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HALIFAX, TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 2002

COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE HOUSE ON SUPPLY

2:32 P.M.

CHAIRMAN

Mr. William Dooks

MR. CHAIRMAN: The honourable Government House Leader.



HON. RONALD RUSSELL: Mr. Chairman, would you please call the Estimates of the Minister of Health.



MR. CHAIRMAN: Thank you. I would like to call the Estimates for the Department of Health. We were talking last evening in the Liberal caucus, and the time remaining I believe is 39 minutes - I will check that as we go on.



The honourable member for Cape Breton Nova.



MR. PAUL MACEWAN: Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and welcome to the Chair and welcome to this happy afternoon session of the committee. Yesterday I asked the question and the minister gave a rather extensive answer. I don't know if I should make the mistake of asking him another question, but my sense of discretion is such that in anticipation that perhaps I may take a rather lengthy time framing the preamble to my next question, which may last the whole 45 minutes, I don't know. I can speak at least as long as he can, within the time parameters of the committee of course.



Yesterday I was talking on two subjects - the first was ambulance services and the adventures of John Chaisson and his son Braydon - and I have the file on that here this afternoon, a rather small file - secondly, I was talking on the minister's plans to introduce the urgent-care-centre concept at the New Waterford Consolidated Hospital and I have my file on that subject here, which is a rather extensive one, although it's not as big as my Devco or Sysco files, but it is my largest file certainly on anything else. If I get through these two matters in time to pose him a question just when my time runs out, he can take the next Party's time if he wishes answering it, even as I allowed him to answer some of the questions from the NDP when he began last night.



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As far as the Chaissons go, I did get a letter from the Minister of Health that came to my attention since I last spoke on this matter and it reads - I'm going to table all this stuff anyway, Mr. Chairman, so I trust I can read the letter. It's to me and it says: "This is in response to your March 7, 2002 letter regarding an ambulance bill for Mr. John Chaisson." - It was actually for Mr. Braydon Chaisson, John happens to be the father who has to pay the bill - "The Ambulance User Fee Appeals Committee had an opportunity to review your correspondence at their March 22, 2002 meeting. They have requested a medical opinion from the Provincial Medical Director. Once the Appeals Committee receives this information, a letter will be forwarded to your (sic) with their decision."



I guess that's where the matter stands at this point in time - I haven't received anything more on the matter but, as I stated, Braydon Chaisson was taken to the nearby hospital by ambulance. He did not call the ambulance; he did not want to get into the ambulance; he did not feel good. He was injured, his father was driving out to the accident site to pick him up and take him home, and when the father got there the ambulance had just whisked off, son aboard, lights flashing and sirens screaming. For that little drive up to the hospital, which you could walk on foot in probably 20 minutes I would think - the ambulance might have taken two or three to get up there - the father receives a bill for $500. Such are the stimulating new times in which we live and we in the Opposition intend to try to do something about that. I am going to table this file of correspondence here, for any who wish to read it, about the adventures of John and Braydon Chaisson.



That's the first part of my question. The second part relates to the New Waterford Consolidated Hospital. Mr. Chairman, I've been a member of this House for quite a few years now; I probably shouldn't tell you how many, but it's more than 30.



AN HON. MEMBER: How many?



MR. MACEWAN: I think it's 31 and some. I can't count quite that high so I will say it's 30 and a bit. During that time, for some reason or other, the New Waterford Consolidate Hospital has been the focus of attention and of difficulty over those years. I don't know why - it's a good hospital. It's new; it was built in the 1960s as I recall it. It has the look of a new building compared to many of the hospitals and schools that you see. It was built to replace an older hospital which is now long since gone. A wooden building, a former school I believe it may have been at one time - the old hospital - but anyway it was a wood-constructed building and it was torn down. So the new hospital was built in the 1960s. It was a community hospital, it was built by subscriptions from payroll deductions and bequests and contributions and that type of community support, as well as I am sure government support from the town, and the County of Cape Breton, the two municipalities that were involved, as well as the Province of Nova Scotia.







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It is a relatively small hospital, it's not as tiny as perhaps Buchanan Memorial Hospital in Victoria County, but it's certainly not on the scale of the QE II or even the Cape Breton Regional. It has three stories to it and I'm not sure of the exact number of beds in it, but I think it would be less than 100. We have seven or eight doctors that practise from that hospital - one recently arrived there is Dr. Atiyah, who is the first plastic surgeon to practise in Cape Breton Island, and his clinic was set up in that hospital because space was available there for him.



I recall asking the fire marshal to give me an appraisal of that building during the time that it was under attack from a previous Conservative Government that wanted to close it. I asked the fire marshal to give me the straight goods on what kind of condition that building was in from a fire prevention point of view. The answer I got from the fire marshal was that the building was A-1. There were a few structural repairs that were recommended, it wasn't perfect - there's nothing perfect I suppose - but it was in pretty good shape. It was certainly in better shape than the other hospitals in Cape Breton at that time, which would have been the old City of Sydney hospital, St. Rita's Hospital and other such buildings. This was a new building, it was in better shape and it was being well utilized.



There's been a problem with the loss of certain departments over the years. I know my good NDP friend, my neighbour for Cape Breton Centre blames the Liberals for closing the obstetrics and paediatrics units at the New Waterford Consolidated Hospital, but I checked it out and I found that one of those two was closed under the Tories of Donald Cameron and the other one, it was closed during the Savage period, the early years - 1994 to be exact. The reason why was that there apparently weren't any babies being born at that hospital, the mothers were all going into Sydney to have their babies. I guess the facilities were better or something and it was closed. There wasn't any controversy at that time, I don't recall any public rallies of protest or parades down the main street. It happened and people have been going into Sydney to have their babies anyway and it continues.



The hospital was not threatened with closure to my knowledge during the Liberal years from 1993 to 1999, but I will say this, that when the Liberal Government came to power in 1993, they discovered - the Minister of Health, the Honourable Dr. Ron Stewart - a document in the files of the department scheduled for implementation and it was this document here, "Proposal To Reform Health Care Facilities in Nova Scotia." It's not signed, not even dated. You have to date it I guess like they tried to date the date of the writing of the Gospel of Saint Mark from a historical perspective to see what events were contemporary at that time and see if it fit in at about 50 A.D., or 52 A.D., or somewhere around about that time.



Now, this one here, you can tell is a Tory document because of the date on it referred to consistently as 1993-94 for the implementation of these plans. So they must have been hatched in 1992, but when we came to power in 1993 we knew nothing about that document because it had never been announced. It had never been made public. Nobody knew anything

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about it except the savants and bureaucrats in the Department of Health, that was all. The Minister of Health came to Russell MacNeil and myself one day, sort of trembling and saying, I think I've found something you guys should be aware of, and then he showed it to us. He says what should I do? We said don't do anything, leave it, don't do anything with it at all. Because it was a plan not just for closing the New Waterford Hospital, it was the most drastic health care purge that has been ever planned or contemplated in the history of Nova Scotia. They were going to close hospitals all over the province, not just New Waterford. (Interruption) Yes, they were going to close the New Waterford Hospital. The proposal, Page 6, under the heading of Proposed Changes states under heading a, "Close New Waterford - Transfer O.R. . . .", that's operating room, " . . . Funding to Cape Breton Regional or Northside," saving $6,900,000.



Then they go on at Page 10 to say, "Regional Utilization Plan, Service Reductions, Close New Waterford," saving $6,900,000. Then again at Page 18, I believe it is, they state once more, no, I'm wrong, it's not Page 18. What's wrong with my memory? It's starting to get into that middle age memory lapse phase. Oh, Page 17, my memory was wrong by one number, "Summary of Reductions" is the heading.



HON. JAMES MUIR: . . . if you're only out by one number you're far ahead of the rest of your colleagues.



MR. MACEWAN: Well, no comment to that. I would like to be as far ahead as I could be, I will say that. "Principles . . . Full closure of - New Waterford." Then finally at Page 20, I know that one by memory, Mr. Minister, ". . . Reduction by Region/Facility, . . . Cape Breton • Close New Waterford," loss of full-time employment positions, 197.1, 0.1 of a full-time position would be lost, 197.1 jobs to be lost by doing that.



Now, in a broader contest what this Tory plan of 1992 called for was, let's take Appendix Six and read through that, "Cobequid • Close North Cumberland • Convert All Saints" at Springhill "to Detox . . .Cape Breton Close New Waterford • Sacred Heart • Inverness • Close 2 Units Glace Bay • Close 1 Unit Cape Breton Regional • Close 1 Unit Northside Harbourview • Victoria County . . ." I guess that's Buchanan Memorial, hospitals like that. The southwestern region, "Close Digby Surgery • Close Roseway Surgery • Close Fishermen's Surgery"



Valley - the Valley members want to pay attention to this to see what the last Tory Government planned to do to the Valley, Close Eastern Kings Memorial • Close Western Kings Memorial . . . Close 1 Unit Hants Community • Close Annapolis General." Northumberland, Close Sutherland Harris • Close (Inpatient Unit) Guysborough • Close (Inpatient Unit) St. Mary's • Close unit St. Martha's." That's the end of the Northumberland area. The Halifax area: Close Twin Oaks • close unit C.H.M.C. • Close unit of the Victoria General • Close unit of the I.W.K.





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Now, combined with all those closures they were also going to close the dietary and laundry units at all the hospitals and privatize that by contracting it out. Totalling all of these things, the loss of 1,032.1 full-time employment positions of which about a third, 336.5, were to be in Cape Breton; one-third of the whole call for the whole province. In New Waterford, as I've already mentioned, 197.1 jobs to be lost, 200 in round figures, one-fifth approximately of the entire total. So that was the Tory plan for health for Nova Scotia in 1992. Since I've quoted from it extensively I think I will table this copy. I have many more in my library. Honourable members who want an extra copy can get one either from me or from the Clerk, as the case may be.



