AMA calls doctor compensation ads 'misleading' - Action News
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AMA calls doctor compensation ads 'misleading'

Alberta government ads that promote the pay settlement imposed on doctors earlier this month have been called 'misleading' by the Alberta Medical Association

Doctors angry about government ads

12 years ago
Duration 1:42
The province is running ads about the settlement recently imposed on physicians

The Alberta Medical Association says government ads thatpromote thesalary settlement imposed on doctors earlier this month are "misleading."

The radio and print ads, which describepay for Alberta doctors as the best in the country,come just over a week after Health Minister Fred Horne imposed the five-year $463 million settlementfollowing an impasse with the AMAafter 20 months of negotiations.

"The AMA believes that the ministers $130,000 ad campaign is misleading; these negotiations are about far more than money," Dr. Michael Giuffre, the AMA president,said in a written statement.

"They are about fairness and respecting the rights of physicians but the minister doesnt want to talk about that."

"Physicians have the right to dispute resolution," Giuffreadded. "We cant just have one side say: 'Thats it and here is what you are going to live with for five years.' Thats what government is trying to distract people about with the ad campaign."

Liberal Leader Raj Sherman, an emergency room physician, is also unhappy with the government's tactics.

"The minister is wasting $130,000 on running something that's akin to a negative attack ad," he said.

But Horne said the ads are intended to inform the public.

"We wanted to make the public aware and there's certainly no antagonism or negativity in those ads whatsoever," he said. .

The imposed setttlement shocked the AMA,which publicly rejected the packageand signaled its willingness to resume negotiations.

Doctors say that they will actually lose more than $200 million through the province's changes.

Giuffre is to meet with Horne on Thursday to talk about the contract