Category Archives: Hospitals

Election focuses the mind — and the pace of MOHLTC’s announcements

There’s nothing like an election to focus the mind on many long-standing complaints, especially if you are the Ministry of Health and Long Term Care (MOHLTC).

While many have been soaking up the sun this summer, the Ministry has been pushing out one announcement after another, bringing hospital expansions, new MRIs and even nurse-practitioner clinics to a town near you.

This week Health Minister Deb Matthews finally appointed a supervisor to investigate community complaints around the Niagara Health System – something Matthews admits has been on her radar since day one.

Similarly, August 5th the troubled Windsor Hotel Dieu hospital received $5 million in new money to hire nurses, add more administrative after-hours support, purchase new equipment and refurbish rooms. Former CEO Ken Deane was appointed supervisor in January.

At the end of July the Ministry announced a major redevelopment and expansion of the Cambridge Memorial Hospital. That will include an expansion of their ER to accommodate an additional 10,000 patient visits per year, a redevelopment of the mental health unit, 33 new medical/surgical beds, five new intensive care beds, two new maternal beds and four additional paediatric beds.

Brockville General will also get a similar major expansion. A new wing will include 48 complex continuing care beds, 29 rehabilitation beds and 29 acute mental health beds.

Hawkesbury and District General Hospital will also get a major expansion, although tenders won’t actually happen until 2013/14. Good thing we know about it now, just before the election.

A more modest expansion will also happen at Winchester District Memorial Hospital.

This summer it was also announced Barrie’s Royal Victoria Hospital will get a new MRI, as will Oakville’s Halton Health Care Services. Vaughan was reminded that they will get a totally new hospital aligned with nearby York Central. Peterborough will get a new nurse-practitioner-led clinic. Infrastructure upgrades will happen at Ross Memorial Hospital,

Long-standing complaints about doctors being overpaid due to advances in new technology were finally taken on with an amendment to the fourth year of the Ontario Medical Association agreement. The OMA is essentially giving back $223 million a year by reducing opthamology fees (including cataract surgery), payment for endoscopy services, and through a new payment model for methadone.

When the William Osler P3 hospital opened in Brampton, there was local concern about the fate of the Peel Memorial Hospital. This week a major redevelopment was announced, creating the Peel Memorial Centre for Integrated Health and Wellness. The new centre brings many services under one roof, including urgent care, preventative care for chronic care patients, diagnostic services and community learning programs. Construction is due to begin in 2013. No figure has been given on anticipated cost.

Earlier in the summer the McGuinty government vowed to regulate private patient transfer after a damning omdubsman’s report.

If the Ministry is reading, there are a few other announcements we’d like to see. How about a staffing standard for long term care, or ending competitive bidding in home care? How about a fix for Peterborough Regional Health Centre or a moratorium on bed cuts and staff losses at the province’s psychiatric hospitals? How about bringing back public coverage for some of the health services the McGuinty government delisted, such as physiotherapy and eye examinations? So little time to October 6th, so many more issues.

Will NHS supervisor rebuild public confidence?

The troubled Niagara Health System is getting a supervisor appointed by the Ministry of Health to take over the hospital.

According to the Ministry of Health news release, “these steps are being taken to restore necessary public confidence in the local hospital system. Despite the hospital’s best efforts, doubts remain about its ability to meet Niagara-area residents’ expectations of their local health care system.”

The appointment follows local pressure over more than 30 C. Difficle-related deaths at the hospital since May 28, although Health Minister Deb Matthews told the CBC that the issue is much more than that – that she had heard concerns about NHS right from day one of her appointment.

Much of the negative publicity the NHS has received stemmed from a hospital “improvement plan” that included closure of ERs in Port Colborne and Fort Erie and the planned transfer of maternity services to the new St. Catharines hospital.

The new hospital itself has been the focus of much criticism over the high cost of building and operating the facility as a public-private partnership.

This lengthy community turmoil was noted by the New Democrats. NDP leader Andrea Horwath told the St. Catharines Standard: “It seems to me that the Health Minister is the last person in Ontario to realize there’s a crisis in confidence in the Niagara Health System. Where has she been for the last couple of years?”