So when our government came to power in 1993, Mr. Chairman, that's what we were faced with, a government that had adopted that plan and was going to implement had Donnie Cameron and company been re-elected in 1993, but instead they weren't. We came to office not knowing about it, never having been briefed about it, never having been shown a copy of it, but the Minister of Health, when he occupied his office, found that on his desk. So it was stopped.



Now, the full story of how it was stopped was never really made public because the news media didn't know about it in the first place and so it wasn't considered to be a news story. It just happened. I can't tell you that I have a selection of clippings saying, Liberals save hospitals across Nova Scotia, on the front page of The Chronicle-Herald where it should have been, but it wasn't, because The Chronicle-Herald didn't know anything about that plan, nor did any of the other news media. Anyway, we stopped that from happening.



During the time we were in office there were strains and there were stresses and there were financial problems and I know all about it, but I can tell you that when the day was done and when our government was finally pulled out of office by the unholy alliance of the NDP and the Tories, when that finally happened, the hospitals that we fought to save were open; they were functioning.



AN HON. MEMBER: Remember it was the people of Nova Scotia who threw you out, Paul, remember that.



MR. MACEWAN: The people of Nova Scotia never threw us out. It was the Tories and the NDP that did it right here in this room, a vote right here in this Chamber. That's how we got thrown out. (Interruptions) He's trying to rewrite history once again.



MR. JOHN HOLM: Mr. Chairman, on a point of order. For clarification of reality, I'm just wondering if you could decide for us, when the former Opposition Parties, the Official Opposition, the NDP and the Conservatives defeated the government that was in this House, does that not mean that we defeated the government but they were still technically the government until the people of Nova Scotia, at the next election, threw them out?





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MR. CHAIRMAN: Thank you member. That's a question directed to the Chair and it's not the Chair's responsibility to answer questions in this session, but I will direct that question to the good member for Cape Breton Nova. I'm sure he will have a very interesting response.



MR. MACEWAN: Mr. Chairman, I would say this in response to that, that the honourable member and I both probably are past the halfway point in our careers in this House. I think we could safely say that. (Interruption) All right, speak for myself, I will say I'm past the halfway point, I believe that, I think he is too. Now, there will come a point, if God spares us, that we can retire. I wouldn't say be defeated, but I would say retire, and when he retires and when I retire we can go to our computers and we can each write our versions of the history that happened during our careers in this House.



I'm sure that in some details, not too many, his version of the history may be slightly different from mine. I recognize that. That's why there will be two different books and not one, but in any event he can explain it his way, I will explain it my way. I remember a certain day that I was here, it was in 1999, a very hot summer day when we should have been home but instead we were up here listening to more and more filibustering from the NDP, but finally it came to a vote and the government was defeated on a budget that wanted to put $600 million into health care. That was the issue on which our government was defeated, and they were so much against it, they were so much against doing that for our health care system that they brought our government down and pulled it out of office because they did not want to see $600 million spent on health care and that's how our government came to an end.



Now, that's my version of the history. I know that his version is different. I think he will probably tell you about how the Tories said that if they ever got in they would sing The Internationale and wave the red flag and all would be well, but it wasn't quite like that.



MR. CHAIRMAN: Order, please. I would like to recognize the member for Sackville-Cobequid on a point of order, or a question, or a clarification?



MR. JOHN HOLM: Or both, or all, Mr. Chairman, I just want to, first of all, clarify that I have no intentions of writing a book, but that having been said, I seem to recall that the dispute at the time when the former Liberal Government was defeated, the issue was not just the money going into health care, but it was a fact that it was called off-book booking and that the monies that were being spent and borrowed weren't going to be as accounted for as part of the so-called deficit that they were projecting. It was off-book booking, and I think that accountability was a big part of the issue, not just the monies for health care.



MR. CHAIRMAN: The debate is rather bizarre today. It seems to be going between the NDP and the Liberals rather than the Progressive Conservative side, but we're going to tolerate that because we're here to inform Nova Scotians not only of the now, but of the past and the future.





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MR. MACEWAN: That's an excellent question. Let me give an equally excellent answer. When I'm writing my book on those days, I will be accounting more than off-book booking, or whatever it was - off-track betting I thought he was talking about. What I would concentrate on is the Epstein factor, where Mr. Epstein said, I am going to vote against this budget - this is before it had ever been released or published - no matter what it contains. You know, the budget could have provided jobs for all. He was still going to vote against it. The budget could have provided for the complete abolition of taxes. He was still going to vote against it. Whatever the budget contained, he was against, and that's why the government fell.



I think that's part of the picture, too, Mr. Chairman, but let me return to the estimates on the Department of Health here in 2002. When I was telling you about that history, it was simply because of the crisis we stand at today where this government, for some reason, has gotten it into its head that what we need to fix our health care system is not $600 million, like Russell MacLellan wanted to obtain, but rather the conversion of the New Waterford hospital into an urgent care centre. Now, what is an urgent care centre? Well, I asked the minister that question and he gave me a very good answer. It had much more meat and substance to it than the question we just heard from my honourable friend opposite.



AN HON. MEMBER: Listen, can you excuse me for a moment? I have to leave.



MR. MACEWAN: Yes, I can. There's the door; all right, be gone. Va-tén. Where was I? Oh, yes, I was talking about the urgent care centre and asking the minister what that is. Well, he said, it's a place that can operate maybe 16 hours a day, or perhaps 12 or eight hours a day, or maybe it can be moved somewhere else altogether if that approach doesn't generate much business. That's what he told me an urgent care centre was. It's in Hansard, and I can circulate that Hansard to my friends and neighbours so they get the picture of what we're fighting against here.



If that is the plan for the New Waterford hospital, all I can say is God help us. I believe in that hospital. I want to see it continue there as a hospital, not as an old folks' home, a home for the convalescent or some sort of a glorified senior citizens' residence. I want to see it as a hospital. It has an operating room in it. It has doctors. It has Dr. Atiyah's plastic surgery clinic. It's a useful facility right now, playing a major role, I think, for its size, in our health care delivery system.



We heard in the House here the other day from the member for New Waterford about someone who had a heart attack and was taken up to the New Waterford hospital for urgent care. No, I won't say urgent care - emergency care. Emergency care is what they give there now and it saved his life. I know the gentleman he's talking about because that gentleman, a couple of elections back, ran against me on the Tory ticket, so I know who he is. But I'm very glad that that hospital was there to save him and was not shut down, as Donnie Cameron wanted to do, so it wouldn't have been there to save him, because if it hadn't been there, he

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wouldn't be with us today, I don't believe, from what he has said himself. So we want to see that hospital protected and kept as a hospital.



There are four health care delivery sites right now in industrial Cape Breton. There's the Cape Breton Regional Hospital in Sydney, the Glace Bay hospital, the New Waterford Consolidated Hospital in New Waterford, and the Northside General Hospital on the Northside. There are concerns right now at three of those four that their future is threatened. There are concerns on the Northside. John Malcom, spelled M-a-l-c-o-m, no second 'l' in it, is the Chief Executive Officer of the Cape Breton Regional Health Care District. (Interruption) District Health Authority all right, he got me that time. I didn't have the term quite right.



But Mr. Malcom is featured in today's Cape Breton Post - I have the electronic issue of it here - to the effect that the Northside General Hospital is here for the long haul, claims Mr. Malcom today, but why did he have to make that assurance today? Because there was widespread doubt in the community that it had any future. The second time in less than a week that Chief Executive Officer John Malcom of the Cape Breton District Health Authority met with Northside residents to reaffirm the long-term viability of the Northside General Hospital - that was Cecil Clarke's pep rally of 25 held in the Northside last night, and why was the pep rally of 25 held? Because the people are concerned and wanted to hear from somebody like Cecil Clarke or John Malcom that the hospital is not going to be shut down in spite of all the obvious signs that there's a problem there.



Some of these problems include the closure of the obstetrical unit, the switchboard, and I could go on and on. Mr. Brian Boudreau knows it better than I do, but I'm following it from a distance from my side of the harbour and I know that all is not well over there despite the fulminations of the honourable member for Cape Breton North, who would tell you that from the day he was elected, and not before, suddenly all turned well. It reminds me of John Buchanan's motto - don't worry, be happy; all is well as long as I'm here to lead you and guide you.



Well, the reports I get from the Northside don't indicate quite to that effect, Mr. Chairman. There are concerns in the Northside about their hospital. There are concerns in Glace Bay about their hospital. The emergency department in Glace Bay shut down, I think, for 24 hours yesterday. Wasn't it yesterday? (Interruption) You don't know. Well, it was shut down for 24 hours. I think it was yesterday; it was very recently, and there are going to be further such shutdowns at Glace Bay of the emergency services because there's a failure of the system to work properly, I guess. I don't know what else you could say. If our schools had to be shut down for 24 hours here and 24 hours there and it wasn't on account of an in-service or one of these snowstorms that seem to develop at this time of year and all the schools have to be shut down, but just for no reason except that they couldn't find any teachers to teach that day, I think we would have troubles in our education system. Well, the same thing, I suggest, by logic applies to our health care system.





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We see the same concerns on the Northside and in Glace Bay as we see in New Waterford. The three peripheral hospitals are not getting equal treatment to the central hospital, the Cape Breton Regional Hospital. The doctors who perform emergency services are being paid a higher pay to work at the Cape Breton Regional Hospital than to work at the New Waterford Consolidated Hospital, where they get a much lower rate of pay. I know we're told, well, the doctors agreed to that. Well, sometimes you have to agree to things that you don't like just to maintain what you've got. I know about that, but it's not right that within a four-centre or four-hospital health care delivery system there should be different wages to work here as compared to there when the two are only 10 miles apart. How are we going to get new doctors to locate in New Waterford if they can't get the same pay there as they would get working at the hospital in Sydney?



AN HON. MEMBER: Teachers get paid the same.



MR. MACEWAN: Teachers get paid the same. There's a voice of experience of many years. I only stayed in it for seven years myself, but even there I knew that the teachers were supposed to get paid the same, although, unfortunately, they got more money to work in Sydney than they got if they were out in the county, past the city limits.



AN HON. MEMBER: That was back in those days.



