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I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 124 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Health.
Before we begin, I'd like to ask all members and other in-person participants to consult the cards on the table for guidelines to prevent audio feedback incidents. Please take note of the following preventative measures that are in place to protect the health and safety of all participants, including the interpreters.
Please use only the black, approved earpiece. The former grey earpiece must no longer be used. Please keep your earpiece away from all microphones at all times. When you're not using your earpiece, place it face down on the sticker on the table for that purpose. Thank you, all, for your co-operation.
In accordance with our routine motion, I'm informing the committee that all remote participants have completed the required connection tests in advance of the meeting.
Colleagues, before we get started, there are a couple of housekeeping matters that we absolutely need to get cleared off today. I'm hoping we can do it expeditiously so we can get to the minister. It should be a straightforward administrative matter for study budgets.
The first budget is in the amount of $1,000 for the study we're doing today, supplementary estimates (A). That budget has been circulated. It is simply for a couple of headsets and the wonderful meal you have back there. We need to pay for that.
Is it the will of the committee to adopt the budget as presented?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Chair: I see consensus. That is adopted.
The next is the proposed budget in the amount of $11,500 for the study on breast cancer screening guidelines. People have already appeared on this study, so there is urgency in this. We won't be able to pay them until this budget is approved, and that would be the right thing to do.
Is it the will of the committee to adopt the budget for breast cancer screening guidelines in the amount of $11,500, as presented?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Chair: Thank you. It's adopted.
Finally, we have the proposed budget in the amount of $38,000 for the study of the treatment and prevention of cancer. This one is looking forward to the fall.
Is it the will of the committee to adopt this budget as presented?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Chair: It's adopted.
Thank you so much, colleagues. That's going to make our lives much simpler.
We have bells. We require the unanimous consent of the committee to proceed through the bells.
Could I have the unanimous consent of the committee to proceed at least through the minister's opening statement, until, perhaps, 10 minutes before, so people can get over to the House if they wish? I see some thumbs up.
Do we have unanimous consent?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Chair: Thank you, everyone.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted on May 30, 2024, the committee is commencing its study on the subject matter of supplementary estimates (A) 2024-25.
I'd like to welcome our panel of witnesses.
We have the Honourable Mark Holland, Minister of Health.
From the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, we have Robert Ianiro, vice-president of policy and programs. From the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, we have Dr. Tammy Clifford, acting president. They are appearing by video conference.
In the room, accompanying the minister, we have Eric Costen, acting deputy minister. From the Public Health Agency of Canada, we have Heather Jeffrey, president.
Welcome, Minister Holland. Thank you for your patience while we worked through some of the administrative details, and for sitting through the votes.
You know the drill. You have the floor.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. It's a pleasure to be before this committee yet again, and in this instance to take questions relating to the supplementary estimates (A).
Maybe, if I could, Mr. Chairman, just before we begin, I'd like to give a bit of an update on where we are, as we're going through a very challenging time for the world, frankly, in dealing with health. We know that coming out of the pandemic, the health system was under enormous strain, with people burning out, long wait times and significant human resource challenges that were felt here and around the world.
Rising to meet those challenges is an exceptionally important priority for this government, working in collaboration with provinces and territories, and it was in your home province, Mr. Chairman, nearly a year ago, that we had the opportunity to meet with all health ministers in a spirit of co-operation and to lay out an agenda for how we might work together, in the aftermath of the pandemic, on the challenges facing our health system.
In the time that has followed, we have been able to see 26 agreements signed, with all provinces and all territories, dealing with health workforce issues, dealing with aging with dignity, dealing with mental health and many other aspects of our health system, and there has been continued progress on pharmacare and dental care. On dental care, I can say in this moment that in just the opening six weeks, we saw 200,000 seniors receive care across the country.
I'd be happy to go into greater detail, but we already have over 40% of providers participating. July 8 will be an important date, because that will be the point at which providers will be able to participate on a one-off basis. They will not be required to sign up in advance. We've also just seen the passage in the House of Commons—and I want to thank the health critics for the NDP, both current and past, and , for working at cross-purposes and finding common ground on pharmacare. I've been having very productive conversations with all provinces and territories, and I'm very anxious to begin that work, to build upon their jurisdiction and to work with them collaboratively.
