:
I call this meeting to order.
I must say, coming in here today, there was activity and there was discussion. It is starting to feel like a regular Parliament again. It's a very nice sign.
Welcome to meeting number eight of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Public Accounts.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(3)(g), the committee is meeting today to undertake a study on “Report 11—Health Resources for Indigenous Communities—Indigenous Services Canada”.
[Translation]
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, in compliance with the House order of Thursday, November 25, 2021. Members can attend in person or remotely using the Zoom application.
The proceedings will be made available through the House of Commons website. So you are aware, the web broadcast will always show the person speaking rather than the entirety of the committee.
[English]
I would like to take this opportunity to remind all participants to this meeting that screenshots or taking photos of your screen is not permitted.
[Translation]
Given the current pandemic situation and in light of recommendations from public health authorities, as well as the Board of Internal Economy's directive of October 29, 2021, to remain healthy and safe, everyone attending the meeting in person must follow the health rules.
[English]
As the chair, I will enforce these health measures for the duration of the meeting, and I thank members in advance for their co-operation.
To ensure an orderly meeting, I would like to outline a few rules to follow.
[Translation]
Members and witnesses can speak in the official language of their choice. Interpretation services are available for this meeting. On the bottom of your screen, you have the floor, English and French as options. If you can no longer hear the interpretation, please let me know immediately, and we will ensure it is correctly re‑established before we continue with our meeting.
Please use the raise hand feature, which is on the main toolbar, if you would like to speak or get the chair's attention.
[English]
For members participating in person, proceed as you usually would when the whole committee is meeting in person in the committee room.
Before speaking, please wait until I recognize you by name. If you are on the video conference, please click on the microphone icon to unmute yourself. For those in the room, your microphone will be controlled as normal by the proceedings and verification officer. When speaking—and I should probably learn this as well—please speak slowly and clearly. When you are not speaking, your mike should be on mute.
[Translation]
I remind you that any comments from members and witnesses must be addressed through the chair.
[English]
With regard to a speaking list, the committee clerk and I will do the best we can to maintain a consolidated order of speaking for all members, whether they are participating virtually or in person.
I would now like to welcome our witnesses.
From the Office of the Auditor General, we have Andrew Hayes, deputy auditor general. It's good to see you again, sir. We also have Glenn Wheeler, principal, and Doreen Deveen, director.
From Indigenous Services Canada, we have Christiane Fox, deputy minister; Dr. Tom Wong, chief medical officer, chief science officer and director general; and Robin Buckland, director general and chief nursing officer.
You have five minutes to make your opening statements. I will go to the deputy auditor general.
Mr. Hayes, you have the floor for five minutes.
We are happy to appear before your committee today to present the results of our audit of health resources for indigenous communities.
I would like to acknowledge that this hearing is taking place on the traditional unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishinabe people.
Joining me today are Glenn Wheeler, who was the principal responsible for the audit, and Doreen Deveen, the director who led the audit team.
This audit focused on whether Indigenous Services Canada provided personal protective equipment, nurses and paramedics to meet the needs of indigenous communities and organizations during the COVID-19 pandemic. Overall, we found that Indigenous Services Canada adapted quickly to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic. During the pandemic, the department relied on the national emergency strategic stockpile to supplement its own supply of protective equipment.
Before the pandemic, the department was providing equipment and health care workers to 51 remote or isolated first nations communities. We found that during the pandemic, the department expanded access to protective equipment to all indigenous communities when provinces and territories were unable to meet the demand. It also expanded access to protective equipment to other individuals, such as police officers and people sick with COVID-19 or caring for a sick family member.
During the first 10 months of the pandemic, the department responded to more than 1,600 requests for multiple pieces of protective equipment. We found that communities, many of which are remote, received their shipments on average within 10 days of requesting equipment.
[Translation]
However, we found a number of weaknesses in the way the department managed its own stockpile of personal protective equipment before and during the pandemic. The department did not have complete and accurate data on the stockpile's contents. We also found that the department had not followed its own approach in procuring sufficient equipment before the pandemic. As a result, it did not have enough of some types of protective equipment in its stockpile when the pandemic broke out.
We also found that, in relation to providing nurses and paramedics to communities, the department streamlined its processes for hiring nurses in remote or isolated first nations communities. In addition, the department made its contract nurses and paramedics available to all indigenous communities to respond to additional COVID‑19 health care needs.
