CAQ promises new agency to help govern struggling health-care system - Action News
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Montreal

CAQ promises new agency to help govern struggling health-care system

As Quebec's pre-electoral campaign ramps up, the Coalition Avenir Quebec party's health minister is promising "de-bureaucratize" the health-care network by creating a new agency to co-ordinate operations, if re-elected Oct. 3.

Team behind co-ordination of COVID-19 vaccination campaign served as inspiration

Health Minister and La Prairie MNA Christian Dub, who is seeking re-election Oct. 3, made a promise Wednesday to create a new government agency to oversee health-care system operations. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press)

Outgoing health ministerChristian Dub has promised to "de-bureaucratize" the province's health-care network by creating a new government agency to co-ordinate operations, if his ruling Coalition Avenir Qubec party is re-elected Oct. 3.

Dub, who is seeking re-election in October, made the announcement Wednesday morning.

"We've all seen the shortcomings of our health system during the pandemic. Everyone agrees we must change the way things work in health and social services," Dub said.

The agency would be called Sant Qubec and "will have the mandate to co-ordinate the operations of the health system while the Ministry of Health and Social Services will focus on its role of planning, orientation, measuring the system's performance and budgeting."

Dub, who is the MNA forLa Prairie, said the agency would help "de-centralize" and "de-bureaucratize" the system, giving as an example the COVID-19 vaccination campaign in Quebec.

Agency is not a reform, Dub says

While the Quebec Immunization Committee provided clinical guidance for the campaign, a separate team was in charge of operations, he explained.

"The idea is not to embark on a major reform of structures that would upset everything on the ground."

 A man standing in front of a podiuum that says,
Dub was accompanied by Health Ministry officials and CAQ candidates at the Sant Qubec announcement. (Radio-Canada)

He said the agency would empower local health board directors to act on decisions more quickly. The Health Ministry's response to COVID-19 at the beginning of the pandemic was heavily criticized, namely for its lack of decisive actions.

Quebecers and health-care workers have become wary of big and ambitiousprojects, after several large-scale reforms meant to streamline operations ended up creating large-scale disruptions and worsening staff shortages.

Qubec Solidaire health critic and Rosemont MNA Vincent Marissalsaid the agency fails to provide solutions to an exodus of staff from the public system.

"Another CAQ plan that misses the real problem: health-care workers who leave the network and never want to return," Marissal said, adding QS would be proposing its own planahead of the election.

He said the governing party should start by abolishing forced overtime and the use of private placement agencies "but the CAQ does not have the courage to do so."

In June, Deputy Health Minister Dominique Savoiepublished a report called "Renewed governance of the health and social services network," which Dub said inspired the idea for the new agency.

With files from La Presse canadienne