[Translation]
We must respect provincial and territorial jurisdictions. That's vital. For example, my discussions with Minister Dubé make it clear that we can improve the overall quality of the health care system by embracing a spirit of co‑operation on both sides.
[English]
Some really important things have to be done on things such as drugs for rare diseases. We're now able to move forward, and I hope that imminently we will be able to see progress on those.
You can see that there are dollars in the supplementary estimates for personal support workers. It's absolutely critical that we work collaboratively with provinces and territories to make sure those extraordinary individuals, who were so critical during the pandemic and who are critical today in our health system, are paid a fair wage and that we as the federal government do our part in that process.
As well, there's health data legislation. That data legislation will be coming before this committee. I look forward to the conversation that will happen on that. Having our systems interconnected and recognizing that data saves lives are absolutely critical things to taking blindfolds off our health care providers, making sure the data is used to its greatest effect to save lives and helping make our health system work efficiently. It's totally unacceptable that we still see fax machines and that physicians have to fill out forms four or five times. We have to get to the bottom of that.
I hope to see the same spirit I've seen with provincial and territorial colleagues, whereby we recognize that health is bigger than partisanship and that we have to find ways to talk about solutions, and I would invite members to share their ideas. We have a huge number of seniors, for example, who don't have dental care but who are going to get it.
For anyone who is against that, I would ask what they think the alternative is. If you're against somebody getting diabetes medication or contraceptives, what do you say to somebody who needs diabetes medication or needs contraceptives? What's your solution?
Similarly, with our health workforce issues, we've been able to make extraordinary progress, Mr. Chairman. Working collaboratively we have seen, for example, the service standard for foreign credential recognition in Charlottetown go from 90 days, or processes with the College of Physicians and Surgeons go from many, many, many months to being reduced and contracted to a matter of days.
I look forward to a solutions-based conversation where we can debate the very challenging global circumstance that we're in and how Canada can lead the way with a world-class health care system.
That concludes my opening remarks.
With that, Mr. Chairman, I'm happy to take questions.
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I think Canadians have an expectation, and I see it, frankly. I had a meeting last week with Adriana LaGrange. We have different political views, but we're able to have civil conversations in which we are solutions-focused. I think that's where Canadians expect us to be, particularly on health.
Even in the House, the work that was done on dental care or pharmacare across partisan lines matters, working with New Democrats to find common ground to make material improvements to the conditions of Canadians' health.
Frankly, googling what's wrong in the world and parroting it adds nothing. It is an act neither of courage nor of intelligence to reflect what's not working in the world. What require work and courage are solutions.
The only time in the House when the Conservatives have ever asked about health care was when we were asking for the wealthiest in this country to make a small additional contribution. I think it's important to recognize that in the last five years, capital gains and capital wealth have expanded vastly.
I don't hear the Conservatives asking about how we improve the wages of a personal support care worker. I don't hear the Conservatives talking about the wages and working conditions of a nurse. However, when it comes to somebody who is making more than $250,000 a year and the fact that they're going to go from 50% tax off to one-third tax off over $250,000, suddenly they're interested. I think that is concerning. It's a difference, frankly, in philosophy and where I think we need to be spending our attention.
On health workforce issues, what's going to get us to a point of coming out of the difficult situation we were in during COVID and into a circumstance whereby we are able to stabilize our health workforce is the $200 billion in investments we've made with the provinces and territories in those 26 agreements. It is accelerating the support for internationally educated health professionals. It is opening medical residency spots, reducing administration and working collaboratively with provinces, not seeking out fights or partisan differences to put things on social media, but instead finding common ground and solutions.
The thing that frustrates me about the Conservatives is there are no solutions. There's what they would cut. There's what they wouldn't do. They criticize the challenges going on in the world, but when it comes to solutions and practical things that Canadians can see they would do to improve the health care system, there's nothing there.
However, the American Food and Drug Administration, or FDA, has recognized this for a few years now. I don't know what more you need. The recommendations and a report were adopted unanimously here. I imagine that you'll speed up your reflection process.
I have a second question for you. A number of issues have come up with the Cannabis Act. An expert panel has made some recommendations. One recommendation called for Health Canada to limit the number of registrations for personal or designated cannabis production, because it became apparent that far too many licences had been issued.
