Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Sign Up

Sign Up

Please fill this form to create an account.

Already have an account? Login here.

Politics

Federal ministers, Indigenous leaders plan to discuss systemic racism in health system

Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller says he plans toholda high-level meeting of federal ministers and Indigenous leaders to address racism in the health system followingJoyce Echaquan's death in a Quebec hospital last month.

Second wave will hit Indigenous communities harder than first wave, minister says

A man and woman pose for a photo, their heads close together.
Family members want to know exactly how and why Joyce Echaquan, right, died while in hospital. (Facebook)

Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller says he plans toholda high-level meeting of federal ministers and Indigenous leaders to address racism in the health system followingJoyce Echaquan's death in a Quebec hospital last month.

The meeting, saidMiller, willinclude Crown-Indigenous RelationsMinisterCarolyn Bennett, HealthMinister Patty Hajdu, Justice MinisterDavid Lametti andMinister of Rural Economic DevelopmentMaryam Monsef.

"We do recognize, however, that this discussion requires the contribution of Indigenous partners and we will be reaching out to them today to convene an urgent meeting to address racism experienced by Indigenous peoples in Canada's healthcare system," Miller said.

The virtual meeting is to take place onOct. 16, CBC News has learned.

Aside from ministers and Indigenous leaders, meeting participants willinclude Indigenous health care officials, provincial representatives,Indigenous health and civil society organizations andprovincial and federal health care organizations.

Sources have told CBC that this meeting will focus on the lived experiences of those working inIndigenous health careand will lead into a second meeting inJanuary.

Echaquan, 37, a mother of seven, died last month in a hospital in Joliette, Que., about 74 kilometres north of Montreal, after recordingsome of the last moments of her life on a video later released onFacebook.

The video captured Echaquan screaming in distress, along with the voices of staff members insulting her. Hospital staff are heard making degrading comments, calling her stupid and saying she would be better off dead.

"Everyone should feel safe when visiting a hospital or physician's office. It is ...thereforeimportant to remind everyone that during this pandemic, keeping Indigenous communities safe, Indigenous people safe and healthy, is my utmost priority," Miller said.

Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller responds to a question during a news conference on October 8, 2020 in Ottawa. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

Miller said he and Bennett met with Echaquan's family. He said that one of her sons got down on hisknees to beg the two ministers to deliver justice.

"Carolyn and I should have got down on our knees and begged them for forgiveness for a system that failed them," Miller said. "That's what I remember from this meeting."

A role for all levels of government

Miller praised the Quebec provincial government for launching inquiries into the incident but said all levels of government have a duty to respond.

"There's a role for the federal government to play here, there's a role for all governments and there's a role for every Canadian in addressing systemic racism in our society," he said.

Why in the hell would I go and get a flu vaccine if I was going to be treated like garbage?- Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller

Miller added that he's following the direction given to his departmentin the throne speech to "co-develop distinctions-based Indigenous health legislation with First Nations, Inuit and Mtis and a distinctions-based mental health and wellness strategy."

The minister also said that, despite reportingan infection rate that is one third that of non-Indigenous Canadians, Indigenous communities are now seeing increases in their COVID caseloadsand the coming flu season will not make flattening the curve any easier.

Miller said that overthe last six weeks, the number of active cases in First Nations communities rose steadilyfrom 19 to 98.

"Given what we have seen in the last two weeks, there is little doubt that the second wave of COVID-19 will hit Indigenous people harder than the first wave," he said.

Miller said that while the flu vaccine is the most effective way to prevent flu and flu-related complications, the uptake for the flu vaccine is lower for indigenous peoplethat it is for non-Indigenous Canadians.

"Why in the hell would I go and get a flu vaccine if I was going to be treated like garbage?" Miller said. "You wouldn't. You'd just say, 'I am not going to do it.'"