Manitoba·Updated
The federal government is sending $633 million in health-care and long-term care funding to Manitoba to help the province hire more staff, address long waits for emergency care and improve home care and long-term care for seniors.
Deal stems from bilateral agreement struck with provinces and territories in February 2023
Bryce Hoye · CBC News
· Posted: Feb 15, 2024 9:59 AM EST | Last Updated: 13 minutes ago
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, left, and Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew speak to nursing and paramedic students at Red River College Polytechnic in Winnipeg Thursday. Trudeau spent the day in the city and announced an increase in health-care funding for Manitoba. (John Woods/The Canadian Press)The federal government is sending $633 million in health-care and long-term care funding to Manitoba to help the province hire more staff, address long waits for emergency care and improve home care and long-term care for seniors.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced the commitment Thursday during a joint news conference alongside Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew and other provincial and federal officials in Winnipeg.
The funding will help Manitoba hire about 1,000 more health-care workers, Trudeau said at Red River College Polytechnic.
“We have to be honest with ourselves,” he said. “It can be too hard to access a family doctor or a nurse practitioner, emergency rooms are too often overwhelmed, people are waiting for the surgeries they need and health-care workers are under immense pressure.”
Trudeau said years of conservative cuts left Manitoba’s health-care system “struggling to protect and care for patients, and of course health-care workers were pushed to their very limits.”
During seven years in government, the former Progressive Conservatives closed three Winnipeg hospital emergency rooms as part of a controversial health-care overhaul meant to cut wait times and find inefficiencies.
The NDP was elected last October after a campaign largely focused on health-care.
$434M for more workersOf the $633 million announced Thursday, nearly $434 million will go toward Manitoba’s three-year plan to improve the health-care system as part of the “Working Together” bilateral agreement.
The other $199 million is earmarked for the “Aging with Dignity” agreement to support improvements in home care and long-term care in Manitoba over the next five years.
The federal government first pitched its 10-year, approximately $200-billion health-care plan last February during a meeting of Canada’s premiers. Of that, $46.2 billion is new money.
Trudeau speaks to media during the news conference. (John Woods/The Canadian Press)The federal government said $25 billion was set aside for separate deals with each province and territory, aimed at directing funds toward specific priorities, including primary care, mental health and hiring more doctors and nurses.
The money will help Manitoba uphold a “key promise” of what it means to be Canadian — having access to “high quality, publicly funded health care,” Trudeau said.
Kathleen Cook, the PC health critic, suggested the province now has more health-care funding because of “the work of the previous government Manitoba.”
“The question is: what’s the actual plan?” Cook said in a statement. “The NDP needs to tell Manitobans the details.”
Details of the plan include hiring 400 more physicians, 300 nurses, 200 paramedics and 100 home care workers, a joint news release said.
Kinew said the funding commitment will help Manitoba provide more quality care for seniors. (John Woods/The Canadian Press)With more staff, the province hopes to add more acute and medicine beds to the health-care system, releasing pressure on crowded hospital emergency rooms, the news release said.
More seniors’ careKinew said the pandemic revealed that Manitoba needs to do better by its seniors, and the latest commitment will help the province provide more quality care for seniors.
“It is fundamental to us, being able to say that we are a society that treats the people who raised us with the dignity and respect that they deserve,” he said.
“When we talk about making investments in health care, we’re also talking about us articulating a message of who we are as a society, that we are a people, as Manitobans and as Canadians, that are not going to leave anyone behind.”
He said the funds will go toward improving safety standards and hiring more long-term care workers.
Manitoba also plans to hire more psychologists, boost addictions treatment options, double hospital spaces for people experiencing homelessness and work on removing barriers faced by internationally accredited doctors and other workers who want to work in the province, according to the news release.
‘New vision’ for health care: AsagwaraKinew said the announcement signals to students in health-care fields that good jobs will be waiting for them when they graduate.
It also lets current front-line workers know the province “has their back,” said Manitoba Health Minister Uzoma Asagwara.
“We will raise the standard of care across the province for seniors and all Manitobans, and we will reduce wait times to make sure that everyone gets the care they need when they need it,” they said.
“Our government has a new vision, one where the culture of health care is the best in Canada, one where patients are at the heart of every decision that is made.”
Manitoba becomes the seventh province or territory to finalize a bilateral deal with Ottawa.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Bryce Hoye is a multi-platform journalist covering news, science, justice, health, 2SLGBTQ issues and other community stories. He has a background in wildlife biology and occasionally works for CBC’s Quirks & Quarks and Front Burner. He is also Prairie rep for outCBC. He has won a national Radio Television Digital News Association award for a 2017 feature on the history of the fur trade, and a 2023 Prairie region award for an audio documentary about a Chinese-Canadian father passing down his love for hockey to the next generation of Asian Canadians.
Email: bryce.hoye@cbc.caTwitterFacebookMore by Bryce HoyeWith files from The Canadian Press