cancer patients and their advocates called upon the federal government on wednesday to pick up a larger portion of the country’s healthcare costs, echoing a plea by the country’s premiers earlier this week.
canada’s healthcare system, financially strained at the best of times, has been pushed to the limit by the pandemic that patient groups say threatens the quality of care canadians deserve. federal contributions to provincial and territorial healthcare — known as the canada health transfer — have increased at a rate of three per cent annually since 2017-2018, an amount advocates said is insufficient to cover the expected 4.2 per cent growth in spending projected by the canadian institute for health information.
“there is no doubt that we must continue to focus on the pandemic. however, we must, at the same time, increase funding for already underfunded health conditions, including cancer,”
said martine elias, executive director at myeloma canada. “we must increase our investments in healthcare services and in building sustainable, responsive health systems for the future, for all canadians.”
eight canadian premiers asked the federal government on monday to increase the canada health transfer. provinces currently contribute around $188-billion to the cost of delivering healthcare, with the federal government covering the remaining $42-billion, or 22 per cent of costs,
according to cbc. the premiers want to see the federal share permanently bumped to 35 per cent, an annual increase of $28-billion, to lighten the load on provinces and patients.