While the department took steps to increase capacity, the number of requests for extra nurses and paramedics also increased. As a result, the department was unable to meet more than half of the 963 requests that it received between March 2020 and March 2021 for extra nurses and paramedics.
The pandemic aggravated pre–existing challenges in meeting nursing needs in remote or isolated first nations communities. Several factors contributed to nursing shortages in many of these communities, including the national shortage of nurses, the challenging nature of the work, the diverse skill set required to work in remote or isolated communities, and poor housing.
Mr. Chair, this concludes my opening remarks. We would be pleased to answer any questions the committee may have.
Kwe kwe. Ullukkut. Tansi. Hello.
I want to acknowledge that I'm on the traditional and unceded territory of the Algonquin people.
Thank you for inviting me to speak to our department's response to the Auditor General's report concerning health resources for indigenous communities during the COVID-19 pandemic.
In the report, the Auditor General made two overall recommendations. The first was concerning personal protective equipment. The OAG noted that the department should review how we manage our stockpile of PPE, making sure that we have accurate records to ensure we have the right amount of stock for this current pandemic and any future emergencies.
[Translation]
To respond, we reviewed our inventory from before the pandemic. We then looked at how quickly the personal protection equipment—
We then looked at how quickly the personal protection equipment was being used during the first year of the pandemic, and overall, we were satisfied that we had enough equipment from the Public Health Agency of Canada to meet the needs of communities.
We must also recognize the challenge of acquiring this equipment on an international scale. In response to the recommendation, we also started working with the Public Health Agency of Canada on a joint automated inventory management tool. This will give us accessible, up-to-date information on the stockpile.
This past summer, we worked with a contractor to finish a full recount of all the equipment. That enabled us to update our inventory tracker accordingly.
I am very pleased to say that the department's inventory target has increased from six to 12 months' worth of equipment in its stockpile at all times.
[English]
We have now moved from a six-month to a 12-month supply at all times. We're also committed to conducting monthly inventory analysis so that we can be proactively managing the PPE stockpile, staying on top of trends and anticipating any needs. Finally, we're reviewing our chain of PPE custody and disposal practices to ensure a stable inventory.
[Translation]
The Auditor General's second recommendation concerned the shortage of nurses and paramedics.
The report said that the department should work with remote or isolated first nations communities to look at other ways to address the shortage of nurses and to review the nursing and paramedic support that communities received.
The department agreed with that recommendation. In response, we are now collaborating with the 50 first nations communities that we serve directly and the 29 communities that are managing their own nursing stations.
Supported by budget 2021, we are focusing on three areas: hiring new nurses, keeping them in the job and lessons learned during the pandemic.
[English]
All of this work is being done in partnership with nursing leadership within the department and our indigenous partners, and under the umbrella of the nursing health human resources framework. We're examining how we can better recruit and retain nurses by enhancing nursing supports and increasing access to practical nurses and nurse practitioners to augment the existing registered nurse workforce. The department has established and managed surge nursing and paramedic contracts to complement our workforce. Since April 2021, there have been over 11,000 service days of surge supports provided to help maintain essential clinical services in remote communities.
We're also working to create an internal primary care nurse service team. In time, this team will provide us with added flexibility to respond to the need for additional nursing resources. We're making improvements in areas such as customized nurse supports to resolve frontline issues related to IT, compensation and security.
We're also working to enhance our clinical practice supports and, of course, our continued 24-7 access to a customized nurse employee assistance program. As we all know, our frontline workforce has been working very hard under challenging circumstances throughout the pandemic.
[Translation]
We thank the Auditor General for the valuable recommendations, and we feel that the changes we have made have strengthened our response to this pandemic. They will also put us in a stronger place to respond to future health care needs.
Meegwetch. Qujannamiik. Marsi. Merci. Thank you.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair, and to our witnesses for being here today.
I want to focus my questions on the shortage of additional health care staff, as alluded to in the opening statements.
For context, I'm proud to represent and work with the community of Akwesasne in my riding of Stormont—Dundas—South Glengarry, and while not being remote, it is an example that certainly speaks to the challenges of attracting and retaining health care staff. Dr. Ojistoh Horn is the only full-time general practitioner at one of the clinics in Akwesasne, for example, a community of 25,000. She works with two nurse practitioners who cover about 14,000 patients.