Matthews statement would suggest that the supervisor will have a much greater mandate than exploring hospital-based infections at NHS.

Unlike other hospitals where senior staff and board have been dismissed following such appointments, Matthews has made it clear that she expects the supervisor to work with existing staff and board.

Who gets appointed may be of concern.

The community may perceive an appointment of a nearby Hamilton hospital executive to be a conflict of interest, particularly if recommendations emerge to move any regionalized services to that city.

Given the Minister’s desire to rebuild confidence, it would be preferable to bring a supervisor from outside the region given the track record in the Hamilton Niagara Haldimand Brant LHIN on public consultation. In 2010 the ombudsman was particularly critical of the lack of proper public consultation over changes to the NHS and Hamilton Health Sciences, calling existing practices “simply illegal.”

It is also not clear how this will impact the review of the misnamed “hospital improvement plan” (HIP) in Niagara. The review was supposed to involve appointees from area municipalities in addition to the LHIN and the NHS. There was widespread suspicion over the review given two of the three organizations on the review were responsible for the original HIP.

The appointment of a supervisor may also open up the NHS to investigation by the ombudsman’s office. As private not-for-profit organizations, hospitals are normally off-limits to the ombudsman. The appointment of a supervisor effectively places the hospital under the direct control of the Ministry of Health and Long Term Care and subject to the ombudsman’s jurisdiction.

The Ombudsman has made no secret of his desire to be able to investigate the MUSH sector – municipalities, universities, school boards, hospitals, nursing homes and long-term care facilities, police, and children’s aid societies.

While the St. Catharines Standard says it will be 14 days before a supervisor is named, there is anticipation that such an announcement may come much sooner.

Ontario hospital data less than timely, transparent

How transparent is data from Ontario’s hospitals? And does it really tell the true story?

In July the far right Fraser Institute took a shot at Ontario hospitals claiming they lacked transparency when it comes to reporting performance indicators.

The Ontario Hospital Association shot back, claiming the Fraser Institute was likely unaware of  www.myhospitalcare.ca –an OHA site that provides data on more than 40 performance indicators.

The release quotes OHA President Tom Closson as saying Ontario’s hospitals are among the most accountable in Canada. The question is: how does Closson come to that conclusion? Is the OHA web site intended to be the evidence to support such a claim?

It’s true that there is a lot of public information on hospital performance, although what gets reported varies from hospital to hospital, the manner in which it is reported is often difficult to understand, and the information is usually less than timely.

The information is also in different places. Some of it is on individual hospital web sites. A select number of indicators are on the OHA site. Wait times information is on a Ministry of Health web site. To complicate matters, the information reporting dates are not the same on these sites, leading to conflicting data results.

It is also not unusual to see wild swings in the information reported, leading to questions about the quality of the data.

If you look up the Niagara Health System (NHS) on the OHA’s site, the infection rate for C-Difficile is similar to many other hospitals, although above the provincial average. That may have something to do with the fact that the data was collected in February of this year. Similarly, the Hospital Standardized Mortality Rate for the NHS is above average but below many other peer hospitals. These numbers don’t tell the real story – the Niagara Health System has recorded 37 C-Difficile-related deaths this year – so far.

In the age of real-time technology, is it reasonable for the public to try and make decisions based on data that is often more than six months old?

The OHA specifically cautions about using standardized mortality scores in determining which hospital to go to, instead suggesting such data should be used to track the performance of the hospital. What’s the point of standardizing such scores if they are not meant for outside comparison?

At the Local Health Integration Network board meetings, explanations over how to interpret this data are frequent. Yet the public is expected to go to web sites and understand such concepts as compliance with pre-surgery antibiotics, percentage of near miss reporting, or how inpatient weighted cases are determined. Could there not be at least a glossary and some explanatory notes to go with this data?

Try and decipher this reported action on the Peterborough Health Center web site: “Monitor and review VAP and CLI cases, rates and compliance with Safer Healthcare Now! Bundles.” Reading this, I’m sure the public can sleep more soundly now.