MR. MACEWAN: That was back in those days under the good Stanfield Government, yes. (Interruptions) Well, I was, but anyway we won't get back into the years of R.L. Stanfield.



[3:00 p.m.]



Let me say in a general sense, Mr. Chairman, that there are concerns in the New Waterford area today about the report of this Dr. Murray. Dr. Murray is the consultant who was retained by the district health authority to make a recommendation for their consideration. Dr. Murray is reported to have gone to the New Waterford Consolidated Hospital, remained out there for every bit of 10 minutes and then retreated back to Sydney.



AN HON. MEMBER: He wants me to ask you a question.



MR. MACEWAN: He wants you to ask me a question?



AN HON. MEMBER: He's got a question for you.



MR. CHAIRMAN: Order, please. Honourable member, you have the floor. I don't know what the good member is speaking of, but continue your debate. I am waiting for the question for the Department of Health.





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MR. MACEWAN: How much time do I have left?



MR. CHAIRMAN: Eleven minutes.



MR. MACEWAN: I don't want to deny the minister an opportunity to respond, so let me wrap it up and give him about 10 minutes to give a reply to these matters, if he wishes to. I think I have outlined the concerns. Dr. Murray did not make an extensive study of the New Waterford Consolidated Hospital. He went there one time only, I am told, and stayed there for 10 minutes. He avoided opportunities to meet with staff and concerned citizens, and he used the pretext that it was a very snowy day and cold and that he had to get back to Sydney. Now, I could be wrong on that, but I don't think it was warm or hot, because it was that time of year - winter. So it was probably cold. I will defer to that.



The point is that he went to his computer and drafted his report, 59 pages long, without having gone back to New Waterford to do a full-scale inventory of just what was going on out there, at least insofar as the information that I have is concerned. If I'm wrong, I'm sure the minister will want to correct me, because if he has a log book or something to show that Dr. Murray went from stem to stern through the New Waterford hospital and examined every facility and every significant component, I would like to know that. The people in New Waterford right now think that that did not happen before Dr. Murray went to print with his recommendations. Now I think that question is probably long enough for my opening question. We can return with supplementaries next time around.



MR. CHAIRMAN: Thank you. That ends your time, and now I am going to recognize the member for Halifax Needham.



MR. MACEWAN: The minister has not responded.



MR. CHAIRMAN: Oh, I'm sorry. I apologize, honourable member.



MR. MACEWAN: That was a question.



MR. CHAIRMAN: It was a question? I didn't really recognize the question in that, but I will recognize the member and also the Minister of Health. It was back and forth.



HON. JAMES MUIR: Mr. Chairman, I thank the honourable member for Cape Breton Nova for that very comprehensive history lesson. I will take a look at the document he tabled. I've checked with my staff. Certainly we didn't know that it was in existence. I think he indicated that the previous Health Minister - or at least two or three of them ago, whatever, they had a bunch of them there - took it out of the files. I notice that what the honourable member referred to was the rationalization of some of the health care facilities in the province. There is no question. The Liberal Government did make some modifications.





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I would suggest that if you were to go back and look at Hansard, at what the honourable member said, you would find that that Liberal Government did, basically, remove a lot of beds. I am not saying that was necessarily a bad thing, Mr. Chairman, but they did. Just for what it is worth, I happened to be down in the Annapolis Valley a little while ago and I visited the health clinic in Wolfville, and a very interesting place it is, too. One of the comments that I heard from people who know that clinic very well is that - I don't like to support what the Liberal Government did because they didn't do much that was good for anybody, but the reference to the decision that was made about the Eastern Kings Memorial Community Health Centre, or the former hospital in Wolfville, was that it was an appropriate decision. The facility as it is now, a community health centre, is really serving the community and meeting community needs to a far greater extent than it had before.



Although I do understand that we subsequently learned from one of the physicians down there that it had been a bit of an ambulatory care centre; somebody categorized it as a nursing home called a hospital simply because the people who were in there were not necessarily people who, given an appropriate facility, would have been in a hospital. So I will take a look at the document, Mr. Chairman, and read it. Like I say, we didn't know it existed, so I do thank the honourable member for bringing it to our attention.



He talked specifically about my colleague, the honourable member for Cape Breton North, who is indeed an excellent member. It is very interesting and commendable that he called together a community group last evening to talk about health care concerns in his constituency. He had a very informed group. He also brought the CEO of the district health authority and, indeed, the member for Cape Breton The Lakes was there. It is a good thing he went there because, clearly, he does need to be educated about some of his thoughts about health and the delivery system. His knowledge base, to be quite candid, Mr. Chairman, often appears to be a little bit weak.



The honourable member for Cape Breton Nova did talk about the obstetrics program at the Northside General Hospital. The reason the obstetrics program is being suspended there is not a decision of the Department of Health. It was a decision of the Cape Breton District Health Authority, and the fact is that they didn't feel they had a sufficient number of physicians who were willing to continue delivering babies. The drive from the Northside over to the regional hospital is probably about 12 minutes on a good day. It just made all kinds of sense to consolidate that program for this year until they can get a group of doctors together who provide the critical mass necessary to deliver an obstetrical service.



It would also say, I believe, Mr. Chairman, looking at the obstetrical service on the Northside, clearly, if you're going to have a full-scale obstetrical service, you need to be able to do high-risk obstetrics. The high-risk cases were going to Sydney anyway, so the issue of the Northside was something that was agreed to, I think, and recognized as an appropriate decision given the availability of physicians.





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Mr. Chairman, he also talked at great length about the report on the emergency service that was commissioned by the Cape Breton District Health Authority. I think this was a very appropriate thing for that authority to do. Apparently, it was done by a gentleman by the name of Dr. Murray, who is an expert in emergency medicine, and I think the honourable member indicated he came from London, Ontario. I stand to be corrected on that. What he was asked to do was to say how we can rationalize or what would be an objective evaluation of the delivery system that we have for emergency medical services in the Cape Breton industrial area, given the fact, as the honourable member pointed out as he began his comments, that you have four hospitals basically within a 10 minute drive of each other. Is that what you said?



MR. MACEWAN: I wouldn't say 10 minutes. To get from New Waterford Hospital, it would be about 15 to 20 . . .



MR. MUIR: Okay, 20. I was out in New Waterford . . .



MR. CHAIRMAN: Order, please. Honourable member, would you direct your questions through the Chair. The honourable minister has the floor.



MR. MUIR: The fact is, that in a geographical area, you have four 24-hour emergency departments. I just want to clarify something for the committee. I am just going to quote from Hansard. The honourable member asked me the other day what the difference was between emergency and an urgent centre. I quote, Mr. Chairman, "In reference to the distinction between an emergent and an urgent care centre, I can give a layman's interpretation of that, but the honourable member may wish to consult with an expert in emergency medical care to get a more precise definition. Emergency, and I will give you the layman's definition, is something that has to be done immediately. Urgent means it is a high priority; there is a need to do it but you can take a bit of time in doing it."



Now I happened to be out later on that night and I met one of the leaders in medical education in this thing and I said, I had been asked this question this morning, I really didn't have time to go out and approach staff about it but I said, how I distinguished it was the difference of time. Emergency implies that it has to be done right away, whereas urgent means it needs to be done but it doesn't have to be done right away. She said yes, that was a very good definition of the distinction between urgent care and emergent care.



Now what I want to point out, Mr. Speaker, and I did in another answer, to the honourable member for Cape Breton Nova's question, or it may have been the member for Cape Breton Centre who asked a question about the same thing, I believe, on that day; we were . . .



MR. CHAIRMAN: Order, Mr. Minister. I am sorry to have you take your - are you okay with that? Thank you. Go ahead, Mr. Minister, finish your . . .





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MR. MUIR: I just wanted to clarify - I want to get back my train of thought here, about that thing and I said, one of the unfortunate situations we have in Nova Scotia and in every other province and territory in this country is we have things called emergency rooms but they aren't being used as emergency rooms. They are being used for something else. It may be urgent, it may be elective. If these emergency rooms were really doing emergency service, then about 90 per cent of the things they would see in the course of a shift would not appear to them, would not be presented to them. About 90 per cent of the so-called emergency things that are seen in our hospital emergency rooms are not things that would be triaged as being an emergency. Therefore, the designation of one facility as an urgent care centre, where you have people who do urgent things, versus another centre where they have skilled personnel to do those high things that are immediate, trained staff to deal with what we will call emergencies, Mr. Speaker, that may not be such a bad observation, given the fact that these opportunities, these facilities are relatively close together.



MR. CHAIRMAN: Thank you, Mr. Minister. I would like to thank the member for Cape Breton Nova. I would now like to recognize a member of the NDP caucus.



The honourable member for Halifax Needham.



MS. MAUREEN MACDONALD: Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. I would like to pick up on this discussion around the use of emergency rooms and emergency departments because I think it is a very important piece of what is required to improve, I guess, upon the medical services available to people in Nova Scotia and, in fact, the health of people. I think we all recognize that part of the problem, in fact a large part of the problem, in terms of people going to emergency departments when they are not well but they are not necessarily requiring emergency care, is the lack of an alternative. The fact that we don't have any longer in Nova Scotia physicians who make home visits, for example; for the most part that is a very rare occurrence. The fact that there are no 24 hour walk-in clinics, there are very few services available to people outside of regular doctors office hours is a very big problem. It seems to me that it is very important for the department to have a plan in place to improve primary care around the province and to spell that out.



[3:15 p.m.]



The minister will know that in my constituency there is the North End Community Health Centre. It is an organization that is near and dear to me, not only because it happens to reside in the constituency I represent, it is also the health centre where my own family physician is and it is a facility I have had a long association with, as a member of the Board of Directors and also as somebody who was employed as the Health Education Coordinator for that community health centre back in the late 1980s.







