtual services. (Laura Meader/CBC)

One of the changes involves a reorganization of how primary care is delivered on P.E.I., by pooling family doctors, nurse practitioners and other medical care providers into group operations known as medical homes and neighbourhoods.

The premier said the province will have 14 medical homes confirmed by the end of March, and 90new positions have been approved to ensure the medical homes are adequately staffed.

As well, ateam is set to travel to Dubai looking to recruit internationally trained health-care professionals for the province.

King said the province will invest in settlement services for any newcomers to ensure they're supported and choose to stay in P.E.I.

Word that an agreement in principle had been reached for Prince Edward Island came on the same day the federal government hailed similar deals with the other Atlantic provinces and Ontario.