Clearly there is a need to provide a more simplified overview that puts this data into a more meaningful context.

Often data is hiding in plain site – on some hospital sites there is so much of it, finding what you are looking for is a considerable challenge on poorly organized web sites.

The myhospitalcare web site does provide provincial averages, but it does make it difficult to look at comparisons without going to each specific hospital location on the site.

Closson’s pronouncement of Ontario’s transparency ignores the fact that the province is the last to bring hospitals under Freedom of Information legislation. Ontario hospitals finally come under the Freedom of Information and Privacy of Privacy Act in 2012, but the OHA successfully fought to bring in additional exemptions for quality information as part of this year’s budget bill. In fact, the broad-based wording of the exemption will allow hospitals to conceal considerable information from prying eyes looking for public accountability.

Curiously, the OHA recently posted its advice to hospitals about the upcoming FIPPA deadline. You need a login and password to read it.

Ontario is also the last province in Canada to open up public hospitals to the scrutiny of the ombudsman. This is one office that has the expertise to cut through the dense jargon OHA members use in their reporting and to demand the data that isn’t publicly posted.

Last October Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP raised eyebrows when they sent out an information bulletin warning hospitals that they should be “cleansing existing files on or before December 31, 2011, subject to legislative record-keeping requirements.” Osler was warning Ontario hospitals that they could face the same kind of reputation risk as e-Health if they failed to do so.

While there was shock and dismay, nobody knows to what extent Ontario hospitals took that advice to heart.

It is interesting that Closson used the word “accountable” and not “transparent” in the OHA’s defense.

Clearly there is a way to go for hospitals to be transparent in a truly meaningful way.

Will auditor’s report prompt Libs and PCs to reconsider health funding?

The Liberals and Tories may want to reconsider their health care funding election pledges following last month’s auditor’s report.

Trying to neutralize the health care issue in the upcoming fall election, PC leader Tim Hudak committed to an increase of $6 billion in new health care spending over the next four years. That works out to be about $1 billion less than the Liberal plan to reduce health care spending increases to 3.6 per cent per year.

At the end of June Ontario Auditor General James McCarter questioned the McGuinty government’s projections of health care costs over the next three years.

“Our view is that, given the health demands of a growing and aging population and an average growth rate in health expenses of 7.1 per cent per year over the past eight years, assuming that health-care costs will rise much more slowly in the next three years cannot be considered cautious.”

Looking at cost assumptions by sector, only the scenario for drugs looked reasonable due to “more definitive plans to contain drug program costs,” including expanded use of generic drugs and a cap on generic drug pricing.

Much of the government’s assumptions rely on zero increases in compensation costs to both unionized workers and doctors.

The OMA agreement is presently in its last year. The auditor writes: “That there will be no increase for health care professionals when the current OMA agreement comes up for renewal in April 2012 is clearly an aggressive rather than a cautious assumption.”

Expense estimates for hospitals assume savings of $1 billion between 2011/12 and 2013/14.

The auditor writes: “The government has indicated that it will be up to hospitals to operate within their funding allocation regardless of how they manage the savings and compensation pressures they face. Therefore, if hospitals do not find $1 billion in savings and do not succeed in freezing compensation, they will likely run deficits or may have little alternative but to cut services.”

While the auditor acknowledges that funding of services provided Community Care Access Centers are far more at the discretion of government, the three year forecast calls for increases of only 2.3 per cent – about a third of the present growth rate of 7.2 per cent per year.

Similarly, it plans to reduce funding increases to long term care from 8.6 per cent per year to 4.2 per cent per year.

The auditor noted the obvious: given home care and long term care are integral to moving alternate level of care patients out of the hospitals, it is hard to see how the hospitals can save money through these transfers if the recipient sectors are being starved of cash.

As damning as the auditor’s pre-election review is towards the Liberal cost projections, consider the fact that the Tories plan to spend even less. To date, the NDP has not released any specific financial commitment towards health care increases.