[Page 72]



As wonderful as that community health centre is, it is quite limited in what it can offer that community. For example, it doesn't have any longer office hours on Saturday. There was a time when the service was available on Saturdays on a walk-in, non-appointment kind of basis. Over the past, I would say, the past 10 years the financial situation for that particular organization has been very difficult. The North End Community Health Association, just like the QE II and the IWK have growing demands on the service but have seen their budgets essentially frozen. Staff have gone without pay increases for periods of time, then finally there were some pay increases. The kinds of demands and needs that that particular health centre faces as a community health centre, in a community of very high levels of low income, high levels of immigrant populations into the metropolitan region - quite often people coming to the health clinic who require not just health services but also an interpreter who is able to help people interpret the language and understand the instructions and decisions being made by physicians and other health care providers is really pretty important.



Now, as the minister will know, that is one of the four sites in the province that has been chosen as a site for a nurse practitioner, the primary care pilot project. The nurse practitioner certainly has been a very welcome addition into that community, but nevertheless, I think that these kinds of services could do with greater support so they can actually expand the role they play in the community, can offer services outside Mondays to Fridays, in communities where certainly people are not only sick between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. I think that just my own knowledge of, let's say, some of the single, mother-led households with young children in that community tells me that a fair number of those families with sick children present themselves in emergency departments on the weekend. So do mental health consumers, whose normal place of seeing a family physician would be at the North End clinic, their only alternative outside of 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. hours, or evening hours, is to present themselves at the emergency departments.



I guess my question to the minister, Mr. Chairman, is about where is the department's commitment to expanding the current handful of community-based health care clinics around the province and where is the plan and the commitment to building a network of community health centres around the province that essentially would take the very real pressure off emergency departments and allow services to be provided in the communities at a far reduced cost than the cost of emergency services?



MR. MUIR: Mr. Chairman, the honourable member for Halifax Needham has outlined some very real concerns that are shared by the Department of Health and they are certainly items with which we are making progress.



She mentioned 24 hour walk-in clinics. As far as I know, there aren't any in the province. Now there are some walk-in clinics; I believe there are a couple, I guess they are commercial ventures. A couple of the Superstores have walk-in clinics (Interruption) There

[Page 73]



is one in Sackville, and there is one out in the Halifax Shopping Centre, or someplace, is there? (Interruption) Portland Street, is it? Anyway, there are a couple of these things.



I have been approached by a couple of other groups looking for funding to set up a walk-in clinic. The issue with walk-in clinics, and there are strengths and weaknesses to those things. People who have had a good deal of experience with them say some good things about them in terms of access, but there are other elements about them that aren't as good as having your own primary care physician. Obviously that's where we would prefer to go.



There are also groups of doctors - I know here in the metro area, I happened to encounter a couple of them recently - who run seven-day services, including Saturday and Sunday. I know in a couple of cases they did have people without appointments arriving on one of those days. They had a period of time where people could come without appointments and they were basically a walk-in clinic at one time but I think in a couple of cases they found that it was fair enough to work without appointments, but the demand became so great they had to restrict it to people who were in their own practices.



The issues of the series of clinics like the North End clinic - she has spoken quite positively of that North End clinic and we recognize that it does provide a valuable service. I've spoken of that clinic and also the Cobequid Multi-Service clinic in talking about potential models for health care delivery in forums - not only here in Nova Scotia but I've talked about it in other provinces as well. We do appreciate those things and, of course, as the honourable member mentioned, the North End clinic is one of the demonstration sites for our primary care projects.



Last year, the department, in looking at the Cobequid and the North End models, had written a proposal to the federal government, and I say expressed an interest in finding out their interest in what we had done, and was basically what we would like to see, as you say, to take the pressure off the emergency rooms. She's indicated they've become family doctor's offices and that was the point I was making in response to the question from the honourable member for Cape Breton Nova to set up a series of six or seven of these in a sort of circle around Halifax to take the pressure off the emergency rooms. We had looked at one in Spryfield as well as the North End - even going out as far as the corridor out in the East Hants area and then coming back because that's really a very, very strong growth area.



Unfortunately, there were primary health care funds being made available from the federal government, and we didn't really get a very positive response from them on that. We thought it was a very good project which would have not only been good for us here in Nova Scotia but would have been a model and an experiment that a lot of other jurisdictions could have learned from. I will continue to advance that and I hope to get together with the federal Health Minister sometime before too long. We had a meeting scheduled and it had to be cancelled in which I would advance that.





[Page 74]



Two other things that we're doing is that we expect to have more nurse practitioners in the field this year working in collaborative practices. I can tell the honourable member that the four sites include Springhill, Caledonia, Lyons Brook as well as the North End clinic. The feedback on those initially has been very positive, however we do have to recognize that not all physicians wish to work in partnership. It has to be a partnership agreement, we don't have stand-alone things.



I can also tell the honourable member one of the things that has happened this year with the co-operation of EMC and with the support of the nurses associations and the medical community is that down on Long Island and Briar Island, in the constituency of the honourable member for Digby, we are using paramedics to provide some limited range of services to the residents on the islands which means they don't have to travel to Digby to get them.



The reason for that was, to be quite frank, we did have highly skilled personnel on the islands and their requirements for transport as an ambulance service, as an emergency transport service, was very, very limited. Fortunately, the calls down there are, quite literally, very few and very far between. So, they did have time and we were able to do that.



This year in our budget the honourable member will see a provision for continuing support to the four demonstration projects that we've had. We continue to learn from that but we have to find alternative health care providers or methods of changing the delivery system that, to be quite frank, by the time we have enough general practitioners or specialists in the province, everybody has their own family practitioner and without waiting five or six or two weeks. I can give you a personal illustration.



I phoned my family doctor in Truro, I think it was about a year ago, I had seen him in December and decided I hadn't seen a doctor for some period of time, I probably should get checked and I think it was about somewhere around November 12th when I called and she said, sure that's no problem at all, maybe it was November 13th and she said come on in the 16th. I said you're going to get me in on the 16th? She says, yes, December 16th. So it was about 34 days. I wasn't sick so that wasn't a problem and I can also say that had I had a reason to go see my family physician, I think I would have been worked into the schedule if I really needed the care. This is an issue right across the province.



I guess what I'm trying to say is that as far as the member for Halifax Needham, her thoughts about the need for an extension of primary care service and that of the Department of Health are very similar; we're actually singing off the same song sheet on this one and I very much appreciate her support for the directions the department is going.



The other thing I'd like to mention is that there is a group getting together from the Atlantic Provinces and we have regular meetings among officials of the Departments of Health in the Atlantic Provinces. We are investigating when we will probably be proceeding

[Page 75]



with a 24 hour a day nurse triage telephone system. I'm told that's worked relatively well in some other jurisdictions and it's something that we hope we can proceed with here. A lot of times when people present themselves at emergency rooms, they just don't know the answer and they have no other place to get the answer other than go there and see somebody about it. If they could pick up a phone and call somebody and say, no, you can wait until tomorrow morning or it's a normal thing, then some of the pressures in these rooms would be taken off.



MS. MAUREEN MACDONALD: I want to thank the minister, Mr. Chairman. He certainly has provided lots of food for thought and discussion. I want to come back to the issue of community health centres because I'm aware that the department has been working on terms of reference or a framework document of some kind with respect to community health centres, also given that the funds for community health centres flow through the districts rather than directly from the Department of Health to centres.



I want to talk a bit about the tensions, I guess, the tensions of being funded in that way. I think everybody recognizes the usefulness of decentralizing health care provision into the districts. That's something that we support in this caucus, the decentralization into the regions. At the same time, you can't help but be aware, using the North End clinic in the Capital District, that it's a very small fish in a very big pond. It's in a situation where it has, as an organization, really come very much from the community. It has been an initiative of the community. It soon will be 30 years old. The staff and the board of directors feel that their responsibility and their accountability is as much to the community as it is to the bureaucracy, I guess you would say, in some ways.



[3:30 p.m.]



I think that there is, I know that there is, concern about any shift in the relationship between the clinic, for example, with respect to its accountability to the community away from its accountability to the community and its sensitivity to the community and the possibility that it has to worry more about accountability toward the Capital District - the potential for a loss of autonomy, the potential for the loss of control over its own hiring practices, its own programming decision in terms of maybe developing new programs, addressing new needs in the community.



So I'm wondering about the framework that the Department of Health is developing for community health centres that will guarantee, that will reassure these communities that they will be able to maintain some degree of control and autonomy over those features of their operations that allow them to respond in a sensitive and realistic manner to what's required in the community. I know that the North End clinic isn't the only clinic that has these issues, that there are other clinics like Hants Shore, I'm sure my colleague, the member for Hants East, will have an opportunity to ask some questions about the clinic in his community. People in those communities have built themselves, they've built them with

[Page 76]



bake sales, bottle drives, and they're important elements of maintaining community involvement and support.



When you are in a situation where you're such a small fish in a big pond that is so institutional in lots of ways, like the Capital District and, you know, not being pejorative about the Capital District, but it's just a reality when that district is dealing with a large institution like the tertiary care facility at the QE II, that the needs and the requirements of a very small community-based organization can get lost in the shuffle. So I want to know from the minister what reassurances he can provide to community health centres like the North End clinic that they will be able to continue to operate and do the kinds of work that he has been able to go around the country and talk about.



MR. MUIR: Mr. Chairman, welcome to the Chair.



MR. CHAIRMAN: Thank you.



MR. MUIR: I guess I would like to begin by saying that I do understand the concern that the member has, but in terms of the North End clinic, of course, it retains its own advisory board and that has not been changed. Secondly, I think the relationship between the Capital District Health Authority and the community health boards and probably its relationship or its responsiveness to community issues is unequaled elsewhere in the province. Clearly the Capital District, despite its being the largest one, has certainly shown considerable leadership in working with its community health boards and being responsive to community issues.



It was very interesting, Mr. Chairman, not that long ago I was speaking to, I think it was the day that the Prince was visiting over at the Infirmary, we were over there, Prince Michael and a couple of other people, and we were talking about health matters here in Nova Scotia and we were talking about community health boards.