Another recommendation called for Health Canada to further scrutinize health care professionals who authorize high daily amounts and to use its regulatory authorities to refuse or revoke applications deemed to pose a risk to public health or safety.
Health Canada must do its job. What do you make of these recommendations?
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Wonderful! It's good to see that the NDP's proposed dental care program is generating so much interest.
[English]
I note that it was three years ago yesterday that Jack Harris for the NDP brought forward the dental care motion that failed. The Liberals and the Conservatives voted against it. However, in this minority Parliament, we're now seeing real interest in dental care.
I'd like to ask you this, Minister: Over two million seniors have already signed up for the dental care program the NDP pushed so hard for. The next stage is June 27, I believe, when kids under 18 and people with disabilities will be able to join the program. There is absolutely no doubt there is an intense need for dental care. The reality is that it saves money in the acute care system, because people no longer need to go to emergency wards when they have a dental emergency. That is very important.
What measures will the government take to ensure there is as much uptake among people with disabilities and kids under 18 as there has been among seniors, who were given information and told they could apply for the program? What is the government going to do to ensure that same level of participation for these other groups at the end of the month?
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The interest has been very strong.
In your home province of British Columbia, Adrian Dix would be ready to sign now if we had royal assent, I think. We've had the opportunity to talk about what that range of action might look like.
Your point around the need for medication is important. It's not just a preventative health measure. You're absolutely right about that. There are all kinds of people who, if they don't have access to diabetes medication, could be in a situation where they lose a limb or have a cardiac event, a stroke or a kidney failure. It's also critically important because what we're looking at is cost. In the last estimate in 2018, diabetes cost our health system about $27 billion. By 2028, that figure is expected to be $37 billion.
Not actioning in a preventative way isn't just unfair in terms of bad patient outcomes. It's also dumb in terms of money.
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I do. There are a couple of really important tax benefits that are retained.
One is that, if you incorporate, you still have the opportunity to shield and, unlike with an RRSP, there's no limit to that, so you can shield and incorporate your gains and allow them to compound.
Second, when you remove money, you continue to enjoy a capital gains exemption, and it will move from 50% to one-third.
Again, the important point here is that a nurse who is—
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I call the meeting back to order.
I'd like to welcome our second panel of witnesses. We have with us this evening the Honourable Ya'ara Saks, Minister of Mental Health and Addictions. With her, representing the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, is Dr. Samuel Weiss, scientific director, Institute of Neurosciences, Mental Health and Addiction. Dr. Weiss is with us by video conference.
For the Department of Health, Eric Costen, acting deputy minister, is still here. We also have Michelle Boudreau, associate assistant deputy minister, health policy branch; and Jennifer Saxe, associate assistant deputy minister, controlled substances and cannabis branch.
Also in the room, representing the Public Health Agency of Canada, are Nancy Hamzawi, executive vice-president, and Michael Collins, vice-president, health promotion and chronic disease prevention branch. Thank you for your patience. Thank you for being with us.
Welcome to the committee, Minister Saks. You have five minutes for your opening statement.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair and honourable members. It is lovely to be back with you again at the HESA committee.
Since being named minister, and even prior to that time, my priority has been to ensure that Canadians have access to the mental health and substance use services they need, both when they need them and where they need them.
In recent weeks, I've been meeting with young people and their families across the country to talk about mental health. They have shared their stories with me and spoken poignantly about the challenges young people face today. I have also spoken with mental health practitioners, researchers and service providers. They have offered valuable insights into how we can work together to better support youth as they navigate the transition to adulthood.
With the new youth mental health fund, our government is investing $500 million over five years to enhance youth access to mental health care. This fund will help community organizations provide more care options for youth that are timely and accessible. It will help broaden our support network and better equip organizations to refer youth to other mental health services within their networks and partnerships.
Community organizations are a lifeline when it comes to mental health care. They provide direct support to people in need. They are trusted by the people they serve. They have first-hand knowledge, which is much needed to make a real difference, especially among equity-deserving groups and youth.
It is so important for us to remember what it means to be Canadian right now. We hold each other together. We are holding each other through many challenging things right now, including the lives tragically lost through the overdose crisis. This is where we step up and throw everything we have in our tool box at saving lives.