Inheriting a surprise deficit from the Tories in 2004, the McGuinty government introduced the Fiscal Transparency and Accountability Act requiring the auditor to review and report on the reasonableness of the government’s pre-election report on the province’s finances.

While the past increases may appear daunting, keep in mind that these increases are not inflation adjusted and do not take into consideration levels of economic growth. While these increases in health care spending were taking place, the government managed to reduce its inherited $5.6 billion deficit and balance its budget by 2005-06. It was the global recession of 2008-09 that plunged the government back into deficit, not excessive health care costs.

Television ads remind Ontarians health care is more than docs and nurses

During the Federal election voters may have got the idea the entire health system was run by doctors and nurses.

Even the NDP, normally more attuned to health care issues, pounded the idea that they were the party that was going to put more doctors and nurses to work across Canada – and do it now.

What was missing from the debate was the fact that health care is provided by hundreds of professions that are essential to a modern health team. Some of these professions – such as speech language pathologists – are in very short supply. It takes on average a year to recruit a speech language pathologist in this province.

Out west they refer to this large group of workers as “health sciences professionals.” Out East they are called “allied health professionals.” Here we just like to call them “hospital professionals.”

About six months ago we became aware of a commercial being run in British Columbia that highlighted the role of these professionals in the modern health team. Produced by the Health Sciences Association of BC – one of our sister affiliates in the National Union – the funny commercial shows a scene in which a man lies unconscious on the floor of a restaurant. The woman beside him asks if there is a doctor in the house. The doctor soon asks if there is an x-ray technologist present? A moment later, looking at an x-ray, he asks if there is a respiratory therapist in the restaurant? As each profession shows up in their evening clothes, they have their equipment with them. The commercial concludes by reminding us that modern health care relies on modern solutions.

OPSEU’s Hospital Professionals Division contacted HSA-BC and arranged a co-sponsorship of the ad to bring it to television screens in Ontario.

The ad will be showing from July 20 to August 16 on CBC stations across Ontario as well as on CP24.

Drawing attention to these professions is more than a matter of recognition. As the Federal election shows, public policy is driven as much by perception as reality. While Ontario has developed a number of initiatives to support the nursing profession – including a target for full-time nursing and a nursing graduate initiative, there are no parallel initiatives for other health care professionals facing similar circumstances.

With an election on the horizon this October, it is important for OPSEU to put these professionals on the politician’s radar.

Polling has shown a greater recognition of these professionals both east and west. It’s clearly time to increase their profile in the center of Canada too.

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Due to posting restrictions with the ACTRA contract, we are unable to show the OPSEU/HSA-BC version of the ad on-line. However, the original HSA-BC version of the ad is available to be viewed on YouTube. See below.

Savings that cost more

Pointing out potential savings in health care is always fraught with danger.

We’ve dramatically reduced hospital beds under the assumption that savings could be had by moving more services into the community.

Now we have overcrowded hospitals and a stubborn wait times problem that prompted a significant influx of cash from both the Federal and Provincial governments.

The Health Restructuring Commission realized that it would be better if the mentally ill were taken out of institutions and placed in community-based care. Now all our psychiatric hospitals are jammed, the justice system is seeing a significant impact in its courts and corrections, waits are embarrassingly long – especially for youth — and agencies are struggling to keep up.

Mike Harris cleaved lab services in two, giving community-based work to the private lab companies. Now the cost of sending tests to these private labs are much higher than if they had been performed in a hospital. Meanwhile hospital labs have been undermined by the withdrawal of funding that previously paid for such community-based work.

Rethermalized food was sold as a way to save money for hospitals. Now hospitals are moving away from it (with the exception of South Grey Bruce Health Centre) after realizing it negatively impacts the patient’s experience and does not contribute to wellness. Nor does it set a good example for how individuals should eat when they get out of hospital.

Seems every time a savings idea comes up, we end up either paying more in cash or the idea results in a decline in services.

The Mowat Centre’s Will Falk points out in today’s Toronto Star that much of the advantage new technology has brought to the system is not being realized because of out-of-date fee schedules between the doctors and the province.

