Thursday 7 March 2024

Medical society has not seen N.B.'s primary health-care transformation strategy, says president

 

Medical society has not seen N.B.'s primary health-care transformation strategy, says president

Department of Health has not made strategy or 18-month action plan, quietly launched 6 months ago, public

The New Brunswick Medical Society has not seen the province's primary health-care transformation strategy or the 18-month action plan, quietly launched about six months ago, according to the president.

"The NBMS is not aware of any comprehensive provincial strategy related to primary health care," said Dr. Paula Keating.

The professional association, which represents more than 2,000 practising, future, and retired physicians in the province, was not involved in developing the strategy either — "beyond typical budget submissions and discussions directly related to the negotiation of recent improvements to the Family Medicine New Brunswick program," she said.

The strategy and action plan, which the Department of Health has committed at least $10.3 million annually toward implementing, have not been made public.

Keating suggested a white paper the Department of Health hired a consultant to prepare has also been kept confidential.

A woman wearing a pink shirt The medical society was 'not engaged beyond typical budget submissions,' said president Dr. Paula Keating. (CBC)

Department spokesperson Sean Hatchard declined a request by CBC News to release the strategy and action plan. The department is still reviewing a request from the legislature's standing committee on public accounts last month, he said.

Green Party health critic Megan Mitton, who only learned of the strategy and action plan through mention in an annual report submitted to the committee, asked deputy minister Eric Beaulieu during a Feb. 21 appearance whether they could be released.

"I believe we can, but I want to check a few things first," Beaulieu said at the time, without elaborating.

'High level' overview of strategy

The deputy minister did, however, provide committee members with a "high level" overview. He said the strategy includes having interdisciplinary primary care teams consisting of doctors, nurses, and other allied health professionals, working either within the same setting or having formalized agreements with each other to care for patients.

The strategy also includes working with the regional health authorities to "renew" community health centres and health service centres across the province, making them more efficient, and enhancing electronic medical records — "making sure that we have a well-connected system so that if a Patient C is part of a clinic, that electronical medical record can be reviewed by any of the professionals that are providing care," Beaulieu said.

A man with short brown hair and glasses, wearing a suit, seated at a table, speaking into a microphone. Deputy Health Minister Eric Beaulieu fielded questions about the strategy and action plan from opposition health critics who only learned of their existence through an annual report submitted to the legislature's standing committee on public accounts. (Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick)

It's unclear whether the strategy includes any specific targets.

The $10.3 million budgeted by the department for initiatives contained within the action plan does not include additional funding already budgeted by the regional health authorities, Hatchard said. He did not provide any other details.

Society had no formal role, says president

According to Keating, the medical society is aware that the department and the Executive Council Office held a series of meetings with the regional health authorities and "select stakeholders" early in 2023, following a call for ideas related to the 2023-24 provincial budget."

The government's hired consultant subsequently drafted a white paper, and government representatives presented the society's board of directors with "initiatives that were under consideration at the time," Keating said in an emailed statement.

But "the NBMS did not have a formal role in this process other than those engagements, and to our knowledge a final version of the white paper was not officially approved, shared or published," she said.

Voice of physicians 'well represented,' says department

Hatchard said work on the primary health-care transformation strategy and action plan was led by Department of Health staff and "health system partners as part of their regular duties."

 A medical consultant was hired to provide "subject matter expertise," he said, declining to say how much they were paid or whether it went to tender. "Details of that contract cannot be shared."

The Department of Health, Horizon and Vitalité health networks, New Brunswick College of Family Physicians, New Brunswick Health Council, Department of Social Development, Extramural-Ambulance New Brunswick, and the Canadian College of Family Physicians were represented on the working group that developed the action plan, said Hatchard.

"The voice of New Brunswick physicians was well represented by the president of the [New Brunswick College of Family Physicians]," he said in an emailed statement.

The governance structure of the action plan and associated workgroups was shared with the New Brunswick Medical Society in June 2023 and it has been "an active participant in several committees tasked with actioning parts of the plan," according to Hatchard.

The New Brunswick Medical Society will "lead and operationalize initiatives in the action plan," along with the regional health authorities, he said.

"Investment has been made under the action plan in Family Medicine New Brunswick in order to attract and retain more physicians to a team-based model.

"The RHAs have responsibility over a network of community health centres, health service centres and communities which they plan to modernize by updating with a common electronic medical record system and reorganizing the workforce to support team-based collaborative care."

Six months into action plan

The department is already "about six months in" to the 18-month action plan, Beaulieu told the public accounts committee, in response to questions from Liberal health critic Rob McKee.

"When it was originally developed, it was very much a work plan … for the different partners in the system — primarily the department, the two RHAs and EM-ANB, moving it forward," said Beaulieu.

Some of the initiatives have been announced, he said, "but not necessarily the entire plan."

He cited as examples the ongoing funding of Family Medicine New Brunswick, investments into electronic medical records, and primary care initiatives by the regional health authorities.

The medical society is working with the department, the regional health authorities and other stakeholders to "better understand and guide" existing strategies to support primary care transformation, Keating said.

It has also been in discussions with physicians from across the province about how to accelerate the transition to team-based care, she said.

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices  
 
 

63 Comments

 

David Amos
Whereas Deputy Health Minister Eric Beaulieu don't call and don't write methinks he don't love me N'esy Pas?
 
