Getting answers about UPEI medical school is Perry's top priority for health committee - Action News
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PEI

Getting answers about UPEI medical school is Perry's top priority for health committee

MLAs on P.E.I.'s health committee have drawn up a long list of witnesses they plan to call on to talk about plans for UPEI's new medical school.

Opposition leader wants former Health P.E.I. CEO and Spindle Strategy to appear

A building under construction is shown in the background with a sign reading UPEI Faculty of Medicine interprofessional health training centre in the foreground.
Opposition MLAs on P.E.I.'s health committee want to scrutinize the plans and decision-making that led to the launch of a medical school at UPEI. Construction is underway and it is scheduled to accept its first students in the fall of 2025. (Ken Linton/CBC)

MLAs on P.E.I.'s health committee have drawn up a long list of witnesses they plan to call on to talk about plans for thenew medical school at the University of Prince Edward Island.

Members of the standing committee on health and social development met Thursday to discuss their priorities heading into the spring session of the legislature that's set to begin Feb. 27.

Opposition leader Hal Perry is leading the push to scrutinize the plans and decision-making that led to development of the medical school, which is slated to accept its first students in the fall of 2025.

The former CEO of Health P.E.I., Dr. Michael Gardam, is at the top of the list of people the Liberal leader wants to bring to the committee. Gardam's time in the CEO's chair ended on Jan. 1,though he'll continue to work with the health authority until the end of March.

A bald man with a white beard and glasses wears a purper sweater overtop a white, collard shirt. He stands in front of a window with a cityscape in the background.
Former Health P.E.I. CEO Dr. Michael Gardam has been a vocal critic of the timing of the new medical school, saying there are not enough doctors working on P.E.I. right now to teach the students who will be enrolled there. (Shane Hennessey/CBC)

Citing the shortage of doctors delivering primary care and specialist services on the Island, Gardam has pointed out: "If they're teaching, they're not seeing patients."

"[Gardam] and the Health P.E.I executive should have been an integral stakeholder in the development of government's plan to establish a medical school here on Prince Edward Island," Perry said. "The fact that the CEO of Health P.E.I. is concerned about the issue is very concerning to me. It does raise multiple red flags.

"I'd like to see him in here as a priority. What concerns him that the public doesn't know?"

Perry also sent a letter to committee chair Susie Dillon requesting the appearance of consultants from Spindle Strategy, which was commissioned by Health P.E.I. and the university to report on the medical school's feasibility.

"I just want to be assured moving forward that the medical school is going to be good for Islanders, that we get our bang for our buck and [that] it also alleviates some of the pressures that we're seeing right now in our health-care system," Perry said.

With files from Kerry Campbell