There is no question that compensation for doctors is extremely uneven. Falk points out that cataract surgery that used to take an hour can now be done in 15 minutes, yet ophthalmologists receive the same amount to do so – about $420, or $28 a minute.

This has led to vast discrepancies in how doctors are compensated with ophthalmologists as the poster-children for this inequity.

In the last agreement with the Ontario Medical Association, there was a modest adjustment made. Under the agreement, overall, doctors will receive an increase of 4.25 per cent in 2011 – the last year of the agreement. Only half that amount will be distributed across the board. The other half will go to adjustments to doctors who have been undercompensated by the system – or what the contract describes as “relativity.” The agreement does nothing to address those who can earn in excess of a $1 million per year largely based on the advent of technology paid for by the public.

Falk suggests its time to check the bill, as we would in a restaurant. However, given the results of past governments who have elected to battle doctors, there may be more than a little reluctance to take this on.

What is more worrying is how much would be cut from hospitals, in the anticipation of savings coming, if such a revised agreement were possible.

After all, we do live in the province of cut first, ask questions later.

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As an interesting footnote to this story, it was also reported this week that a new batch of patent expirations will lead to considerable savings on drug costs.

The Toronto Star reported August 3 that Ontario should save $2 billion over the next three years as 44 medications come off patent.

Drugs account for about 10 per cent of the province’s $47 billion public health care budget. This should also have a significant impact on private drug plans.

Seems the “sky is falling” scenario Don Drummond and others have been pounding is looking more and more ridiculous. As Dr. Michael Rachlis has pointed out, if the doomsayers couldn’t get their projections right for this year, how credible is their 20-year forecasts?

High occupancy rates roll the dice on hospital-borne infections

Hospital C-Difficule-related deaths are making the news again in Ontario.

This time hospitals in Niagara and Guelph are reporting deaths related to clostridium difficile, a bacterial infection for which symptoms include diarrhea, fever, and abdominal pain. The OHA is reported to have said that 16 hospitals are now struggling with C-Difficile.

C-Difficile spores are very difficult to clean, and can remain viable outside the body for a very long time.

It’s stating the obvious that hospitals need to maintain rigorous infection control policies – something they appear to be learning following years of ill advised cuts to cleaning staff.

Many countries believe reducing hospital crowding can also reduce chances of infection. In the UK, for example, hospitals are supposed to maintain an average occupancy rate below 85 per cent. Several years ago it was considered a national scandal when it was reported numerous hospitals were operating above that threshold.

In Ontario we continue to roll the dice on the issue of hospital occupancy, maintaining an average rate of more than 97 per cent.

Not only does the evidence suggest that such crowding leads to the spread of hospital-borne infections like C-Difficile, but it also leaves the hospital few options when seasonal surges of demand take place.

The Ontario government is trying to clear out beds occupied by so-called “alternate level of care” patients. These are people who have completed their acute care treatment, but are physically not well enough to go home. Many are waiting for long term care beds, some are waiting for home care.

This may give hospitals some additional capacity and lower occupancy rates – provided the bean counters don’t see any capacity as potential waste and close more beds.

By taking the ALC patients out it may have another unintended consequence: when seasonal surges do take place, the hospital will have less flexibility to clear beds if they are completely occupied by patients who have to be there for treatment. That means more patients in the hallways where cleaning may not be as rigorous and infections more likely.

Hospital-borne infections just make matters worse on the patients, on over crowding, and on the budgets administrators have to work with.

You can’t run a hospital like a hotel. Penny pinching only leads to higher longer term costs, sometimes tragically in the form of lives taken.

Video: Hospital professionals target Ontario PC pledge to undermine job security

Hospital professionals represented by the Ontario Public Service Employees Union have targeted the Ontario PC pledge to undermine job security through competitions for jobs public sector workers already have.

OPSEU’s Hospital Professional Division has posted a YouTube video showing the Tory platform for what it is – a terrible step backwards in worker’s rights.