There was a good CBC article that came out at the beginning of the pandemic, and it notes—to get into my question—that even before the pandemic, as Mr. Hayes alluded to in his opening comments, there were some challenges already arising. This was before the pandemic exacerbated the challenges.
Mr. Hayes, for statistics purposes, there's one thing I was wondering. You provide data on the services being met or not met during the pandemic. To give us a context, do you have—and if not, the deputy minister might be able to provide our committee with this—an idea of the request for services prepandemic and what was met and not met so that we can understand perhaps the volume and percentage of success in meeting those requests? Did you look at that data, and if not, can we get that?
:
In terms of the question itself, I would say that the [
Technical difficulty—Editor] that were requested in terms of surge during the pandemic were very much to complement the additional requirements beyond the staff we currently have in communities. It would be a different type of tracking in the sense that we have a permanent workforce in various indigenous communities across the country. At the time of the audit, it was actually 51 communities where we managed direct services and 28 where the service had been transferred to the indigenous communities. At this time we're at 50 and 29, because we transferred a community in Quebec.
In terms of the needs on the ground, it would have been assessed and met by the primary health team in the community, supported by the 18 physicians we have across the country, the regional medical health officers and the staff.
In the pandemic we saw an increased demand for surge support that would not necessarily have been common prior to the pandemic. We could probably provide the committee with statistics on the number of clients we saw per community, our workforce in the communities prepandemic and our workforce in communities postpandemic. I think that could give you an indication of the need surge during the COVID-19 pandemic, if that's helpful.
:
Thank you for the question.
Just to give you a sense of context, we employ 862 nurses within Indigenous Services Canada. In addition to that, at this moment in time we have approximately 600 nurses and paramedics on our roster of contracted nurses. We use that roster in order to fill surge and even in order to fill the requirements within communities. It's very much a mix of Indigenous Services Canada personnel plus surge contractors.
How do we get those? We definitely do work with the province. In fact, as you can imagine, during the COVID-19 pandemic health human resources was a challenge across the country. Therefore, we sometimes had to compete for that health human resource capacity. We had to think about what some of the creative ways were we could attract and retain. We worked with colleges and universities and with first nations-led institutions like SIIT to try to get that health human resource capacity in indigenous communities.
I can speak to efforts going into the future, but definitely at this point we relied on ISC nursing staff and contract staff, and then used different ways to advertise and look for skills. Even within our own group, we have nursing staff who are in communities. We also have nursing staff within the department who are doing policy work. We look at our own workforce. We look at the retired workforce. Could we bring people back to be on contract with us, even if part time?
The last thing I would say is that we also instituted ISC CARE, which was turned around in about two weeks. It was a safe air transport that actually moved people from communities and that facilitated, safely, the arrival of our HHR personnel. We were able to fly over 5,400 health human resources in and out of those 51 communities.
First of all, I want to take this opportunity to thank the Office of the Auditor General for a very timely report and recommendations.
I also want to thank the public servants, especially the medical officers and scientists, who have guided the government with their expertise and facts. It was one of the biggest reasons that Canada was praised around the world as a nation with a better response to a pandemic that we haven't seen in 100 years. Sincerely, please convey my gratitude to all the public servants under your supervision.
I want to talk about the first recommendation. The Auditor General's report specifically talked about the stockpiling of PPE. I heard about the management of surge support for the indigenous community.
Deputy Auditor General Hayes, in your findings, was there any particular focus on the fact that PPE has an expiry date? Was that factor applied to the readiness of the department when it came to support for indigenous communities?
Then I'll move to the deputy minister on this point as well.
:
Thank you very much for the question.
Our findings on the department's stockpile focused in on the fact that there was inaccurate and incomplete information of the amounts that were in stock. Before the pandemic there was an approach that was expected to have been followed to have the appropriate amounts in the stockpile, and we found that it wasn't indeed followed.
During the pandemic we identified errors in the stockpile, whether from manual errors in inputting information on materials or equipment received, or from the actual contents of the stockpile. Our recommendation was focused on accuracy and completeness. We didn't comment on the expiry dates. However, as we mentioned in the PPE and medical device report, that is an important factor to be aware of as you manage a stockpile.
