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CAQ unveils Sant Qubec, the new agency in charge of fixing the province's health-care system

The Coalition Avenir Qubec government has tabled bill aimed at making the health-care system more efficient and more accessible. If Bill 15 becomes law, Sant Qubec will become the new agency that oversees the province's health-care system.

Health minister calls Bill 15 'historic' and 'fruit of colossal work' during pandemic

Man in a suit at a podium with glowing blue light and sign reading efficace behind him.
Quebec Health Minister Christian Dub has announced a sweeping reform of the province's health-care system, eliminating regional health agencies created under the Liberal government. (Sylvain Roy-Roussel/Radio Canada)

Franois Legault's governmentis banking on a new provincial agency to fix its battered health-care system, and it's called Sant Qubec.

The creation of Sant Qubecis the foundational piece of Bill 15, which Health Minister Christian Dub tabled at the National Assembly on Wednesday.

If it becomes law, Sant Qubec wouldoversee all activities related to the public health-care system, including providing services and facilitating access.

The province's Health Ministry would provide broad guidelines, Dub said, but Sant Qubec wouldbe the organization in charge.

Sant Qubec would also help organize elements of the private sector.

"It will be a separateentity with a small management team that will be responsible for operations, and developing the means to achieve results," the minister said.

The agency would also become the sole employer of the province's health-care employees and would supplant regional health agencies known by their French acronyms CIUSSS and CISSS.

There are currently 34 regional health agenciesin the province. This bill, if passed, would turn those regional health agencies into councilsthat answer to Sant Qubec and monitor how effective services are.

During a news conferenceWednesday, Dub described the bill of about 300 pages as"the fruit of colossal work" from the last few years.

"The status quo is not an option," the minister said, accompanied by Lionel Carmant, the province's junior health minister responsible for social services, and Sonia Blanger, the minister responsible for seniors.

During its first mandate, which saw the province endureseveral harsh waves of COVID-19, the CAQ government often blamed the health system's shortcomings on the previousLiberal government.

A few months into its second term, Bill 15 appears to be the CAQ'sattempt at reforming thatsystem it inherited in 2018.

If adopted, the law would not apply to the Naskapi, Inuit and Cree communities.

A surgical team surrounds a patient in an operating room.
On Wednesday, Dub said the current wait times in emergency rooms and backlog for surgeries are unacceptable. (Nicole Germain/Radio-Canada)

What this means for patients and staff

According to Dub, a more organized structure at the top will lead to reduced wait times in emergency rooms, put a dent in the backlog for surgeries and improve the overall patient experience.

With the current system, aCIUSSS or CISSSis in charge of hospitals, long-term care homes and other facilities within a given region. In many cases, that means the person in charge of a facility is not physically there.

"For me, that makes no sense," Dub said.

With Bill 15, the CAQ wants each facility to have its own on-site directors. The law would also allow for regionaldirectors one for family medicine, the other for specialized medicine.

"We have to decentralize the decision-making process," Dubsaid. "That's what's important. We have to be able to have a doctor or a nurse in a hospital in Saint-Jrmebumping into their hospital director in the hallway."

The bill would also allow the seniority of health-care staff to be recognized across the province, not just within a certain region. That way, if a nurse from the Laurentians gets transferred to Montreal, she will preserve her seniority and the advantages that come along with it.

Although the proposed legislation deals largely with how the health-care system is managed, there are elements that deal specifically with access to care.

The government wants the Quebec Federation of Medical Specialists (FMSQ) to do more andbe available for more patients in different facilities in a given region, at different times of the day.

In a statement, the president of the FMSQ blasted the government, accusing it of being out of touch with reality.

"It is profoundly unacceptable to imply that medical specialists aren't present in hospitals after 4 p.m.," saidDr.Vincent Oliva.

Health-care workers are walking.
If Bill 15 is adopted, health-care workers would keep their seniority even if they move to another region. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

Reform misses mark, unions say

The FMSQ isn't the only unionunimpressed bythe bill.

Robert Comeau, the president ofthe Alliance du personnel professionel et technique de la sant et des services sociaux(APTS), one of the largest health-care unions in the province with about 60,000 members, says Dub's plan is flawed by the lack of consultation with workers who know the issues that plague the system better than anyone.

"Centralizing more and consulting less, it's a perfect recipe to worsen the situation," Comeau said.

TheFdration de la Sant du Qubec, which is affiliated with the CSNunion federation, agrees. Its representatives saythe CAQis trying to change a structure without tackling root problems.

Julie Bouchard, the president ofthe Fdration interprofessionnelle de la sant du Qubec(FIQ), which represents 80,000 nurses, licensed practical nurses, respiratory therapists and clinical perfusionists,says recognizing staff seniority across the province "is not what will help the Quebec population have full access to the care they are entitled to."

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story said the Fdration interprofessionnelle de la sant du Qubec (FIQ) represents most of the province's nurses and nursing assistants. In fact the FIQ represents nurses, licensed practical nurses, respiratory therapists and clinical perfusionists.
    Mar 30, 2023 4:17 PM ET

With files from Radio-Canada