Doctor shortage exposes old thinking on health
In the past month, several hospitals
have gone through ‘emergency-room emergencies’, due to their
inability to find doctors.
A week ago, a Kitchener hospital came
within hours of closing its emergency room because it was unable to find
doctors to staff it.
This doctor shortage prompted a Cambridge
hospital to contract a private company to run its emergency room –
a solution the government endorsed. In response to questions on his newfound
embrace of private healthcare, Premier McGuinty threw in the towel. Since
then, my colleagues in the Opposition Caucus have applied consistent pressure
on the Premier, urging him to take the doctor shortage seriously. The
doctor shortage has been Opposition Leader John Tory’s top priority
since the Legislature reconvened on September 25.
Now that we have passed the third anniversary
of the McGuinty government, it’s time to reflect and take stock
of the progress – or lack thereof – made since the election.
Over the years, each party has developed
its own ‘home-turf’ policy issues. When we were in government,
we were known as the party that would get tough on crime, keep our promises,
cut taxes, and balance the budget.
For its part, the McGuinty government
continues to portray itself as the party of healthcare. But, after three
years in office, Ontarians are still waiting to see results.
In his first budget as Premier, Mr. McGuinty
made his health care formula well known – he gave Ontarians the
largest tax increase in history, followed by the creation of an extra
layer of healthcare bureaucracy, with the assumption that higher taxes
and more bureaucrats would cure our healthcare crisis.
Unfortunately, that formula has been
a disaster. I have always believed that doctors and health professionals
– not bureaucrats and politicians – are the central components
of our healthcare system. After three years under Premier McGuinty’s
government, Ontario is facing an acute shortage of physicians.
For information on signing the Official
Opposition petition on solving the doctor shortage, send me an email at
toby@tobybarrett.com.
Ontarians are asking a number of important
questions. They want to know why they are paying the McGuinty health-tax,
especially when the doctor shortage is getting worse. They are asking
why the Premier is spending so much money on the new health bureaucracies,
when the Minister of Health won’t commit to an emergency-room wait-time
guarantee. And they are realizing that when it comes to healthcare, the
McGuinty government has a better record of making promises than it does
of keeping them.
The doctor shortage is a serious threat
locally, and in rural communities throughout the province. Larger urban
hospitals often have greater resources, which allows them to offer salary
‘top-ups’ for their emergency room doctors. Unable to compete
with these ‘top-ups’, rural hospitals have a harder time staffing
their emergency rooms.
In the Ontario Legislature, this worsening
crisis in healthcare has dramatically changed the nature of debate. Under
relentless questioning about his inability to come to grips with the doctor
shortage, the Minister of Health is still trying to blame everybody but
himself – going as far as blaming a government that was elected
back in 1990.
But the reality is that Premier
McGuinty has lost credibility on the healthcare file. With taxes up, and
access to doctors down, Ontarians realize that increasing taxes and bureaucracy
is not the answer.
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