:
Thank you very much for the question.
I think we definitely took the recommendation on, and I think there would be two components that I would point to in terms of the department's response.
The first would be around the automated tool, which is very much centred on both outbound PPE and inbound PPE, having a very good sense of the type of PPE, the supply, the quantity, and where it's going. To give you a sense, since the beginning of the pandemic we received 2,241 requests coming into the department. Over 20 million units of PPE have been shipped. At this stage, 2,201 have been delivered.
Through this automated system and through the changes that we've done in the department, we can really track the flow of PPE that we have and we are able to determine both the expiry and the gaps in supply, whether it be gloves, sanitizers or whatever it may be. We have a very good sense of that. I think, as I noted in my remarks, that new tool, the sophistication that we brought to our current systems and how we manage the flow have allowed us now to build our supply to a 12-month turnaround period.
The way we worked with communities was that we would approve requests within two days of coming in and ship them right away. The average arrival of the PPE would be within 10 days.
I should also note that we provided PPE to the 51 communities and their health care workers, but we did not limit our PPE stock to just those health workers. If a school called, if a police officer called, if there were needs in the community, we did everything we could to respond to that need, and that was not limited to on reserve. We actually sent PPE supply to urban indigenous centres to be able to provide those essential supports for urban indigenous individuals who found themselves out of the community or even in very dire situations, in terms of the indigenous homeless population. It was very much not just limited to that.
How does it help us going into the future? I think we have a much better system to plan and track and to enable us to have confidence in our ability to meet the demands as they come in.
I want to begin by thanking all of our witnesses.
Like my honourable colleague opposite, I want to say that your work is very important and has been especially important in the most difficult moments. As we know, you work with more vulnerable populations, and they are often the ones who suffer the most during pandemics like the one we have been going through over the past couple of years. I thank you for your work.
Some of you may know this, but, in Quebec, when we talk about first nations, we do so from nation to nation. We have considered first nations as our brethren since 1603, since the Grande Tabagie de Tadoussac, when an alliance was established. According to some historians, that should actually be considered the founding year of New France.
But enough of the history lesson. My questions will mainly focus on the 2014 strategy, which has not been implemented. Stockpiles were not replenished in time, despite the strategy that was even developed by you.
I would just like to know what may have happened and why that strategy has not been implemented.
:
Thank you for your question.
We were able to recognize that, although the 2014 strategy was a hybrid one, we were exclusively counting on equipment from the Public Health Agency of Canada. Moreover, as we have seen since the beginning of the pandemic, there was a true shortage of equipment internationally.
If we look at the 2014 model and where we are now, the changes we have had to make have primarily consisted in not relying strictly on equipment percentage and what we received directly from the agency, but also in meeting needs by purchasing directly from the department.
It is also important to say that measures may not have been in place in 2014 for a daily review to be carried out. Now, a monthly review is done to determine what articles are in stock and what their expiry date is, and to really better understand what we have or don't have, so as to be able to meet needs. Unfortunately, the process has been more ad hoc than based on an automated system.
What we experienced during the pandemic and the recommendations we have received have given us an opportunity to review our methods. Before the fiscal year's end, in late March 2022, we are really entering the phase where this tool is starting to get tested. We will then continue to fine tune it to ensure that it meets not only the current needs, but that it will continue to meet needs going forward.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I often find these studies difficult, because I've experienced in many ways, like in the last committee meeting, what this work means in communities and on the ground.
Madam Fox, you have spoken quite highly about the work that's been done here, but there are tremendous gaps. The work of our committee is to identify these gaps and to ensure that you know of them, so please don't take anything I am about to say personally. I hope that it informs your work better and we can ensure that lives are saved, because lives were lost. My uncle died on reserve during COVID, 15 days after a request from the community went out for PPE.
That is someone's responsibility. They never got the services in time. They never got what was really needed so that the community could truly protect itself, and this isn't a new story for indigenous people. We've experienced this time and time again, whether it was tuberculosis during the residential school period—when Canada failed to act to protect my grandmother and my uncles, who died in that institution—or before that with smallpox. At times, it was deliberately brought to communities.
These are the types of communities we are dealing with. They are communities that are trauma-informed by those experiences.
