Kenney and His Government Cannot Be Trusted with Our Public Health Care System
- Friends of Medicare -
Today's release of the AHS Performance Review Proposed
Implementation Plan is, in short, the biggest betrayal of Albertans by
any government.
"Once
again, this Premier and his government are callously advancing plans to
suit their aggressive privatization agenda in health care," says Sandra
Azocar, Executive Director of Friends of Medicare. "Kenney's UCP
government continues to demonstrate nothing but disdain for the women
and men working on health care's front lines.
Considering how central they have proven themselves in the province's
pandemic response, this whole plan is an insult to health care workers,
and it's a betrayal of the patients who depend on them."
The aggressive changes outlined in the proposed implementation plan
are not unexpected, but are yet another step in this government's plan
to privatize our health care. We saw them take a step with the release
of the MacKinnon report back in September 2019, and another big step
with the release of AHS Performance Review in February.
Both reports recommended massive restructuring of our health care
system through major privatization, and both rely heavily on Fraser
Institute data, the reliability of which was most recently called into
question by the BC Supreme Court in their landmark Cambie Case ruling:
"It is unclear whether any general conclusions can be drawn from the
Fraser Institute surveys, even if these surveys could generally be
relied upon as providing reliable data (a proposition I seriously
question)."
Despite the major questions as to the reliability of the two reports
remaining, the Alberta government has not hesitated in capitalizing on
them as the ideological fodder they need to accelerate the process of
privatizing our health care system through contracting out and reducing
the health care services available to Albertans.
The AHS review, contracted by American accounting firm Ernst &
Young for over $2 million, was intended to find inefficiencies in the
system. This report contained 57 recommendations that, by their
estimate, could result in $1.9 billion in savings, though Ernst &
Young cautioned those figures don't represent expected, or even
achievable,
actual savings, and Health Minister Shandro indicated at the time that
not all recommendations were feasible, or would be implemented.
Following
its release, Health Minister Shandro turned the AHS review report over
to an AHS implementation team, which was tasked with reporting on their
own recommendations in 100 days. As this date was five months delayed
by the province's pandemic response, nothing had been made public until
today. The 82-page plan outlines
extensive cuts across our public health care system, acutely in line
with the recommendations made by the initial Ernst & Young review.
While the Health Minister has publicly stated that the implementation
will be determined by AHS and guided by Operational Best Practices, a
leaked document acquired by CBC reveals that Minister Shandro had
in fact directed AHS to produce plans to implement all of the
recommendations in the Ernst & Young report, except for a few he
determined were off the table.
Included in the proposal are plans to contract out in-hospital food,
laundry and environmental services, removing nurses' collective
agreement provisions, introducing home care co-pays, ramping up
chartered surgical services, and reconfiguring rural emergency
department, acute care and maternity/obstetric services -- among many
others. This
plan has the potential to turn our health care dollars, resources and
staff over to private companies which will be subsidized by public
health care funding. Most pressingly, the government has forecasted
11,000 health care job losses, affecting up to 16,000 workers across
the province.
While in today's press conference, Minister Shandro said there would
be no impact to nurses or frontline health workers for the duration of
the pandemic, this contradicts the letter received this morning by the
United Nurses of Alberta, which clearly states that AHS intends to
proceed with its previously announced layoff of 500 nursing
full-time equivalents, which equates to 750 nurses out of work,
according to UNA's estimation.
"Rather than building upon the solid foundation that we have in our
health care, this government is choosing to sell it off to the highest
bidder without presenting Albertans with so much as a business plan to
show how these proposed 'savings' would impact patients and the care
they are able to access," says Azocar. "Rather than recognizing
the vital importance of our health care providers, they are choosing to
cut 11,000 good jobs at a time when many Albertans are already out of
work. Albertans need to ask themselves if this is the recovery they
envisioned for their province. Frankly, we demand better."
AHS's plan, as directed by Minister Shandro, will see no less than
the decimation of our public health care. Despite Minister Shandro's
attempt to spin it, contracting out is not just a change in employers,
it's a change in the way we deliver health care and a clear move
towards private health care. As we continue to navigate the immediate
and
long-term implications of this pandemic, Alberta's government is trying
to suggest that the path forward lies in laying off thousands of health
care workers, and privatizing our health care. Albertans should know
better than to trust them.
This article was published in
Number 70 - October 15, 2020
Article Link:
Kenney and His Government Cannot Be Trusted with Our Public Health Care System - Friends of Medicare
Website: www.cpcml.ca
Email: editor@cpcml.ca
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