“Increasingly workers are finding out they are being left out of the economic recovery,” says OPSEU President Warren (Smokey) Thomas. “Instead of addressing the issue of low wages and insecure employment, it appears that PC leader Tim Hudak is threatening to make the situation much worse.”

Substituting modern health care professionals for displaced farm workers from the dirty thirties, the video reminds viewers of what can happen when government places the interests of Bay Street ahead of Main Street.

“I think most Ontarians oppose the idea of their government deliberately creating a low wage economy in this province,” says Thomas. “By attacking job security and wages in the public sector, they are attacking all workers who are struggling to maintain their standard of living.”

Adjusted for inflation, wages for the middle class have remained stagnant for close to 30 years while the top 20 per cent of Canadians have made considerable gains. Canada’s income gap between rich and poor is among the fastest growing in the developed world.

The video was shot in Port Perry in June.

To view the video, click on the window below.

Good discharge laws badly practiced for long term care

The laws governing hospital discharge and admission into long term care (LTC) homes are good but they are badly practiced by hospitals, says Judith Wahl, the Executive Director and Senior Lawyer at the Advocacy Centre for the Elderly (ACE).

Speaking in Toronto June 20th at the High-Level Briefing and Summit on Retirement Homes and Alternate Level of Care (ALC), Wahl was critical of practices that violated existing legislation, calling them unethical.

Some hospital discharge policies include statements that if a person refuses to pick from their short list of nursing homes they must take the first available bed that becomes available or face punitive fees.

An elderly patient was threatened with $1,800-a-day fees from a Toronto area hospital, and a Windsor hospital threatened to charge $600 a day if a patient refused to take the first open bed in a nursing home.

Wahl says it is her opinion that this is illegal.

Hospitals are permitted to charge $53 a day. That rate is also subject to a rate reduction under the Health Insurance Act.

The Long Term Act, passed into legislation in 2010, now makes Community Care Access Centers directly responsible for placement of individuals into long term care, not the hospital.

The CCAC must determine eligibility, assist with the application, and confirms requirements for choice of LTC homes for that person.

The legislation also states that patients can choose up to five homes and is not required to go into a nursing home unless he or she consents. Consent must be informed and voluntary, with fair representation.

Wahl says the Public Hospitals Act (PHA) and Health Insurance Act (HIA) further ensure that on discharge, patients cannot be abandoned even if they have completed their acute care treatment.

For patients and their families that need long term care they must to be aware of their rights on discharge from hospitals.

The Long Term Care Homes Act ensures that patients have the right to choose his or her own care.

Long-awaited mental health strategy missing cash or timelines

It was almost three years in the making. It totals 28 pages, including pictures, cover, a few case studies and a couple of blank pages.

Open Minds, Healthy Minds is the long awaited provincial mental health strategy. Whether it ever gets implemented will depend on a fall election and a government’s willingness to expand services in a new era of fiscal austerity.

Ambitious in scope, it comes up short on specifics or even on timelines for implementation of many of the strategies. This was supposed to be a 10-year blueprint. Beyond $257 million over three years for mental health initiatives aimed at children and youth, there is no costing or financial commitment for the rest. In fact, new reporting requirements without administrative support will likely mean some mental health providers will have to divert resources to keep everyone posted on the progress of their unfunded quality improvement plans. OPSEU’s child treatment sector reports “we are already drowning in ‘justifying’ our work with limited support staff.”

Specific and funded commitments include expanding mental health supports in the school system, increased funding for community-based agencies to reduce wait times for children, expansion of telepsychiatry (video counselling) to remote and underserviced areas, and more mental health workers in aboriginal communities, the courts and post-secondary education.

The government also promises to develop performance measures for public reporting of wait times, client experiences and health outcomes – all new administrative work without any matching resources.

The government claims these initiatives will mean more than 50,000 kids and their families will immediately benefit from this strategy even though the funding is supposed to roll out over the next three years. (Curiously when they factor how many children will be supported by each initiative, it only adds up to 47,000.)

Nowhere in the report does it even mention the role of tertiary care mental health facilities, leading one to question why these facilities issued their own press release praising a plan that doesn’t include them. Given these institutions take up 60 per cent of current mental health funding, it is a notable absence.