I remember growing up with stories from my kôhkom and cimošôm about how scary it was when the Indian agent would come with a medicine chest and they were uncertain as to what was in it, but they were even more afraid of what wasn't in it. Many of these nations have signed treaties with Canada, asking for a guarantee for health like the medicine chest clause.
The medicine chest clause is something that every treaty group in this country wanted to ensure Canada understood clearly. I have heard from Treaty 6, Treaty 7 and Treaty 8 that, on this clause, Canada failed to uphold its obligations to ensure they had the proper resourcing as per the treaty that's been guaranteed.
I really appreciated my colleague from Quebec's mention of nation-to-nation relationships. There is a lot that Canada can learn from that framework. In my community, in Alberta, we didn't have that support. We didn't even have the ability to protect our elders.
A part of this I want to mention.... I'll spread this out over a few rounds, but in particular in the report, your action plan states something that I found to be a glaring discrepancy with what the Auditor General asked for. I am looking at your action plan that was provided in response to report 11. On page four of 14, there is an action item response to what the Auditor General requests to engage first nations communities in staffing processes. You and your ministry have reported the response to that action, in item 2.1:
Working with the Nursing Leadership Council, and the Nursing Retention and Recruitment Steering Committee, ISC will examine its current recruitment model....
Does the deputy minister think that's satisfactory for engaging with first nations communities in staffing processes?
:
Thank you very much, Chair.
Thank you to our witnesses for their work and for appearing.
In the report, recommendation 11.61 states:
Indigenous Services Canada should work with the 51 remote or isolated First Nations communities to consider other approaches to address the ongoing shortage of nurses in these communities and to review the nursing and paramedic support provided to all Indigenous communities to identify best practices.
The department has agreed to that recommendation.
My question is on the 51 first nations and engagement. It's a question to the deputy minister. How exactly will engagement proceed? Are communities prioritized according to a particular set of criteria? If so, what are those criteria? How does engagement unfold in these cases?
I should specify that, at the time of the audit, it was in fact 51 communities, but we have transferred the service in one case. If I use the figure of 50, it's to show that we're at a different place now than we were, and it's great news in terms of the agenda for health transformation that the Quebec community has taken on.
In terms of how we will engage, I think the first thing is that we engage regularly. We have nursing staff in community at all times. For the 51 communities, there are constant communications between the chief, the band council and the health directors. That engagement happens consistently on the needs.
Specific to the recruitment and retention, what we want to talk to leadership about is not just how we recruit and retain, but how we modernize the practice environment. What is the well-being of the workforce? How do we encourage members of the community to pursue a career in HHR, and what are some of the supports that are required? How do we maintain a nimble and agile search?
These are sometimes very challenging postings. They're remote. They're rural. Over the summer, I spent some time with our nursing staff in Sandy Lake, Pikangikum and Norway House.
I think the strategy and the engagement has to be not just about what they need in terms of primary health care needs, but it also needs to be future looking. What does the health infrastructure in the community look like? What is the path towards the talent development? The department has emphasized health transformation, and that is about empowering communities to take on the health services for their communities.
We also talk a lot about health teams. The reality is that our health professionals, at times, are doing work that is perhaps administrative, in addition to their day-to-day work. How can we create these teams that are paramedics, nurses, physicians and lab technicians to conduct X-rays? How can we engage the community?
When I was in Sandy Lake, the X-ray technician and the person doing the rapid test kits or the GeneXpert testing for the community was a member of the community who was hired and then embedded into that nursing team. I think these are the types of engagements that we need to have.
:
I have three thoughts on that.
The first one, in terms of best practices, is probably the most important: ensuring that we have culturally relevant health services for indigenous communities. That means training. It means hiring indigenous professionals to manage health services. That is a best practice that needs to be across the country.
The second piece is around innovation. We talk about tools that can help us, like IT systems that can help track PPE, but beyond that, what are some of the innovations in terms of best practices that we can adopt? We have teams that now have connectivity. If you're in northern Saskatchewan, you can connect with a physician in Regina or Saskatoon. What types of virtual care technologies can we do? These are some of the best practices—
:
Thank you for your question.
The pandemic has exacerbated the housing shortage in some of our indigenous communities. We know this will affect not only community members, but also staff, such as nurses, professors and police officers who come from elsewhere and work in those communities. That is one of the challenges we are facing in recruitment.