There was a meeting of community health boards in Halifax that afternoon which the chairman of the board and the CEO attended and they were trying to set up, the comment was something like this, the district health authorities, the CEOs meet as a group and board chairs, and they were trying to ensure that they had very good relations, or the integration between the community health boards and the relationship between the community health boards and the district health authority was solid. They decided that the model that they were using in the capital region was the one that should be adopted for the rest of the province and I'm not saying that it might not have to have some modifications, but certainly they had done an excellent job in this area and the others were looking at it. So I hope that gives the member some comfort.







[Page 77]



MS. MAUREEN MACDONALD: Mr. Speaker, I just want to be really clear here with the minister, that I'm certainly not being critical of the community health boards or the Capital District board in this area in terms of their desire to be responsive to community issues because I can say based on, not a great deal of contact, but to the extent that I've had contact with the folks in the community health boards and the district board, there is a very strong desire to work with the community and to work in partnership with community.



So, without any question, I would never raise any issues or have any concerns about that aspect, but I want to say that it's a very big district. I guess the point I'm trying to make is that it is a very big district and that within the district the needs are quite diverse and the circumstances can be quite different and that is the value of, let's say, a community health centre that operates in a particular area. Those folks every day see the people who come through the doors who not only bring their medical care needs, but they often bring a lot of other needs with them as well that are very connected in terms of I would say are the determinants of health.



So you can talk to physicians at the North End clinic and they can tell you that people are bringing in, you know, they're coming in and they're not feeling well. They're quite stressed out and it turns out that a source of many of their problems is income problems, housing problems, employment problems, education and training problems, addiction problems, these kinds of things.



Now, to use again the example of the North End clinic, the North End clinic is situated on Gottingen Street. It's in the inner city of Halifax and in this community we have a problem with drug abuse and addictions and we have a problem in that for our young people who are involved in drug abuse and the whole drug culture, these young people are not apt to get on a bus and cross the harbour and go over to the grounds of the Nova Scotia Hospital and participate in the addiction services programs there. They're just not going to do that and people at the North End clinic and people in my community recognize that. They recognize that here we have a group of young people who really need addiction services and they need a different kind of addiction services. They need addiction services that are very grounded in the community, that are very sensitive and specific to race and class issues, if you will, and they're not available.



So they're not available and a very important role of the North End clinic has often been to identify, through the workers in the clinic, these very serious problems and then they do a lot of community development work in the community looking for ways to address these programs.



The North End clinic did research. They had some young people on a summer student program working with one of the physicians who has been in the clinic for many years, who is very dedicated to families and youth. They developed a very nice proposal for a youth addiction treatment program that would be community based, that would be offered in the

[Page 78]



community, and they were unable to secure financial support through your department and probably through the Capital District. Not because the Capital District is mean or miserable, or anything like that, but that people had this idea that maybe the better place to offer those services would be in the high schools, associated with St. Pat's High School or Queen Elizabeth High School. To most people that would sound like a very reasonable idea, but let me tell you what's wrong with that idea, that people in our community know, but people from outside our community don't know.



What they don't know is that the kids we're talking about who need these programs don't make it to high school, believe it or not. They quite often leave school at the junior high level and that's actually part of what we need to address with community-based addiction services in our community. Actually catching kids when they're 12, 13, 14 and 15, at that level, and doing it in an environment that they're in every day and that they feel comfortable in. I know because I've had the discussion with the chairman of the community health board and I've had the discussion with others, just trying to make people understand that you have to trust the community when they identify a problem and they work out the solution to that problem that makes sense to them.



We're not trying to be difficult and we're not trying to be contrary. We're trying to say this is a different set of circumstances and realities that we understand because we live it every day and so I guess, to use that example, that's the point I'm trying to make. I think that there is a huge amount of desire on the part of community health boards and district health authorities, but there also is, I think there just is a bit of a disconnect perhaps sometimes. I'm wondering how that can be addressed so that community organizations - the minister said in response to this earlier point that the North End clinic, for example, retains its own advisory board.



I would submit to the minister that the board of directors at the North End clinic see themselves as much more than advisory. They are the stewards of that organization. They essentially get elected from the membership and it's their job to oversee all aspects of the operation, including the accountability piece, that they ultimately are accountable for the health dollars that they spend back to government and to the taxpayers of Nova Scotia. They also are very accountable to the membership of the North End clinic who are drawn from the community and from the patient base for the array of services that are provided from the clinic. Many of those are primary health care but a lot of them community-based development, to address things that are features of the determinacy of health like the whole question of addiction in our young people.



MR. MUIR: Mr. Chairman, let me begin by acknowledging that I did use the wrong terminology - as an advisory group. I do know that they are a board of directors and I substituted one term for another and I do know that they are accountable and we've seen some actions of their accountability in recent years since I've been here.





[Page 79]



The honourable member does bring to the floor of the House a very important thing and this is the whole issue of population health. I'm pleased to say, Mr. Chairman, that the Department of Health has formally endorsed a population health model for the improvement of the health and health care of our citizens. The honourable member quite correctly points out that health is not a matter of just sitting next to somebody and getting a cold, that there are many other factors such as, you know, the relationship between income and health. Quite frankly, the lower the income, in general, the higher the health care need. The lower the education, the higher the health care need, we know that and we are building those factors into our planning. I'm delighted that we are getting support from the other Parties as we move forward.



[3:45 p.m.]



Indeed, I guess I want to talk about just our tangible commitment to population health indicators next year. We have Dr. David Rippey heading up our population health section and we've committed $1.1 million to the formalization and development of a plan or a model that is tangible, that can be implemented, and that really makes a difference. The honourable member talked about addiction problems in reference to the northend of the city and that the community health clinic there, you know, people really couldn't get on a bus and go over to the Nova Scotia Hospital, that services in the community were more appropriate, and I guess sort of in recognition of that, not only that, but in other jurisdictions as well, the government this year as part of our, I suppose you could call it our population health initiative, has allocated an additional $1.8 million for addiction services with particular reference to adolescents and women.



We also have a blended mental health approach and we've beefed up addiction services. We have a 24-hour call-in line. I know that that's not appropriate for everybody, but we do have some things and it does serve some people. We've also funded some research about various types of addiction. We tend to think, I suppose, in addiction most people tend to think of drugs and perhaps tobacco. When we're talking about those things as addiction, we know that they have a direct relationship or a negative affect on the physical health. We also are concerned about gambling addiction. There are a number of people who have those and we've done work to try to recognize that problem and to lessen that impact.



Just about everything that we do now in the Department of Health in terms of programs and new initiatives, we examine through a population health lense. That's a commitment that we made and something that we are doing and sometimes the trouble is with population health, you don't always get an immediate feedback on it and it's a long term thing. If you've got a broken leg and you go to the hospital, somebody fixes it today, then it's fine. We have the highest rate of obesity in the country here in Nova Scotia and we know the relationship between obesity and a number of other chronic illnesses. We preach that - not only the government and the district health authority and whomever it is responsible for

[Page 80]



delivering - the most important thing in health service in this province is going to be how individuals accept the responsibility for their own well-being.



We can influence a very minor part. I think I talked about this last year; about 95 per cent of health anywhere depends on the individual. You've got some things with genes that you can't deal with; you know, some people have inherent dispositions for certain diseases. We're in the business of genetics and stem cell research and all of those things; sometime in the future maybe we will be able to deal with those. Then there is the amount that has to do with health that is delivered in a formal way by the health care system, but by and large, and I think this is what the honourable member is pointing out, we know that the great majority of a person's well-being depends on how they live their life, if they exercise and eat good food.



Eating good is one thing. Good food doesn't overcome the lack of exercise, but exercise will overcome or at least help combat the lack of good food. So, you know, we say get up and exercise. That's probably about the most important thing. That's what the people tell me and, like everybody else, probably, in this room, we don't have the time. (Interruption) Yes, we should be having a calisthenics break, Mr. Chairman, is what we should be doing in this House.



MR. CHAIRMAN: Well, honourable minister, if there's unanimous consent, we perhaps could give that consideration.



MS. MAUREEN MACDONALD: I agree with what the minister had to say, and I want to go back to a point, though, that he made earlier because he was speaking about alternative health care providers and the need to really address this. I was listening to Roy Romanow, I think, on CPAC one evening during the hearings in one of the other provinces. He was expressing some frustration with the snail's pace of change that has occurred in the Canadian health care system with respect to moving in the direction of alternative health care provision.



Certainly in Nova Scotia we have had an opportunity that we haven't played to our advantage and that is the introduction of midwifery. When I was first elected, there was great optimism in the midwifery community. They had done a lot of research and they were feeling that in fairly short order there would be some change in this province. There would be the introduction of legislation that would recognize the valuable role that licensed midwives and practitioners could play in our health care system, and yet we have not seen any legislation come forward. I think it would be fair to say that many members who were so optimistic are feeling quite demoralized.







[Page 81]



So I'm wondering why it is that we have not seen any advance in the regulation of midwifery or the introduction of legislation that would legitimate and involve licensed midwife practitioners in our health care delivery system? Why haven't we seen it and when we could look forward to some change?



MR. MUIR: Mr. Chairman, the honourable member raises an interesting question and I just want to indicate, for what it's worth, that we do have a primary care planning group going on and representatives of the midwives are part of that. So in the primary care planning group, one of the things that I think will come from that is some sort of role clarification for midwives. Once we reach that stage, I don't think there's any question in my mind that not only midwives but a number of others, what we right now call alternative health care providers, will begin to play a larger role in our health delivery system. You know, people use them all the time. No, they don't use midwives all the time; that's not true, but we've got a whole array of what we would call alternative health care providers, whether it's a massage therapist or a midwife - there are all kinds of them - doctor of herbal medicine, naturopathic.



I've met representatives of those groups and, you know, I really believe that the blended approach to medicine is probably something that will come. It's not going to happen overnight, but I can remember that when I was a young person, the practice of chiropractor was not seen as really adding any legitimate or real value to the medical field and now, you know, we just did something with the Chiropractic Act here, either last year or the year before. They're recognized by insurance plans and everything else. It took the chiropractors a long time and it's going to take some time, but I think it's going to come.



