Vancouver Island group release playbook of proposed solutions to health-care crisis
It’s called the Community Healthcare System Support Playbook and it has been two years in the making.
According to its authors, it has the potential of fixing health care in communities across B.C. – and potentially the country.
“This is for communities to adopt as a whole,” said Dave Saunders, president of the Saunders Family Foundation. “This is just a different philosophy rather than funding.”
Saunders says it’s not about throwing gobs of taxpayers' money at the problem. Instead, it’s about solving issues that affect everyone, from the community level.
“How do you do shift work if you don’t have daycare?” said Saunders.
Or if a nurse or locum comes to a new community, where does he or she live in a housing crisis?
Through hours of consultations with medical professionals and community stakeholders, Saunders says those were just a few of the issues that continued to come up.
The playbook addresses those problems, then provides communities with guidelines to follow to create a solution.
“Municipalities play a big part, they can implement this into their official community plans but it’s the community that needs to embrace supporting our health-care workers as a whole,” said Saunders.
Solutions include municipalities and developers working together to build units of housing that would be set aside for medical professional at an affordable rate. Another measure would be establishing 24-hour daycare and transit services. On the funding model, the playbook proposes estate planning for individuals.
“This is a concept that allows people to give in a professional way that helps our health-care system,” said the president of the Saunders Family Foundation.
The playbook began with Saunders brainstorming solutions. He then met with B.C.'s then-premier, John Horgan, who saw potential in his idea and offered a small amount of seed money.
On Tuesday night, Health Minister Adrian Dix will be on hand in Colwood as Saunders and his team officially release the playbook for municipalities and organizations to hopefully adopt.
“I’m really optimistic that this is going to get picked up by a lot of communities,” said Mark Holland, with Westplan Consulting Group.
Holland is a community planning expert and has been working on the project since almost day one.
He says if even just a few of the ideas within this playbook are embraced by communities, solutions to our provinces ongoing medical professional shortage can be solved.
“There is a probability that you will retain them and or attract more which is really what you want to do,” said Holland.
“This could empower communities to become involved, to give a signal of hope in a situation that we’re in a health-care crisis across Canada,” said Saunders. “This book is what that signal of hope is.”
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Watch Live Now: Canadian analysis ahead of the CNN Presidential Debate
U.S. President Joe Biden and former president Donald Trump are set to go head-to-head tonight in the first of two planned presidential debates. Here's how to watch the CNN Presidential Debate, Power Play's pre- and post-debate specials, and follow along in our real-time CTVNews.ca live expert analysis and commentary by debate and body-language experts.
'Hanging on for her life': Sask. family desperate to bring home sick niece from Philippines
For half a decade, a Saskatoon family has been trying to bring their orphaned niece to Canada, they say now it’s a matter of life or death.
'No additional flights will be cancelled': WestJet avoids strike as feds order binding arbitration
A potential strike by WestJet airplane mechanics would upend travel plans for 250,000 customers over the Canada Day long weekend, the airline says — and cost it millions of dollars.
BREAKING Nunavut judge sentences Toronto woman to 3 years prison for Inuit identity fraud
A Nunavut judge has sentenced a Toronto woman to three years in prison in a case of Inuit identity fraud.
Canada's top court rejects appeal from Sask. man who murdered wife
The Supreme Court of Canada has rejected an application from a Saskatoon man who murdered his wife.
Where do new Canadians come from? India and Philippines take top spots
Canada has welcomed more than 3.9 million new citizens since 2005, with nearly one third coming from India, the Philippines or China, according to a CTVNews.ca analysis.
Marilyn Monroe's former Los Angeles home declared a historic monument to save it from demolition
Fans of Marilyn Monroe have won a battle to preserve her mark on Los Angeles and are a step closer to seeing a towering statue of the silver screen icon remain in Palm Springs.
Man charged with threatening to kill presidential candidates found dead as jury was deciding verdict
A New Hampshire man charged with threatening the lives of presidential candidates last year has been found dead while a jury was deciding his verdict, according to court filings Thursday.
AI regulation 'a start,' needs to 'have teeth': Hinton, godfather of AI, says
So-called godfather of AI Geoffrey Hinton says he's 'pleased' governments are starting to take artificial intelligence, and the possible regulations of it, seriously.