Let's take for example a community where, in normal times, we have enough housing for three to five nurses. However, owing to COVID‑19, more staff had to be sent there for augmented teams. Given that context, there was occasionally no housing available for everyone.
That is a reality. The department is really trying to resolve the housing shortage issue. I think we have invested just under $1 billion in that initiative since 2015. Further investment is needed and will continue to be provided. That is the reality of our human resources services. They must think of not only housing, but also the safety—
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
My questions will be directed to the deputy minister of Indigenous Services.
On the same line of questioning as my colleague from Quebec, related to housing, this is a systemic problem that the government has been aware of for generations. Before I was even born, my father had to build his own cabin in the northern part of Alberta, and we lived there. We lived there without clean water, and we lived there without power. We lived there without the basic things that many Canadians expect in a country as wealthy as the one we have. Throughout his time there, he eventually moved out of that house when he started to have children, and he attempted to get a government-sponsored house. Once he did, he already had four children, who ended up growing up in poverty. My oldest four siblings—I'm one of eight—during that time had many of the sicknesses that affected the community.
Housing is critical to health. Imagine if you had someone come into your house, which is overcrowded, with one bedroom and one bathroom, and there are eight people or 12 people living in your house, and then one comes home sick—you're all going to get COVID. That's what happened in indigenous communities across this country, because the housing crisis is real, and it's a massive indicator. The Auditor General even mentioned it in his statement. The Auditor General even mentioned in paragraph 9 of his statement that it was one of the criteria:
The pandemic aggravated pre-existing challenges in meeting nursing needs in remote or isolated First Nations communities. Several factors contributed to nursing shortages in many of these communities, including the national shortage of nurses, the challenging nature of the work, the diverse skill set required to work in remote or isolated communities, and poor housing.
That's a massive issue. If we've had these year-long plans year after year after year for the last 50 to 100 years, I'm not confident that this ministry has the ability to actually fix this plan. We need to know and we need to get down to the bottom of where it needs to be fixed. I'm interested in results and making sure that this doesn't happen again. I don't want to see more kids die. I mentioned in the last committee meeting that I've seen that.
I also want to mention in regard to the PPE supply that, when I was working in Alberta on behalf of indigenous groups, we actually met with the former and she committed at that time to supplying isolation units for northern Alberta communities. Zero were delivered. That wasn't in this report, though. Zero isolation units were delivered to any of the Métis settlements in Canada. Not one Métis settlement got an isolation unit, and the minister committed to that—I was on the phone with her—and people passed away.
I would like the deputy minister to comment.
I'm looking back, but I want to be helpful to the department, hopefully, going forward.
According to the Auditor General's report, in 2014 the department developed a procurement plan. However, it wasn't followed.
Deputy Minister Fox, I know that you are a great communicator, but briefly, if possible, could you tell me where the failing was? Was it a failure of resources from the government? Was it a failure of the department? Where did that failure happen?
:
Thank you very much for the question.
All of us in the department, even before the pandemic, have been very concerned about the most vulnerable population within each community, whether it's first nations, Inuit or Métis, especially individuals who are elders or who have diabetes or cardiovascular diseases. All of the individuals are at much higher risk of complications from COVID.
Because of that, one of the top priorities of the department was to convince the provinces and territories of the importance of prioritizing indigenous peoples for vaccination and to get public support for all other public health measures. Also, every day within each community and our regions we need to support the regional leadership and the health directors to try to make sure that, to the best of their ability, they can support the protection of the elders, pregnant women, children and other individuals. If we don't take care of the most vulnerable, we will not be able to eventually come out of the pandemic and minimize both hospitalizations and fatalities in the communities.
However, that being said, all of the long-standing social determinants of health, including housing, water, etc., are contributing to the vulnerabilities of the members of the communities, and those must be addressed.
To the deputy minister, I want to follow up again on the aspect of staffing and some of the challenges there. I always hate asking for more statistics. If you don't have them, this isn't a make-work project, but you alluded to the recruitment aspect of working from a wide variety of demographic angles, I'd call it, trying to encourage people who have just come out of college or university as well as people who have retired and are possibly looking to work up north for short periods of time.
