Print Page

Canadian Healthcare Debate: Mental, Indigenous and Seniors Health

Published: 2018-06-01 - Updated: 2023-09-17
Author: HealthCareCAN - Contact: nhlc-cnls.ca
Peer-Reviewed: N/A - Publication Type: Announcement / Notification
Related Papers: Latest Items - Full List

On This Page: Summary - Main Article - About/Author

Synopsis: Canadian health leaders will be asked next week to step up and identify Canadian health care system's most pressing current needs. Improving access to mental health services, providing culturally appropriate care to Indigenous peoples and addressing the issues caused by Canada's ageing population are of utmost importance.

Main Digest

The Great Canadian Healthcare Debate - A deeper dive into mental health, Indigenous health and seniors' health showdown at St. John's gathering. The nation's health leaders will once again be asked next week to step up to the plate and identify the Canadian health care system's most pressing current need.

advertisement

The annual exercise is being temporarily revamped to provide health leaders with updates on the progress achieved to date on the past three years' motion themes - mental health, Indigenous health and seniors' health - and to outline opportunities for further advancement in these areas.

This will be the fourth iteration of the Great Canadian Healthcare Debate at the National Health Leadership Conference (NHLC), taking place in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, June 4-5.

The Great Canadian Healthcare Debate was designed to identify the issue most in need of priority action by the nation's policy-makers.

In 2018, the Debate will feature eight motions that fall within the three themes of;

Article continues below image.
Person receiving a blood pressure test.
Person receiving a blood pressure test.
Continued...

The Policy Resolution Committee, tasked with overseeing the process and recommend the top motions that go forward, identified these motions using the criteria of newsworthiness, potential for revealing new insights, appeal to Canadians, impact, ability to generate concrete outcomes and to create positive policy change.

The process resulted in a list of the top 8 motions framed within one of the three topics.

Delegates will have the opportunity to vote on their top policy resolutions - one per theme - to be put forth for the final vote. The 2018 Debate will be moderated by award-winning author and health columnist for the Globe & Mail, André Picard.

"All Canadians are in some way affected by at least one of these three issues," said Sue Owen, Acting President and CEO of the Canadian College of Health Leaders. "I am very pleased to see all the progress that has been made in these areas, and anticipate a lively and deeply productive debate on June 5th."

"These topics are a top concern for policy-makers and health leaders", added Paul-Émile Cloutier, President and CEO of HealthCareCAN. "Improving access to mental health services, providing culturally appropriate care to Indigenous peoples and addressing the issues caused by Canada's ageing population are of utmost importance. Because of this, we wanted to dive deeper into these topics to sustain momentum and advance the conversations on these issues."

Furthermore, the original motion sponsors provided op-eds describing the progress that has been made on each issue, highlighting what opportunities still exist, and offering guidance on what should be focused on going forward. The eight contenders (divided by theme) are:

Mental Health

Achieving Universal Mental Health Care:

Be it resolved that health leaders continue to support increased investments and policy changes to overcome the factors that impede achieving universal access to a full continuum of evidence-based mental health services and supports for all people in Canada.

Zero Suicide:

Resolved that, Canadian healthcare leaders across the country work collectively to view every death by suicide, whether among those under care or those living in the community, as an unacceptable outcome and offer the necessary systems, programs (including culturally appropriate services and supports) and policies that strive to make suicide a "never event."

Maternal Mental Health:

Resolved that, the federal Ministry of Health working with the local, provincial and territories government develop a national strategy on Maternal Mental Health; this action would be achieved through the implementation of a national screening & treatment program for expectant and new mothers. The strategy should be ready by June 2020 and be put into action by the provinces in order to assist the 76,000 new mothers who experience a Postpartum Mood & Anxiety Disorder each year by providing early treatment to lessen the negative impacts on mothers, infants, and families.

Indigenous Health

Embedding Cultural Safety in Core Curriculum:

Resolved that, all Indigenous people deserve to receive care from practitioners who are self-reflective/self-aware regarding their position of power and the impact of this role in relation to patients to ensure people feel and are respected and safe. All Provinces, Territories and the Federal Government support Indigenous communities in co-designing a mandatory national education program/curriculum that promotes cultural safety for all health providers, volunteers and students.

Indigenous Health:

Resolved that, in order to understand and address the patient safety incidents experienced by Indigenous (First Nations, Metis, and Inuit) people, Canadian healthcare leaders and Indigenous communities will jointly develop a meaningful consultation process that respects diverse, holistic approaches to health, and recognizes the importance of strengthening health literacy and patient engagement as critical conditions for patient safety.

Seniors' Health

Family Caregivers of Seniors:

Resolved, that Canadian healthcare leaders recognize and embrace family caregivers of seniors as valued members of the healthcare team by committing within the next two years to changing the culture in the healthcare system to actively involve family caregivers in care settings and by educating healthcare providers on the value of respecting and acknowledging the crucial role family caregivers play.

Advanced Care Planning:

Resolved, that Canadian health-care leaders and provincial and territorial Ministries of Health commit within the next two years to adopt routine, early integration of Advance Care Planning (ACP), as an enabler for person-centred care, into the care of capable seniors in all care settings, by development of policies, care processes, training programs, funding models and a registry to boost ACP awareness and enhance the capacity for consistent initiation of ACP conversations, documentation storage and access throughout the health system.

High Quality Palliative Care:

Resolved, that recognizing access to high quality palliative care is an important issue for Canadians, health care leaders promote Palliative Care Matters, adopt the Collective Impact Framework (CIF) and work together toward a framework for an integrated approach to funding and delivery of palliative care.

Attribution/Source(s):

This quality-reviewed announcement / notification article relating to our Canadian Healthcare section was selected for publishing by the editors of Disabled World due to its likely interest to our disability community readers. Though the content may have been edited for style, clarity, or length, the article "Canadian Healthcare Debate: Mental, Indigenous and Seniors Health" was originally written by HealthCareCAN, and published by Disabled-World.com on 2018-06-01 (Updated: 2023-09-17). Should you require further information or clarification, HealthCareCAN can be contacted at nhlc-cnls.ca. Disabled World makes no warranties or representations in connection therewith.

Share This Information To:
𝕏.com Facebook Reddit

Discover Related Topics:

advertisement


Disabled World is an independent disability community founded in 2004 to provide disability news and information to people with disabilities, seniors, their family and/or carers. See our homepage for informative reviews, exclusive stories and how-tos. You can connect with us on social media such as X.com and our Facebook page.

Permalink: <a href="https://www.disabled-world.com/medical/healthcare/canada-medicare/healthcarecan.php">Canadian Healthcare Debate: Mental, Indigenous and Seniors Health</a>

Cite This Page (APA): HealthCareCAN. (2018, June 1). Canadian Healthcare Debate: Mental, Indigenous and Seniors Health. Disabled World. Retrieved September 21, 2023 from www.disabled-world.com/medical/healthcare/canada-medicare/healthcarecan.php

Disabled World provides general information only. The materials presented are never meant to substitute for qualified professional medical care, nor should they be construed as such. Funding is derived from advertisements or referral programs. Any 3rd party offering or advertising does not constitute an endorsement.