On the other side of the bench, unfortunately, there is much stigmatization. They talk about the overdose crisis in terms of our loved ones being criminals. They want to stigmatize our loved ones back into the dark corners and criminalize them. People should not have to hide their struggle with substance use and the disease of addiction. This is the ideology of the failed war on drugs. We cannot go back to that way of thinking.
We know that needle exchanges and safe consumption sites bring people into health care. It gives them another day, a day towards living and thriving. They walk into those places knowing that they will get the help they need. We're not just talking about saving lives. We're talking about getting people the health services they need with the compassion and care that they deserve.
Last September we launched a national call for proposals under Health Canada's substance use and addictions program. This program supports community-based organizations in delivering innovative prevention, harm reduction, treatment and recovery, and other evidence-based health interventions. Our $144-million investment in SUAP is an important part of a comprehensive response to problematic substance use.
We are also investing more than $20 million in a new youth substance use prevention program. This program will support the implementation and adaptation of the Icelandic prevention model right here in Canada, a model that has been highlighted multiple times in studies from this committee.
In addition, budget 2024 includes $150 million over three years for a new emergency treatment fund. This fund is designed to meet urgent needs on the front lines by providing support for municipalities and indigenous communities facing an acute increase in substance use harms and deaths related to the overdose crisis.
Mr. Chair, we are stepping up and looking at all options, but we cannot do this work in isolation. We recognize that it's incumbent on the provinces and territories, as the main health care service providers, to identify their needs and their priorities. Our historic investment of close to $200 billion over 10 years will improve health services across the country, with $25 billion being provided through tailored bilateral agreements. This funding will help integrate mental health and substance use services as a full and equal part of our universal health care system.
So far, more than a third of the bilateral funding has been allocated to mental health and substance use services. This is good news. It will strengthen the capacity of family health care providers to offer mental health and substance use support to patients all across the country. This is essential, because mental health and substance use care should never be an afterthought. Our mental health and well-being are integral to who we are, and the health care system must reflect this.
The Government of Canada will continue to work with its partners to ensure that mental health and substance use services are built into the very foundations of that system. With a strong foundation in place, Canadians can count on having access to a full range of high-quality, culturally informed, timely health care services that are accessible to them. This is what they expect, and they deserve nothing less.
Thank you.
I'm now happy to answer your questions.
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Thank you to the member.
Through you, Mr. Chair, I'd like to say that the integrated youth services program is a hallmark of what we can do to help youth in every part of this country and meet their needs in the community with a full range of services, including primary care, counselling and support for families.
With regard to the youth mental health fund, we are very excited to be working with a youth-led and expert-led consultation process right now. This will be a “once in a generation” investment in our young Canadians. We know mental health challenges have been growing among our youth. We also know we need to meet them where they are, so we can offer them the services they need and deserve in order for them to succeed and thrive. We know that when our young people thrive, Canada will succeed. This is exactly why these investments are needed at this moment, particularly after COVID.
With regard to recent investments, we've been building out the integrated youth services program for quite a number of years. There are now 48 hubs throughout the country, gathering data and knowledge and working with youth every single day. Now we have made a $59-million investment to “network the network”, so knowledge exchange, increased support and an evidence-driven approach to addressing youth mental health, wellness and well-being will be the future for young Canadians.
I would like to defer—
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I agree. At the time, it wasn't clear whether a systemic diversion had occurred.
That said, I gather that there may be an investigation.
Do you know how this investigation is going? Without giving us any details, can you say whether progress has been made? At some point, will we see the matter resolved? This has been going on for a few months now. Is this an isolated issue? What information can you provide?
Enforcement of the law is a key pillar of the Canadian drugs and substances strategy. Hence my questions. We tend to forget that some witnesses told us that we wouldn't win the war on drugs, that we had never won this war and that neither prohibition nor coercion would help us win it.
At the same time, it's part of the national strategy and it rarely comes up in that context.
I have another question about enforcement of the law.
Have you set up any initiatives to regulate or limit the availability of precursors, which help fuel clandestine laboratories and manufacture the harmful and toxic drugs that kill people?
Through you, Mr. Chair, I'll try to be succinct and accurate in answering Dr. Hanley.
To be frank, there's a false debate brewing regarding harm reduction versus treatment. It's a distraction, because we're focused on saving lives. We are focused on those who use substances and have the disease of addiction and on getting them to health care services. We know this is where we need to stay, within the evidence and the science.