Do you have a breakdown of what you've found most successful so far? I don't think it's a lack of effort by the department or indigenous communities to attract staff. The reason I'm asking is this: What more can we do that the federal government is not doing already to bridge that gap? Again, this was a challenge not only during the pandemic with the surge demands. This was a challenge before then, and it will remain a challenge after COVID as well.
:
Thank you for the question.
I should say we have 862 nurses. I'd say about 50% are in remote and isolated communities and about 600 of them are on contract.
What worked in terms of strategies? Ideally we tried to ensure first that people had the right training and culturally relevant experience in order to work in an indigenous first nations remote community. That's really important. It's not just the kind of recruitment that a provincial government would do, for instance, for something in a hospital setting in downtown Toronto. That training is a really important requirement.
In terms of the contract nurses, is it a perfect system? It's not always. However, a lot of people don't necessarily want to commit to full-time employment, so this can be a really rich way to enhance the supports and have a workforce that we can call upon. We did have some successes in recruiting more people through the contract.
By changing our hiring practices and actually making more effort—not just putting up posters but also seeking candidates through various channels, indigenous networks, hospital networks, colleges and universities—we were able to hire 177 new staff who are part of this 862 now, and those include nurses and paramedics. I think it's more about being more proactive and not just using older approaches like putting a job poster on a website but really going after that talent.
The last thing I would say is that this idea of having surge teams that can be mobile and move to a crisis or be needs-based could be a really interesting way to not require someone to make a commitment to live in a particular area for weeks on end, year after year. Maybe someone would like that flexibility of coming in and out of community and not necessarily staying long term. That is something that I think could have some promise as well and could help meet some needs.
:
Thank you for that question. I would say that during the pandemic and even postpandemic in conversations we're having within teams, we are looking at innovative approaches. We are looking at ways, and I think the one that you've raised is similar to how sometimes teachers college or a nursing program has students go and do a service in a community for a period of time. There's nothing concrete at this stage, but I think those are some of the ideas we're trying to focus on in terms of innovative ways.
I would say that, with respect to funding through the anti-racism strategy, ensuring that we have enough indigenous youth who have a path towards post-secondary and funding that post-secondary is probably the most promising route, because the talent that is within communities is what we have to develop and maximize. That's what health transformation is about.
From my perspective, as the deputy of the department, if we can increase the number of indigenous students in some of these areas—not just those in HHR but also water operators, engineers and construction professionals—these are the—
:
Thank you very much, Chair.
I was very interested, actually, in the comments of one of my Conservative colleagues. I think it was Eric talking about Akwesasne. Yes, it's in your region, and it got me thinking about Kahnawake, which is technically not in my riding of Châteauguay—Lacolle but we are very close neighbours. They basically took over the management of their COVID-19 response and actually had no cases for many months until there were outbreaks almost everywhere. It was very interesting to see just how independent they were in putting forward their directives.
I don't really want to know if they obtained PPE from Indigenous Services—that's really their business—but if they had needed to obtain it, because of course they're an urban reserve, could they have obtained it? I'm asking the deputy minister.
:
Thank you very much for that question.
Yes, as I've said, we provided PPE to communities, not just limited to the health professionals or the ISC employees or the contract nurses. We really try to take an all-of-community approach to the PPE. If a community would have made a request, they could definitely have gotten PPE through our distribution channels.
The second thing they could have done was use ICSF money—indigenous community support funding—to purchase their own PPE if they preferred to do it that way. That was a second option that a community would have. Then, of course, we would also provide PPE to urban indigenous centres, just because of the need and the accessibility challenges they were facing with provincial and territorial governments.
The answer to the question is, yes, they could have and would have that channel to make that request.
:
Thank you for the question. I'll say three things.
The first thing is that we definitely agree that the housing challenge and overcrowding had an impact throughout COVID-19. Overcrowding does present huge challenges for health. That would be my first point.
My second point would be around temporary isolation and alternative accommodations. We did provide infrastructure for temporary isolation requirements for communities, and that was also because of conversations we had with leadership who did not necessarily want to use the school gym or the school library, just because of what it meant for the children in their communities, so there were some isolation units sent across the country. There were different types for different purposes, and that was one strategy. The second was alternate accommodation outside the community. In cases of very vulnerable populations, they were flown out to a hub, perhaps in Winnipeg, where they would be in isolation hotels where we would provide some support.
