• CHA Learning
  • Français
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • Facebook

HealthCareCAN

The national voice of healthcare organizations and hospitals

HealthCareCAN
  • About us
    • Our Board of Directors
    • Our Strategic Plan
    • Our Annual Report
    • Our Team
  • Our Work
    • Bolster Canada’s Health Workforce
    • Modernize Health Infrastructure
    • Support Better Aging and Older Adult Care
    • Strengthen Health Research and Innovation
    • Empower Lifelong Learning
  • Our Membership
    • Our Members
    • Our Members’ Vice Presidents of Health Research
    • Our Health Human Resources Advisory Committee
    • Member Benefits & FAQ
  • News & Events
    • From the CEO’s Desk
    • Grants & Awards
      • Legacy of Leadership Award
    • Events
      • Canada’s Health CEO Forum
      • Advocacy Day
    • News
    • Press releases
  • Policy Documents and Government Submissions
  • Job Board
    • Jobs at HealthCareCAN
    • External Career Opportunities
    • Job Postings FAQ
  • Contact us

An Open Letter from HealthCareCAN to the Council of the Federation on Building Back Better from COVID-19

An Open Letter from HealthCareCAN to the Council of the Federation on Building Back Better from COVID-19

Dear Premiers and Territorial Leaders,

On July 11 and 12 in Victoria, you will hold your first face-to-face Council of the Federation meeting in more than two years. You have again asked that the federal government raise its contribution to the Canada Health Transfer (CHT). This is a demand familiar to Canadians as a regular feature of federal-provincial-territorial relations. In our current context, it has taken on even greater, existential urgency.

As the national voice of healthcare organizations and hospitals across Canada, HealthCareCAN supports your calls for a significant increase in health transfers to the provinces and territories. But the existing formula for determining those transfers has to change drastically. We need an outcome-driven system based on performance indicators tracking impacts on Canadians’ health, with the prioritization of those indicators — be they wait times, access to specialized services, home care, reduction in hospital visits for specific chronic diseases or other metrics — determined by each individual province based on its unique needs. This approach would ensure accountability not only between governments, but also between governments and the people they serve.

As all of you know, the COVID-19 pandemic is not just a crisis. It is the sort of multifaceted, protracted public health catastrophe that happens once in a century. It has been more than a stress test on Canada’s treasured healthcare system; it has been a sustained assault. That assault has revealed strengths: among them, the selflessness of our healthcare workers, the ingenuity of our health researchers, and the depth of our clinical capital. It has also revealed weaknesses, and none of those weaknesses — from decaying infrastructure to lagging digitalization — can be fixed without immediate investment.

Most urgently, Canada is experiencing a health workforce shortage. This shortage pre-existed COVID but has been exacerbated by the unprecedented demands of the pandemic.

HealthCareCAN has worked hard with our front-line members to identify key priority areas for short- and long-term federal action to address the growing workforce shortage. We recommend:

  • the implementation of a pan-Canadian health workforce planning strategy;
  • the establishment of a pan-Canadian health workforce body created collaboratively between Ottawa and the provinces/territories;
  • the leveraging of immigration and internationally trained health care workers to address workforce shortages;
  • interprovincial/territorial coordination of education and licensing;
  • collaboration among provincial and territorial governments, regulators, and educational institutions to train more healthcare workers – particularly from Indigenous and underrepresented communities; and,
  • the expansion of mental health and wellness programs for healthcare workers.

On May 9, our submission to the House of Commons Standing Committee on Health for its Study on the Emergency Situation Facing Canadians in Light of the COVID-19 Pandemic included a comprehensive list of 20 recommendations to address those challenges. Without immediate reform, healthcare workers will continue to leave the system in droves due to exhaustion, illness and burnout, which will compound the closures of emergency rooms and other health care services, and health outcomes for Canadians will worsen. That is not a rhetorical warning, it’s a statement of fact.

While we welcome the upcoming meeting of the Council, HealthCareCAN has also called for a separate federal-provincial First Ministers Conference dedicated solely to addressing the urgent needs of Canada’s healthcare system.

Meanwhile, as you continue to debate funding percentages, the health system is crumbling around us and Canadians need you to take action, now. If you do not, there is no telling how much worse off our health system, healthcare workers and patients will be when the next crisis hits.

We wish you success in the difficult task before you,

Paul-Émile Cloutier
President and CEO, HealthCareCAN


Related

HealthCareCAN’s submission to the Standing Committee on Finance’s Pre-Budget Consultations in Advance of the 2025 Federal Budget – Read now!

Posted: August 2, 2024

“The HQ” Podcast marks 50th episode with a discussion on how AI can help address Canada’s HHR crisis, with Dr. Muhammad Mamdani

Posted: May 9, 2024

Our country is no stranger to health workforce challenges, and the people of Canada are desperate to see improvements in wait times and access to health care services. With the emergence of Artificial Intelligence (A.I.), Canada has an incredible opportunity to leverage this new technology to be part of the critical solution needed to improve

Fixing health system flaws requires better data sharing and workforce strategies, say health-care experts

Posted: February 14, 2024

Canada’s healthcare system needs urgent transformation

Posted: February 7, 2024

February 7, 2024 – A new report from the C.D. Howe Institute and HealthCareCAN states that bold action is urgently needed to transform Canada’s healthcare system to better meet the needs of citizens across the country. A new Special Policy Conference Report “Better Health Outcomes: What’s Holding Canada Back?” offers a summary of the presentations, discussions and

Advocating for your health in a flooded healthcare system – Interview with Dr. Michael Gardam, Chair of HealthCareCAN’s Board of Directors.

Posted: January 29, 2024

Share

Tweets by HealthCareCAN

© 2025 HealthCareCAN

  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Contact us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Anti-Spam
  • DORA
  • About us
    • Our Board of Directors
    • Our Strategic Plan
    • Our Annual Report
    • Our Team
  • Our Work
    • Bolster Canada’s Health Workforce
    • Modernize Health Infrastructure
    • Support Better Aging and Older Adult Care
    • Strengthen Health Research and Innovation
    • Empower Lifelong Learning
  • Our Membership
    • Our Members
    • Our Members’ Vice Presidents of Health Research
    • Our Health Human Resources Advisory Committee
    • Member Benefits & FAQ
  • News & Events
    • From the CEO’s Desk
    • Grants & Awards
      • Legacy of Leadership Award
    • Events
      • Canada’s Health CEO Forum
      • Advocacy Day
    • News
    • Press releases
  • Policy Documents and Government Submissions
  • Job Board
    • Jobs at HealthCareCAN
    • External Career Opportunities
    • Job Postings FAQ
  • Contact us
  • CHA Learning
  • Français
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • Facebook

We are using cookies to give you the best experience on our website.

You can find out more about which cookies we are using or switch them off in .

Powered by  GDPR Cookie Compliance
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

Strictly Necessary Cookies

Strictly Necessary Cookie should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.

If you disable this cookie, we will not be able to save your preferences. This means that every time you visit this website you will need to enable or disable cookies again.