MR. CHAIRMAN: The honourable member for Dartmouth North.



MR. JERRY PYE: Mr. Chairman, I want to thank my colleague, the member for Halifax Needham, for allowing me some intervention time during her hour of Budget Estimates. My questions will be going through to the Minister of Health, but first I want to go back to the Tory blue book, Strong Leadership . . . a clear course. Under Seniors I just want to make some general statements to begin with.



In one of the bullets under seniors, during the election campaign, the government of the day decided to state that it would "ensure that input from seniors and the interests of seniors are at the forefront of all government decision-making affecting the future of our province." I want to also go to an excerpt from Hansard with respect to Wednesday, June 10, 1998, and I will table this if I'm requested. There the Premier, Dr. John Hamm, was posing a question to the then Minister of Health, Dr. James Smith: "Mr. Speaker, I have a question for the Minister of Health. The Minister of Health has created a lot of confusion in the minds of seniors as to what is going to happen to the cost of participating in the government's Pharmacare Program. I want to, by way of my question, give the minister an opportunity to clarify this situation. Is the minister prepared to commit here today that seniors in this

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province will not have any increase in participating in the Seniors' Pharmacare Program, either in the premium or the co-pay for as long . . . as this government is in power?"



He goes on to ask another question. Dr. Hamm again asks the Minister of Health, "When the government announced its program in 1995, it announced it was going to share the cost 50/50 with seniors. Has that policy changed, or is he prepared to guarantee seniors for as long or as short as this government is in power that they will not face an increase in either premiums or co-pay to participate in the Pharmacare Program of this province?"



MR. CHAIRMAN: Order, please. Did the honourable member for Dartmouth North indicate that that document is public record?



MR. PYE: Yes, it is public record.



MR. CHAIRMAN: It won't be necessary to table it then.



MR. PYE: And I did indicate that only if it was necessary to table it that I was quite prepared to table it as well.



Of course, what do we have? We have, in fact, the Hamm Government, the Minister of Health, has announced that there will be an increase in seniors' co-pay, and as a matter of fact, it has gone from 20 per cent to 30 per cent that seniors will have to pay. You know, he said that this would in fact benefit some 7,000 seniors and that seniors with an income of $24,000 or less, single seniors, would have to pay and seniors with combined incomes of $28,000 would have to pay.



[4:00 p.m.]



My question is to the Minister of Health. Does he really think that this government is doing justice to the Seniors' Pharmacare Program when, in fact, he is placing a 10 per cent increase from the last time the increase had occurred on seniors who are now expected to make that co-pay?



MR. MUIR: I welcome the honourable member for Dartmouth North to the debate on the estimates. He's quite correct. This government does put forethought into a good many of the health care decisions that are made and not only decisions in my department, but decisions in other departments as well.



With reference to the Seniors' Pharmacare Program, the cost of that continues to go up. The honourable member did say in his comments, when that program was introduced, it was supposed to be on a 50/50 basis. That was the case. You know that when that program was first introduced, there was neither premium nor co-pay associated with it. It was 100 per cent paid by the government. The issue was that at 100 per cent pay that program was not

[Page 83]



sustainable and that was really the whole issue. Not only in terms of the formulary which did expand, which is probably a good thing, a good many of the pharmaceuticals that are on the formulary continued to increase in cost. In addition, the number of seniors was increasing as well.



The program right now, I think there are about 95,000 seniors in the program and indeed, we have consulted with seniors' groups in arriving at decisions in Pharmacare. That is not to say, I don't want to give the impression that all of the seniors with whom we consulted would accept or indeed, endorse the changes that have been made. I'm not trying to imply that, but I do believe that they do understand why they have been made. This year, there will be roughly about 55,000 of the 95,000 seniors who are eligible not to pay any premium or have their premium reduced. That program is escalating the cost at roughly around 10 per cent per year. It's about a $125 million ticket item next year, that's the cost of the program. I think the participation of the seniors is around 40 per cent and the government picks up the rest. Right now, I think the seniors are paying roughly about 30 per cent, the government's paying about 70 per cent.



MR. PYE: Mr. Minister, you're absolutely quite right. In 1990 seniors paid 0 per cent, the government paid 100 per cent of the Seniors' Pharmacare Program. That cost in excess of almost some $65 million. There's absolutely no question. The problem that we have today is that we recognize that the population is becoming aged as we move on. The unfortunate part of it is, many seniors are on fixed incomes and those fixed incomes have not kept pace with the cost of living. What government has done is they've simply continued to deliver the program, but they've added that burden onto many of the seniors who simply can't afford to pay that Pharmacare fee. What I'm saying to you is that through my office, a number of seniors have simply said to me, there is no way that we can possibly afford that cost. So the question to the minister is, is the minister aware or does the minister know how many seniors have opted out of the Seniors' Pharmacare Program because they can no longer afford the cost of participating in the Seniors' Pharmacare Program?



MR. MUIR: No, I don't have that information. All we know is that we have the numbers of people that enrol from year to year. I don't have that information right in front of me. As you are perhaps aware too, Mr. Chairman, and I think the honourable member is, the government three or four years ago went to be a payer of last resort. In other words, if a person had a private insurance plan, they were to kick that in before the government. Thus, you will see if you take a look at the chart and the expenditures, one year there's a drop in enrolment, it's simply because people stayed with their private plans. In some cases, quite frankly, I guess a private plan is better than the government plan and that's a decision people have to make.



We have not heard of many people opting out of the plan. I think part of the reason is that the premium is on a sliding scale. They can register in the program and it may not cost them anything to register, or very little. In other words, if they are below a certain income

[Page 84]



level, then they don't pay a premium, effectively the government pays that premium. If they go up to another level, then the amount of premium that they pay is pro-rated. Perhaps the question is, can they afford the co-pay and we haven't had many reports of that, although there's some suggestion we're close to the point now where it might make a difference.



MR. PYE: To the minister, if you know that you're reaching that point where it may make a difference, I'm wondering if the minister has given any consideration to re-evaluating or looking or making an assessment after this year with respect to the increase of the co-pay that is paid by seniors to the Pharmacare Program and if there will be a review of the impact that this may have on the seniors limited ability to make those co-payments?



MR. MUIR: That Seniors' Pharmacare Program is reviewed every year and clearly this year when it was realized that the program was to be sustainable then users had to participate more. The decision was made to go with the premium as opposed to the co-pay. We say this in Question Period every once in awhile, but I want to reiterate for the members of the House and I think everybody knows this, is that if I had my druthers as Minister of Health, I would have a universal drug plan for every Nova Scotian and that's something that we are looking at. I won't call it a proposal, but some thoughts have been put together that I haven't seen yet but I do know that we had asked some people to put them together if we were to proceed with that initiative, what would be the best way to go about it? Similarly, in terms of the seniors' plan, to be quite frank, my druthers would be that we would go back to 1990, or whenever it was, system where there was no premium and no co-pay. That's just simply not practical now unless our friends in Ottawa want to come down and pick up all the Pharmacare costs and I will tell you I have suggested that to them, but for some reason they seem to be reluctant to do it.



Notwithstanding that, the program that we have in Nova Scotia is one of the most generous in the country. For example, in New Brunswick, to get the same coverage that they have here in Nova Scotia, the annual premium for seniors has just gone up to $1,068. I saw in Quebec they upped their premiums considerably. We have a very, very generous plan. I know that it's tough for people, but comparatively speaking, Nova Scotia still has a very generous plan and obviously, I would prefer it was more generous, but we just can't do that right now. Health care costs are going up so much, we have to have people participate, that's a fact or we aren't going to have it.



MR. PYE: I would say to the minister that we have to have people who are able to participate and be able to afford the premiums as well. I do know that the minister made reference - and I'm very pleased to hear the minister say that if he had his druthers, that he would prefer a universal Pharmacare Program in this province. I want to say that in 1993 there was a Pharmacare reform working group. I know that the minister was not around at that particular time - or I don't think the minister was around. He certainly wasn't in this Legislature in 1993 - in spirit, of course, indeed.





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I wonder if the minister has actually looked at that working group's recommendations and if, in fact, some of those recommendations can ever become reality in the Province of Nova Scotia?



MR. MUIR: Mr. Chairman, we do have people in our Pharmacare section who obviously would be familiar with that. It was the people in the Pharmacare section who put those preliminary thoughts on paper for us to take a look at. I would be very doubtful if they did not take the work of that planning group into consideration when they were doing it.



MR. CHAIRMAN: Thank you. That concludes the NDP time at this point.



The honourable member for Glace Bay.



MR. DAVID WILSON: Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I should notify you at the beginning that I will be sharing some of my time here with my colleague for Cape Breton The Lakes in approximately 15 or 20 minutes time. I would like to go on the record as saying a few things and perhaps get the occasional question in for the Minister of Health as well.



First, Mr. Chairman, I am sure the minister is aware that one of the most popular headlines in the Cape Breton Post these days, especially on the Glace Bay page, would read something to the effect of how this headline reads here, that a shortage of doctors will force residents to travel to Sydney and New Waterford this weekend. Of course, as the minister would well know, that would be because the emergency department at the Glace Bay hospital is closed, forcing residents to go to either the Cape Breton Regional Hospital in Sydney or the New Waterford Consolidated Hospital.



Now, Mr. Chairman, I guess at one point in time - and the minister has made reference to my recent experience in the emergency room at the Glace Bay hospital - as unbelievable as this may sound, the administrative staff at the Cape Breton Regional Hospital actually contemplated setting up one of those neon glow signs at the bottom of South Street in Glace Bay that would alert people whether or not the emergency department at the Glace Bay hospital was open on that particular day. In other words - and I would liken it to travelling home to Cape Breton, when you see the flashing lights telling you whether or not the Englishtown ferry is operating and in service at that particular time.