My final comment would be that throughout the omicron crisis, because of the spread, when it hit a household, we had to make determinations, because sometimes people would isolate at home, which meant that the support shifted from isolation outside the home to supports within the home, and that meant food deliveries, wellness checks and ensuring well-being in the isolation of individuals at that time.
But I will say wholeheartedly that overcrowding was a challenge.
:
Northern Manitoba and Ontario were probably our most challenged communities in terms of the outbreak. Not only would they have received more PPE as a result of.... There were communities like Norway House, Shamattawa or Red Sucker Lake that seemed to be in a continuous mode of outbreak. We would get the numbers down, and numbers would go up again. They likely received more PPE as a result of the outbreaks and the needs within the community.
Many of those communities would also decide, at times, to accommodate their most vulnerable populations outside community, for example, in Winnipeg, Thompson and various areas, so PPE would be delivered not just to the communities but also to the isolation centres. That's another reason.
Many of those communities also made requests for assistance, so the military was sent in. We needed to ensure that, throughout all of those peak periods, those supports were there not just for the community members but the staff, including the first nations pandemic response team or the AMC ambassadors, who were deployed into community.
:
I can get the committee the final costs. It's actually something that's still ongoing in some parts of the country, specifically for the Sioux Lookout First Nations Health Authority communities in northern Ontario.
The decision to provide this service was in consultation with our first nations partners, who felt there was a risk with our health human resources flying commercially to get to and from their communities. Therefore, to minimize that risk, they suggested that charters be deployed with which we agreed.
It was also a means not only to get our health human resources into communities but also to transport some PPE and fast-track the delivery of urgent items. We did have over 5,400 HHR travel on that system into 51 communities. It was done in order to protect our nursing workforce, to protect communities and to ensure no disruption in travel in light of what was happening at airlines at that moment.
In terms of where we're at, we do have a contract now that we can draw on should we need to resume the service, or if ever there is a requirement for either a future wave or variant. For the time being, we have the possibility of extension. However, we will get you the exact figures and who the contractor was.
Thank you to our expert witnesses today. It's been fascinating.
There's no question that COVID was a great learning opportunity for all of us, and perhaps no more so than at Indigenous Services Canada.
I'm going to direct my questions to Deputy Minister Fox. Basically, the Auditor General's report identified two areas of concern and improvement. The first one being PPE. That was clearly the more easy one to address.
The workforce issues are much more complicated and complex, particularly in health care and isolated areas with which you are dealing. I know that many employers offer isolation pay and bonuses to attract people to these remote communities, because their living conditions aren't as desirable, and of course the isolation. Does your department do that?
:
It's something that definitely keeps me up at night. We have formal processes and systems in place with employee assistance and a dedicated support service exclusively for our nursing staff, which is not common to all of our employees across the system and which I think is important.
We need to have regular conversations with our nurses, and that's through town halls and it's through direct contact. I reach out from time to time directly to a nurse, after either an incident or a challenging situation, and make sure to visit our nurses in communities so that I can hear from them about what goes well and what doesn't go so well.
I think that part of that mental health and wellness and those supports is going to be key. They are exhausted, so we're trying to find ways to have that surge capacity, which is why I talked about the mobile health surge team and, when our teams are exhausted and mental health and wellness are at risk, having the ability to replace them and have people recoup. I think every regional executive responsible for health is having those discussions directly with our nursing staff.
Highlighting what they do, when I joined this department I did the nursing awards, which is something we do to recognize the heroic efforts of our nurses. Someone said, “If you save a life, you're a hero, and if you save over a hundred, you're a nurse.” That stuck with me, because that's what they do every day. I just wanted to share that.
:
Thank you. That is a lovely way to end today's meeting.
I want to thank everyone for appearing today.
I want to thank our team for working out the technical bugs.
Deputy Minister Fox, I should say as well that your previous minister, , speaks very highly of your capabilities. I did not want you to think I was suggesting that your dad's legacy in any way overshadowed how this committee viewed your work. I think you've proven that today. I just wanted to pass on your previous minister's remarks as well.
Ms. Christiane Fox: Thank you very much, Chair.
The Chair: Again, thanks to all our witnesses for appearing and for being ready to appear today.
I will now close the public portion of our meeting and suspend for about two minutes to give our committee members a moment before we go in camera.
Thank you again.
[Proceedings continue in camera]