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Toronto

Health care experts hope for long-term reform, 'shift in philosophy' for Ontario's system

While policy makers have their visions for health care, health experts across the province say they're hoping for long-term reform of the system from hospitals to home care to disease prevention that lasts beyond the next election cycle.

From hospitals to home care to disease prevention, many want ongoing, system-wide change

Many Ontario clinicians are hoping for lasting change, including Vicki McKenna, president of the Ontario Nurses' Association (left), Dr. Paul Pageau, president of the Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians (centre), and Dr. Nadia Alam, the Ontario Medical Association's president-elect (right).

Bed shortages. Hallway medicine. Lengthy wait times. Communication breakdowns.

To name a few.

The long list of problem's facing Ontario's health care system, according to many patients and clinicians. So what can be done to improve a situation that has, at times, been called a "crisis"?

In recent days, provincial party leaders have teased at their respective game plans, including the Ontario NDP's proposal to cover dental care and prescription drugs for all Ontarians, and newly-minted Progressive ConservativeLeader Doug Ford'sgoal to make sure people aren't"stuck" waiting for a doctor.

Today, there's the latest Liberal promise ofa four-year investment of $2.1 billion inmental health care services, which comes on the heels of the party's other recent promisesof more spendingto reduce hospital wait times andmake prescription drugs free to those 65 years old or older.

But while policy makers have their visions for health care, health experts who spoke to CBC Toronto for our ongoing series Prescription for Change say they're hoping for long-term reform of Ontario's system from hospitals to home care to disease prevention that will endurebeyond the next election cycle.

Tonight at 6:30 p.m., CBCToronto is hosting a live panel discussion on how to improve Ontario's health care system on our supper hournewscast andour Facebook page.

Calls for more funding for frontline staff

When one of Dr. NadiaAlam's90-year-old patients developed a wound in her leg, the Georgetown, Ont.. family physician ordered home care to the woman's retirement residence. But Alam never heard any feedback about her request.

"Turns out, she never got her services," said Alam, president-elect of the Ontario Medical Association."They never came in."

That communication breakdownis just one example of the "crumbling," resource-strapped health care system in Ontario, Alamsaid.

The OMA, which represents more than 40,000 doctors, residents, and medical students across the province, launched a campaign earlier this week to raise awareness of what the group sees as long-standing poor decision-making from the government, and a lack of collaboration with clinicians.

Alamwants to see improvements on both those fronts, and said more health care funding is always welcome to ensure there are enough frontline clinicians to care for a growing and aging population.

VickiMcKenna, president of the Ontario Nurses' Association, agrees. "We need staffing numbers that are appropriate for the volume of patients that we can for... not only is there no room, but there's not enough staff," she said.

Doctors wearing medical scrubs are shown inside of a hospital room.
More needs to be done, according to the president of the Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians, Dr. Paul Pageau, because the "backlog" in hospitals starts in the community. (Bright097/Shutterstock)

'Shift in philosophy' needed

Alongside greater funding,Alam also wants to seea "fundamental shift in philosophy" in how the province spends that cash.

"The focus seems to have been bureaucracy in the health care system," Alamsaid. And on misspending, she added, citing the province's decade-old, scandal-ridden eHealthventure as one example of billions of health care dollars that could have been spent elsewhere.

"Just throwing money at the system won't fix the inherent problems and pressures," echoed Rosealie Wyonch, a health policy expert at the C.D. Howe Institute.

She said provincial funding may open more hospital beds in the short-term, but a long-term reform of the system is also needed, tofocus on decreasing patients' dependency on hospitals and increasing community-based health care.

That type of care including mental health treatments, home care, and other community supports has been an area of focus for theprovincein recent years, but not to the degree desired by many clinicians and health policy experts.

More needs to be done, according to the president of theCanadianAssociation of Emergency Physicians, Dr. PaulPageau, because the "backlog" in hospitals starts in the community.

As an Ottawa-based emergency department doctor, Pageausaid he sees the struggles of paramedics dealing with offload delays and "alternate level of care" or ALC patients waiting in hospital for spots in long-term care homes and other non-hospital facilities.

"Solutions that look at the larger picture are needed," he said. "That's where I think the governments come into play, because they are funding the entire system, and they're the ones who can address the issue of ALC patients in the hospital."

Bed shortages, hallway medicine and lengthy wait times are just a few of the issues facing Ontario's health care system, according to many patients and clinicians. So what can be done to improve a situation that has, at times, been called a "crisis"? (Paul Borkwood/CBC News)

Health beyond 'health care'

Some say the province also needs to think outside the box when it comes to reducing strain on the system, particularly as Ontario's population continues to age.

Downtown Toronto family physician Dr. Ritika Goel said the focus should be on broad social issues,including access to housing, mental health supports, and the ongoing opioidcrisis in other words, paying attention to people's health beyond just "health care."

"If someone doesn't have access to safe and affordable housing, they're living in a shelter ... it becomes almost impossible to address their addiction issue, mental health issue, their chronic pain issue," she said.

And University of Toronto health policy expert RaisaDebersaid there's another crucial question the province needs to answer:How do you keep people from getting sick in the first place?

Focusing more on public health and prevention of diseases and chronic illnesses is, in her words, a "win-win."Keeping the population from getting sickis both cheaper for the government, and tied to better health comes for patients, said Deber, author of 'Treating Health Care: How the Canadian System Works and How It Could Work Better.'

Others feel it's time to reduce government involvement. Dr. DouglasMark, interim president ofDoctorsOntario, an advocacy group dissatisfied with themuch-larger Ontario Medical Association,said the only way to improveOntario's "overburdened healthcare system" is by ending the province's monopoly on medical care in other words, opening the system up to competition from private sector health care providers.

"We deserve zero wait times and not a government bureaucrat or politician dictating what we have now," Mark said.

Pageau, in contrast, said real change will come through a combination of government planning for the future,looking at the system as a whole, and collecting more data to help clinicians and the province understand the areas that need reform.

The bottom line, he said,is there's no quick-fix to Ontario's health care woes.

"Sustained attention to that is the only way it'll get solved," he said.