I am sure the minister could confirm that with administrative staff from the regional hospital, that they actually did contemplate setting up that type of a system, so that residents would know whether or not their emergency department was open at that particular time. If we have reached the stage in this province where the minister considers that to be adequate, good health care in this province, that the residents of one particular community or, in this case, several surrounding communities, do not know and may not be aware whether or not their emergency department, emergency room, outpatient department, whatever you want to call it, is actually functioning with a doctor on duty at that particular time, perhaps at the time

[Page 86]



of a severe injury or when emergency medical treatment is required. If that is what the minister categorizes as good health care, then I guess he and I are at odds and disagree somewhat vehemently as to whether or not that is good health care in this province in 2002.



One of the things that has happened of late at the Glace Bay hospital and it also affects the Northside General Hospital and the New Waterford Consolidated Hospital, but I am not going to touch on those topics because I am sure my colleagues from those particular areas will cover them. The Glace Bay hospital is among three or four hospitals in the regional health care complex that have been the subject of a study that was done by Dr. Michael Murray, a physician from Barrie, Ontario. The work was completed and he was, in effect, an independent reviewer on behalf of the regional healthcare complex in Cape Breton. The conclusion of a 59-page report on emergency departments at the Glace Bay hospital, the Northside General Hospital, the New Waterford Consolidated Hospital and the regional hospital - and I am sure the minister has seen that report - was that emergency departments at busy community hospitals will be negatively impacted if physicians aren't compensated for heavy workloads.



[4:15 p.m.]



That report found that, number one, physicians are under increasingly heavy workloads. In some cases a physician on duty at the Glace Bay hospital, for instance, is doing the job that would normally take two physicians, at least two, and there is a shortage. It also found that if you don't compensate that doctor, if you don't pay that doctor as much as you pay that doctor to work in the emergency department at the regional hospital or at other regional hospitals throughout this province, if you don't pay them as much to work at the Glace Bay hospital, the New Waterford Consolidated Hospital or the Northside General Hospital, you are not going to have those doctors. It is as simple as that. This was an agreement that the Department of Health, I understand, negotiated with the Medical Society.



Now I also understand, at this point in time, that there has been, thankfully, someone in the department who came to their senses. It may have been at the urging of the Cape Breton Regional Health Care Complex, which was faced with this crisis, but someone in the department came to their senses and said, this deal is not right; we will renegotiate it.



I would like to ask the minister if he could rather briefly tell me whether this is indeed under renegotiation, whether there are going to be changes and if doctors at the Glace Bay hospital, specifically - as I said, not that I am not concerned, but I know my colleagues who represent the other areas will do their job of asking those questions - are going to be compensated on a level equal to those who are working, for instance, at the regional healthcare complex that is part of the overall Cape Breton Health Care Complex.







[Page 87]



MR. MUIR: The issue of compensation for emergency room physicians - again, I am calling them emergency rooms and everybody in here does recognize that most of what goes on in those things is not emergency service - was a table item for discussion between the Department of Health and the Medical Society of Nova Scotia, which represents the physicians. The Medical Society, I believe - I perhaps stand to be corrected on this. I understand that the differential - and it was increased a bit this year under the terms of the new contract - was something recommended by the Medical Society, but it was, in my understanding, sort of a national pattern right across the thing. I think the reason for it was probably that if you are going to have an emergency room, then an emergency room should literally be treating the crisis instances as opposed to necessarily delivering outpatient services; therefore, you needed people who were highly skilled in particular sites.



I can tell you, though, that clearly that was a problem. It seemed to be a problem up in the Cape Breton District Health Authority. In conjunction with the Department of Health and with the cooperation of the Medical Society, I believe a solution has been found to that. Basically the solution is pretty simple; they have taken the money, they are pooling it and they are going to dole it out.



MR. WILSON: I would take that, Mr. Minister, as the answer being that from here on in, physicians who work the emergency department at the Glace Bay hospital are going to be paid the same as physicians who are working at the emergency department at the regional complex in Sydney. Is that correct?



MR. MUIR: Mr. Chairman, this is a matter for the Cape Breton District Health Authority, and their Medical Advisory Committee is taking these matters under consideration. Exactly what the final solution is, I don't know, I can't give a specific answer to that. As I say, this is being administered through the DHA and you would have to get the most up-to-date information from them.



MR. WILSON: Mr. Chairman, I'm baffled a bit because the contract with the physicians in this province is negotiated by the Department of Health to my understanding. It's a province-wide contract with the Department of Health that's negotiated with physicians in this province. Therefore that fee structure was negotiated on a provincial basis with the Department of Health. It's Department of Health officials and officials from the Medical Society of Nova Scotia who agreed to that fee structure that saw a differential as a matter of fact between Glace Bay, North Sydney, New Waterford and Sydney, but now you're saying that it is not the responsibility of your department, Mr. Minister, to correct that situation. Is that what you're telling me?



MR. MUIR: When you say that it has to be corrected, it implies that it does need to be corrected. It would imply that there might have been something the matter with the negotiations and I'm not going to comment on that. What I can tell the honourable member is that the Cape Breton District Health Authority did express some concern. It expressed that

[Page 88]



concern to the Department of Health and also to the Medical Society and they are trying to work out a solution to that problem with the support of the Department of Health and the concurrence of the Medical Society. I can tell you, if you're asking is the agreement changed, the answer to that is no.



MR. WILSON: So, again, I would like some clarification, Mr. Chairman. If the minister would clarify, I am saying it is a problem. Officials of the Cape Breton Healthcare Complex, specifically the chief administrative officer there, John Malcom, had been quoted in the media as saying that it is a problem, that there is a problem with the fee structure. I attended a meeting in Glace Bay at which about 50 people attended. Mr. Malcom stated at that meeting that there were negotiations taking place to try to change that, and they were optimistic that it could come about, that the fee structure would be changed.



So, obviously, it has been recognized as a problem, perhaps not by the Minister of Health, Mr. Chairman, but it has been recognized as a problem by the administration of the Cape Breton Healthcare Complex and John Malcom, the Chief Executive Officer, says that there is a provision apparently to allow the four hospitals within the Cape Breton Healthcare Complex to be classified as one. Therefore, that would lead to a change basically in the wording of any contract that could be made by the Department of Health and by the Medical Society of Nova Scotia. With some simple contract wording, it would be possible for that to be changed, but again the clarification that I'm looking for here is whether or not the minister, and surely the minister agrees that this is a problem area, that this has to be corrected?



You can't pay doctors one fee at one regional emergency department because Dr. Murray in his report said that the Glace Bay hospital should be treated the same as any regional facility throughout this province. It has the numbers that it's dealing with. There are close to 30,000-some people a year who go through the emergency department of the Glace Bay hospital. The numbers are basically the same on the Northside and the situation for emergency care is quite evident in New Waterford as well. The minister must be in agreement, has to be in agreement, that that fee structure is a problem, it's going to lead to bigger problems and has to be changed, Mr. Chairman. Surely the minister can agree with that statement?



MR. MUIR: Mr. Chairman, let me back up a little bit. I take it that you're endorsing Dr. Murray's recommendations wholeheartedly in all of the report, just from your last comments. (Interruption)



MR. CHAIRMAN: Order, please. Would the honourable member for Glace Bay wait until his turn.







[Page 89]



MR. MUIR: I thought I heard him say that, Mr. Chairman. Anyway, let me continue on with the thing, what it is, is that certainly there was a concern expressed by the district health authority about the differential pay schedule. With the department and with the cooperation of the Medical Society and their own medical management committee, they believe that they are coming to a solution.



MR. WILSON: Mr. Chairman, let me clarify one point that the minister has brought up and the minister knows full well that I did not say that that report should be approved in its entirety. That's not what I said. I said from the outset that I was dealing with matters pertaining to the Glace Bay hospital. If I were to agree, and perhaps the minister is agreeing with that report, I don't know, but if I were to agree with that report, then I would be calling for basically the shutdown of the emergency department of the New Waterford Consolidated which, of course, I'm not, and the 1,000 people who showed up at a meeting to protest that are not calling for it either.



The minister knows that, but the minister knows that an integral part of that report dealt with the subject of these fees for physicians, for doctors who are working at the emergency rooms in those various hospitals. The minister knows, and the minister I would assume has been told by his staff and by the administration of the Cape Breton Healthcare Complex, that this is a serious problem. This is a matter that has to be corrected because it can spread pretty fast and take off when you're paying doctors one salary in one emergency department in this province and paying them another for doing the same type of work and the same volume of work.



Now, I have asked the minister, and he has skirted around the issue for the last three or four questions, as to whether or not he is going to address this issue. I have been told, and other people have been told, and the media has been told by the chief executive officer of the Cape Breton Healthcare Complex, that this matter is now being negotiated and is on the road to resolution, that it is a subject of negotiation between the Nova Scotia Medical Society and between the Department of Health and that, indeed, the Department of Health is leaning towards changing the fee structure again to more adequately reflect what doctors are doing at the Glace Bay General Hospital, at the Northside General Hospital and the New Waterford Consolidated Hospital. So, again, I would ask the minister to confirm that and to bring us up to date on what's happening in those negotiations?



MR. MUIR: Mr. Chairman, I will repeat, I'm going back on this and I think I've given the answer about four times, and I don't know why he keeps repeating the question. (Interruption) He doesn't like the answer or I don't know what it is, but certainly I think I have answered at least four times. The fee schedule is negotiated between the Medical Society and the Department of Health. The Cape Breton District Health Authority has expressed some concern about the fee structure for emergency room physicians, the applicability up in that area and basically what it is, well, everybody knows what it is. They have expressed that concern to the department and they've also expressed concern to the

[Page 90]



Medical Society. As a result of the expressing of concern and with the support of the department and the Medical Society, they are trying to work out a solution, a solution done locally.



The fee structure as per the agreement was negotiated with the Medical Society. That fee structure is not the thing that is being negotiated. What they're trying to do is everybody is a bit flexible and they're trying to find a local solution to a local problem with the support of the Department of Health and the Medical Society. They've got their own medical management committee, or whatever it is. It is really the one working on the solution. Is there going to be a solution, as the chief executive officer has said, that is acceptable to physicians there? I believe there is.