Professor Benjamin Perrin has also raised the issue of disinformation, calling out the on his claims about hard drugs—crack, heroine and cocaine—being decriminalized and resulting in a 380% increase, which was false. Dr. Perrin, who is a former Conservative staffer, outlined this and called the Leader of the Opposition out on what he said were the lies he was spreading.
I would encourage all of us to focus on what's most important: We can't treat someone if they are dead. That is why harm reduction is health care. It is a door to the system. That is why we need to use every tool available to us to save lives, to get those we love into the treatment and health care services they deserve.
Madam Minister, in another component, you had the opportunity to talk about harm reduction by answering some of the committee members' questions.
The experts who appeared before the committee told us that harm reduction was the first step in treatment. Incidentally, the Maison Benoît Labre is a supportive housing facility with two injection rooms. When we travelled across Canada, people told us their stories. We discovered that supportive housing played a role in helping people successfully get off drugs. It's a harm reduction measure.
Could you talk about harm reduction? Do you agree with the experts who appeared before the committee and who said that harm reduction was the first step in treatment? Do you agree that there aren't just two paths, contrary to what Alberta's Minister of Mental Health and Addiction said? There aren't just two paths, which are misery and harm reduction or mandatory treatment.
What are your thoughts on this?
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I will be very quick, given the time before the vote.
The document, to my knowledge, was not requested through an order for the production of documents. It was requested for further information or as a question taken as notice. Documents tendered to the committee are the possession of the committee. The committee can do with them as it wishes during the sitting. At the end of the sitting, all of the documents, unless they have been deemed by the committee to be confidential, are made public, and they are available to be searched.
If the committee wishes to discretionally not release the document at this point but have it be public only at the end of the sitting, that is certainly within its rights. If the committee wants to render it public at any point, it can. It can choose to publish it on the website, or it can choose to designate it as confidential.
All of these are options for the committee to consider.
[English]
Colleagues, the vote is under way. I am quite concerned that if we don't suspend the meeting and somebody has technical difficulties, they're going to be denied their chance to vote. The minister has also reached the one hour that she had committed to us, so I'm going to thank the minister for being with us and give her the opportunity to vote, and then I'm going to ask to suspend the meeting until we're finished voting. We'll follow the same procedure as last time. If there's a will to come back before the normal time, I'll canvass the room. We do have some committee business to deal with.
Minister Saks, thank you so much for being with us. Make sure you get your vote in. That's why the good people elected you to be here. We appreciate, as always, your appearance, your flexibility with respect to the timing, and the patience that you showed in responding to our questions.
The meeting is suspended.
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I'd like to state that I appreciate the motion and I appreciate the severity of the problem we have of not having access to doctors. Certainly, many people in my riding are in that situation, and I'm very cognizant of the importance of that.
It turns out that my blood pressure got high. It was probably because of too much time in these meetings. They've driven my blood pressure high. As a doctor, I knew it was high, but the chronic management of high blood pressure is not my area of expertise. I was an emergency doctor.
I know, as a doctor and as an MP, about the problems of even getting in to see a doctor. There are a lot of people who just never have their blood pressure checked until they go to the emergency room because they're having a hemorrhagic stroke or something.
I understand the importance of getting doctors. I also certainly understand the importance of the opioid crisis. The question is, should we meet during the summer in order to try to solve this problem?
As a lifelong doctor who still practises medicine, I've been up many nights, looking after people when they're sick. I did it because I had to. I've operated on people in the middle of the night and I've done procedures in the middle of the night—not particularly because I like working in the middle of the night, but because I had to. I'm certain there are other doctors here who feel the same way.
The question is: Do we have to? Is it going to change anything?
I'd like to say I think our committee has moved the dial on various subjects recently. One of them was the health care workforce shortage. I think the work of the committee has contributed to addressing that issue and some of the issues around legalization and safe supply. Perhaps the view on those has been changing. I think, in part, it's because of the work of this committee.
However, how much more are we going to change over the course of the summer? I don't think it will be very much.
On the other hand, we have other duties. We have duties to our own constituents. I have 90,000 constituents, and I'm their only MP. They deserve the time to be able to talk to me about their problems, and the summer is a big part of my time to do that.
With all this in mind, I have to say I disagree with the motion. Furthermore, given the time of day, I will try again to move a motion to adjourn.