 
Don Corey
Reply to David Amos
I suspect he may be avoiding you. 
 
 
Al Clark
Reply to David Amos 
Methinks thouest art rite. Surprise! x3
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Don Corey
I know he is



 
David Amos
 "According to Keating, the medical society is aware that the department and the Executive Council Office held a series of meetings with the regional health authorities and "select stakeholders" early in 2023, following a call for ideas related to the 2023-24 provincial budget."

I wonder if they discussed the fact that they still owe me money 

 
Don Corey
Reply to David Amos
I highly doubt it. I'm thinking that a few of them may be in need of regular "reminders". 
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Don Corey
Consider it done 
 
 
 
Geordan Mann 
Why would Dr Higgs need any help from these folks? He already knows the answers to every question. After all, he is an engineer and worked for the Irvings.   
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Geordan Mann  
Many a true word is said in jest 
 
 
Lou Bell
Reply to Geordan Mann 
Anyone reading the story would have understood they had plenty of experts taking part in the decisions . Thsi has nothing more than the head of the Nurses Union and sour grapes for not getting 10,000 dollar bonuses for her union . 
 
 
 
 
Kyle Woodman  
Hard to get buy in when your plan is secret. 
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Kyle Woodman   
Go Figure Why That Is 
 
 
 
 
Don Corey
It's nothing less than ludicrous for any government to develop a primary health-care strategy and action plan

- with minimal (at best) input from the NB Medical Society, and, not even communicate the actual strategy/plan to them

-with no public involvement/input, and, 6 months later, still no communications.

Supposedly we're now 6 months into an 18 month action plan that only a select few know anything about, and the sorry state of health-care is one of the top 3 issues facing NB'ers (the top one for many, if not most).

Mr. Outhouse is doing a poor job of getting the Higgs' house in order. He'd be wise to throw away any plans for a spring election.

 
David Amos
Reply to Don Corey
I second that emotion
 
 
 
 
Frank Brace
Higgs calls the shots, names the names, as experts in subject matters, medicine , social work , teaching or psychology have no say in their areas of expertise in New Brunswick
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Frank Brace
True 


 
 
William Peters   
No, you can't see it. It's between Higgs, Poilievre, Western based think tanks and their private sector planners. They're not going to be giving you their plan of attack until you are surrounded by the consequences of it. They get away by calling it a search for efficiencies, for the moment. Secrecy above all until things are implemented. 
 
 
Greg Miller 
Reply to William Peters 
Go grief--you're implying Cons don't get it right but Libs do. Where have you been for the last 8 years of JT? 
 
 
David Wilson  
Reply to Greg Miller  
Mostly CON provincial governments across the country have dismantling public healthcare for decades in their larger quest to privatize evertything.   
 
 
Greg Miller 
Reply to David Wilson  
Oh okay in your world the Feds have no role-no responsibility. Hmm, interesting concept--might as well get rid of the Federal Dept. of Health and like expenditures. 
 
 
David Wilson  
Reply to Greg Miller 
The provincial and territorial governments are responsible for the management, organization and delivery of health care services for their residents. The federal government is only responsible for: setting and administering national standards for the health care system through the Canada Health Act.

Facts matter.

 
John Lee 
Reply to William Peters  
Poilievre is also clearly to blame for the extinction of the dinosaurs. 
 
 
Don Corey
Reply to David Wilson 
So does the amount of federal funding, which is clearly way short of the 35% requirement.  
 
 
Don Corey
Reply to John Lee   
Would that help explain his unprecedented 20 point lead in the polls? 
 
 
Jim Lake 
Reply to Greg Miller  
Unlike most conservative governments, the Feds are not doing everything in their power to dismantle the things that help the vulnerable in our society … the Higgs government is doing nothing to help those most in need, unless it is breadcrumbs for a photo op. He does not deserve to be governing when he ignores the most vulnerable and those in our society most in need of protection. 
 

John Lee 
Reply to Jim Lake  
Unfortunately the most vulnerable often don't turn out in big numbers to vote. 
 
 
Jim Lake 
Reply to Greg Miller 
And, in case you weren’t aware, the Federal Health Ministry doesn’t manage healthcare in the provinces - they give the provinces billions and billions of dollars for healthcare (thank you) that provincial governments are adept at squandering on systems they completely mismanage … not something you can blame on the Feds.  
 
 
Rosco holt 
Reply to Don Corey  
The provincial government divert money that is suppose to go to healthcare. Remember the surpluses during the pandemic. That is also the reason why the provincial governments wanted the additional healthcare funding with no string attach. 
 
 
David Amos

Reply to Don Corey
I often wondered why cousin a health critic never asked Higgy about my right to free health care 
 
 
David Wilson 
Reply to Don Corey
More like the rise of the dinosaurs  
 
 
Don Corey
Reply to David Wilson 
No, it's the fall of sunny ways.  
 
 
MR Cain 
Reply to John Lee  
Poilievre is also clearly to blame for the rise of the dinosaurs. 


Al Clark
Reply to Rosco holt   
Refusing to give our own nurses a nickel while paying $300 and hour for travel nurses is an example of his magnificent "management skills"

The recruiting/ retention problem is entirely on him. I guess he's never worked at a fast food counter. 

 
Al Clark
Al Clark
Reply to Al Clark
...., as we see daily on here.  
 
 
David Amos
Reply to David Wilson 
What colour are dinosaurs? 
 

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