MR. WILSON: Mr. Chairman, as I indicated, I am going to share my time today, but I thank the minister. I will summarize what the minister said and that, you know, if the minister and department officials on the provincial level screwed up and you're looking to the local authorities to finally fix things and put them back the way they should be, if that's what the minister is saying, then it's good to have the minister stand up and admit that mistake, that it did happen, and that it will be corrected by the local authorities who have that flexibility as the minister stated. They will finally fix things and make them the way that they should have been from the very beginning. (Interruption)



With that in mind, Mr. Chairman, I would now like to turn over the rest of my time to my colleague, the member for Cape Breton The Lakes.



MR. CHAIRMAN: The honourable member for Cape Breton The Lakes.



MR. BRIAN BOUDREAU: Mr. Chairman, knowing full well that my time is limited, I'm going to get right to the questions directly to the minister and I would like to ask the minister my first question. Are you in support of community hospitals?



[4:30 p.m.]



MR. MUIR: Mr. Chairman, I would like to perhaps address that question in two ways. I guess the obvious answer to, am I in support of health care being delivered in communities, the answer is yes. The problem with the question - and I don't think the honourable member knows this - is that one of the problems we have had in Nova Scotia is equating hospitals and health care. That system has changed.



A more appropriate question would be should there be health services for communities, rather than counting numbers of hospital beds or calling them hospitals. We are committed to that. I just think it gives the wrong connotation. That is something that is gone. I explained to this House one time that I was at an emergency medical conference in Toronto and there were some people there, actually, from the IWK. I had met them before.

[Page 91]



I ran into them and making conversation, I said, well, how many beds are in the IWK? She said, I don't know; we don't talk about beds any more. We talk about services; are services available to children? So I think that is probably a more appropriate question. Do I believe in community-based services? The answer is yes.



MR. BOUDREAU: I would like to ask the minister, then why would you negotiate a contract with the doctors to pay them more money at regional facilities and less at community facilities?



MR. MUIR: Mr. Chairman, there are two people at the negotiating table. As I explained in an answer to his colleague, the honourable member for Glace Bay, this type of distinction in the acuity of services and the volume of services is a national trend. This is not something that was done in Nova Scotia; this distinction has been supported by medical practitioners or medical associations right across the country. I think one of the reasons for it is - and I don't sit on the other side of the table; I didn't sit on this side either, to be quite frank, in the negotiations - is that they recognize that emergency rooms ought to be for emergencies and there should be a system which, if you are delivering emergency services, which is, according to the Medical Society, different than delivering the outpatient services. In so many of our facilities, so much of the volume is that, and that is probably the reason for that national trend.



MR. BOUDREAU: Mr. Chairman, I agree with the minister but the minister misunderstands something. Those emergency rooms should still be open in order to provide the service. I would like to ask the minister how much money he will save this year in his budget by closing the maternity ward at the Northside General Hospital?



MR. MUIR: Mr. Chairman, the Department of Health did not close the maternity ward at the Northside General Hospital. As the honourable member is well aware, that service was suspended because there were not enough physicians to carry on the service. Now if he wants to carry on delivering the babies when there are no people to deliver babies, then that is probably not a good idea.



AN HON. MEMBER: Midwives. Why don't we bring back midwives?



MR. MUIR: Well, your colleague asked about that a minute ago and we did talk about that. With midwives, of course, if there is anything complicated, they have to have some help, too.



So the department, and that hospital, like the others, are in the budget for, in that case, the Cape Breton District Health Authority. I am not sure what figure they have down for saving if the obstetrical unit is closed, but again I emphasize that the reason that unit was closed, so I am told, is that there are not physicians who wish to continue delivering babies there.





[Page 92]



MR. BOUDREAU: Mr. Chairman, you know, it is pretty disappointing to me, as a rookie MLA, to have to stand here and remind the minister that it is his responsibility and he is the ultimate individual who is responsible for health care throughout the province, and he can't pass off all the bad stuff onto the health boards. Of course, there is no good news anyway in health care anywhere since this gang took over.



Could you tell me how many acute care beds have been changed to long-term care beds since you came to be the minister of this department?



MR. MUIR: Mr. Chairman, I respectfully ask that he repeat the question; I missed it.



MR. BOUDREAU: How many acute care beds at the Northside General Hospital have you transferred to long-term care beds?



MR. MUIR: Mr. Chairman, I can't give an answer to that question. I believe they were given a temporary license for about 30 long-term care beds. I believe some of those beds were not in service and what they did was open up a number of beds that were not currently being used to try to take the pressure off of the acute care side, not only in the Northside General Hospital but in the other facilities as well.



MR. BOUDREAU: If you recognize the need for long-term care beds on the Northside, then why did you cancel the projects at Miner's Memorial Manor in Sydney Mines and the Northside Guest Home?



MR. MUIR: Mr. Chairman, there was a moratorium on long-term care beds in the province, I think since about 1993 or 1994. I see the honourable member for Halifax Atlantic nodding his head. He has been around that long and he would know.



The issue of Northside General Hospital, as you know, we implemented a single entry access program here into long-term care. One of the pilot territories where that was introduced was up in DHA 8 and the other, of course, was DHA 7. What we have managed to do there is - although there had nominally been quite a long waiting list - once we got into the single entry process and started to assess the need for long-term care beds, that list dwindled to virtually nothing. I think it went down to about one-seventh of its original length.



The issue, and he has raised that twice today, Mr. Chairman, about facilities on the Northside - Miner's Memorial Manor and the Northside Guest Home, I believe those were the two, have been granted licenses to extend by the previous administration. I am checking, but I think that is incorrect. The reason I think it is incorrect is that it may have been an election promise. There may have been an election promise, because the former Premier also came to Truro before the 1999 election and was speaking to the chamber, somebody there,

[Page 93]



and whipped out a new hospital from his back pocket that nobody in the department had ever heard of.



I wouldn't suggest that was electioneering, now; I don't want to suggest that at all. So there may have been some electioneering going on. I have staff trying to find out that information. The reason I say that, seriously, Mr. Chairman, is that I have met with both of those organizations; they both presented proposals to me and said that they have proposals in. They did not indicate to me that they had ever been given any indication that the proposal had been accepted.



MR. BOUDREAU: Could you tell me how much the operating budget for District Health Authority 8 has increased this year, please?



MR. MUIR: The non-wage increase to DHA 8 was $3.3 million.



MR. BOUDREAU: How much was the wage increased, Mr. Minister?



MR. MUIR: The estimated wage differential is about $9.6 million. Now, take into account, Mr. Chairman, that that does not include fee-for-service doctors.



MR. BOUDREAU: Mr. Chairman, could you explain to us what cigarette smoke shacks are doing at these hospitals and how much these facilities cost the taxpayers?



MR. MUIR: Most health care facilities in the province have a no smoking policy. As I understand, the only deviation from that would be in the forensic and mental health facilities and also in veteran's wings. To be quite frank, when the Department of Veterans Affairs negotiated its agreements with the particular facilities or the agencies that represent those facilities, the right to smoke was built into the contract.



The honourable member has referred to them as smoking shacks. I have never been in one. We've got one in the Town of Truro, which is not too far from the door there, and it looks like a plastic bus shelter or something like that. You can stand in there and smoke and not get wet. Other than that there is no comfort to it so I don't think there would be a whole lot to maintaining it, but I don't know the answer.



MR. BOUDREAU: Mr. Chairman, the nurses at the maternity ward, why are they being transferred to other departments and facilities and why are they not assigned to other maternity wards so they can maintain the skills that they have today and enhance their skills in the future? Why has that not been a commitment of yours, Mr. Minister? During the last provincial election you people made a commitment and a choice. Why are you treating the nurses at this facility in that manner?





[Page 94]



MR. MUIR: I think the honourable member is referring to the Northside General Hospital, where a number of family physicians have indicated that they don't want to continue with obstetrical services and therefore that obstetrical service is being discontinued. The precise answer to that, Mr. Chairman, would lie with the district health authority that manages the system.



MR. BOUDREAU: It is pretty interesting, you know. Have you lost your memory or what? Mr. Minister, it's no wonder that individuals in Nova Scotia are frustrated and have lost the confidence that they had in you, because they don't get any answers. Nobody gets any answers. It's just create smokescreens; you know, you blame it on the district health board or the doctors or the nurses or the cleaning lady. It doesn't matter who; it's just not you.



Somebody should lift the fog from around your shoulders there, Mr. Minister. You're the individual who's responsible for health care at the Northside General Hospital and at every hospital in this province. I think somebody over there should wake up and smell the coffee. You guys have been over there two and a half years. You've already spent more money than anybody in two and a half years. (Interruption) In two and a half years you've spent more money than your previous Buchananettes over there on health care, and it's in shambles. The entire health system in this province must be being destroyed by your government, it has to be. You stand up over there; you're pretty brave you stand up in this House and you just create more smokescreens.



Ambulance service, Mr. Speaker, just last week - and I will table this in the House - there was an after midnight call to the ambulance and apparently it was slow in arriving. I have also, right here, an e-mail from a family that has lost a father as a result of bungling last summer in Bras d'Or on the Trans-Canada Highway; the response time was over one hour for this individual bleeding to death in a drain. The ambulance didn't get there, Mr. Minister. It didn't get there. What are you doing for these types of situations in Nova Scotia?



[4:45 p.m.]



MR. MUIR: Mr. Chairman, I want to assure the honourable member that one of the things our ground ambulance provider does is it's very concerned about response times and has them built into contracts. Wherever there is an unusually long response - and to be quite frank, I guess, unfortunately, it does happen - sometimes they don't meet, but in the number of calls we have in the course of the year, in most areas they exceed the contractual response time.



Now, the particular case to which the honourable member is referring, I'm not familiar with it. Of course, if I was, I couldn't comment on it anyway. If he or members of the family have a concern about response time, I know there was one accident out there where there was a lot of folklore around the response time and what happened. Once it was investigated and documented, including playing tapes for people who were concerned, they

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found that indeed what transpired was very much within standard. So if the honourable member has something that he would like officials from my department to take a look into that's new