The question of funding is central to the ambitions in the plan, especially when both the Tories and Liberals have committed to reducing health care spending increases to three per cent per year despite a growing and aging population.

The document makes note of the fact that mental health disability claims have overtaken cardiovascular disease as the fastest growing category of disability costs in Canada. The plan says workplaces should be key partners in the mental wellness strategy – adopting policies and programs that help employees enhance their mental health.

The report gleefully states: “Happier workers, higher productivity and less absenteeism – we all gain from improvements in mental health.” It is interesting the plan suggests the government work with communities and the private sector to deliver education and awareness programs and to develop best practices. Whatever happened to the public sector in this scenario?

It is not clear under a Hudak government how “happy” public sector workers will be as he tries to scale back their incomes, cut the size of the public sector by two per cent per year, make workers insecure in their employment through competitions for their jobs, or interfere in the arbitration process. This flies in the face of the plan’s recommendation to create “attractive career choices and pathways for people who work in mental health and addictions.”

As part of their effort to “create healthy, resilient, inclusive communities,” the plan calls for harmonizing policies to improve housing and employment supports, but nowhere does it actually call for an increase to supportive housing for mental health clients. It does suggest that Ontario “develop policy, guidelines and tools to match health, housing and employment resources to the needs of people with mental health and addictions problems.”

While OPSEU’s own mental health survey indicated a widespread need for workplace training in mental health both for employee wellness and to help respond to clients with mental illness, there is very little beyond a call for training to support family health care providers, teachers and first responders, including police who will receive “sensitivity training.”

The government has also put mental health workers on notice that it intends to develop a competency-based mental health and addictions workforce with standardized roles and responsibilities and scope of practice. There is no detail as to how this would function or affect existing workers in the system, including whether the government intends to provide workplace training.

No McGuinty-era health care report would be complete without the usual tools of accountability agreements, wait time targets, targeted funding increases (unspecified) and integration between providers.

There is no question that transition between providers has been lacking in the mental health system. The report speaks to the need for a client-centered approach, one that “engages the person with mental health addiction needs and includes health services, housing, employment and education, social services and the justice system, if needed.”

Let’s not forget the fragmentation that does exist is largely due to the rush to get services out of hospitals where many of the supports had already been integrated.

The plan does call for a “directory of services” to help families navigate the system as well as a plan to “identify core institutional, residential and community services at the regional and local level.” The government and Children’s Mental Health Ontario just completed a lengthy provincial mapping exercise, raising the question of whether the plan is intended to repeat this work.

In the section “building on our progress” the government admits it has only provided two base funding increases to child and youth mental health in over a decade to “support and expand core services.” Any service that gets only two funding increases in a decade is not expanding core services – it is losing ground.

In terms of leading the strategy, the government clearly sees no role for workers who toil on the front lines of mental health service delivery. Workers are not invited to sit on the Mental Health and Addictions Advisory Council.

While the report puts all the emphasis on community-based care, they acknowledge that St. Joseph’s Health Centre, a West-end Toronto hospital, has been so successful in reducing wait times for mental health visits that it now has the second highest volume of mental health visits in the city. There is no mention in the report as to whether the government is funding these additional volumes, or whether quality is being affected. At the same time, the report sets an objective of reducing “unnecessary use” of emergency departments.

The World Health Organization says governments should aim to spend 8 cents per health-care dollar on mental health. New Zealand spends 10 cents. Britain spends 8 cents. Ontario manages just 5.4 cents. While the $257 million is welcome towards addressing a long standing shortfall in children’s mental health, the money is being spread around to the extent that it may limit its overall effectiveness on any particular agency. Let’s not forget that over the three years the funding starts at $76 million and will rise in year three to $93 million. On a $47 billion health budget, this is not exactly a game changer.

For those looking for supports for the adult population coping with mental illness, Open Minds, Healthy Minds is absent of any actionable items within the next three years. Given the length of time it has taken to come up with this document, it is a bitter pill for adults seeking better to have to wait that much longer.