Government attracting more health care workers through new “Learn and Stay” grant and by recognizing foreign-credentialed professionals
Ontario is introducing A Plan to Stay Open, which includes legislation that, if passed, will expand on policies and measures already in place to ensure the province is able to stay open by building a stronger, more resilient health care system that is better able to respond to crisis.
The COVID-19 pandemic revealed that historically, Ontario had not done enough to protect and prepare the province for a crisis. Stockpiles of personal protective equipment (PPE) were depleted or expired, emergency protocols were under-developed and out-of-date and the province’s health care system was chronically underfunded and understaffed. A Plan to Stay Open, which includes the Pandemic and Emergency Preparedness Act, 2022, will, if passed, recruit and retain more doctors, nurses and personal support workers, further expand domestic production of critical supplies like masks and vaccines and will continue building health care infrastructure so hospitals have the capacity to delver high-quality care to treat more patients.
“We can never go back to previous governments’ chronic underfunding of health care and inadequate emergency preparedness that brought our health care system to the brink and caused so much disruption in our daily lives,” said Prabmeet Sarkaria, President of the Treasury Board. “Our hardworking families, dedicated health care workers and job-creating businesses deserve a plan that will keep Ontario open, safe and prepared.”
Expanding Ontario’s Health Workforce
The cornerstone of the province’s Plan to Stay Open are innovative measures to recruit more doctors, nurses and personal support workers to the province’s health system. To build on the 8,600 health care workers added to the system since March 2020 through wage enhancements and financial incentives, the Plan, and legislation, if passed, will:
“Now more than ever, we must train the health care work force of tomorrow to ensure we are prepared to meet the needs of the people of Ontario, especially during times of crisis,” said Jill Dunlop, Minister of Colleges and Universities. “Creating more opportunities for health care professionals to complete their training and successfully transition to employment means that all Ontarians will have access to the quality of care they expect and deserve, regardless of location.”
Shoring-up Domestic Production of Critical Supplies
At the onset of the pandemic, all of the province’s personal PPE was purchased from international sources, which caused enormous disruption due to lockdowns and border restrictions such as when the U.S. barred shipments of N95 respirators from entering Canada. By promoting and supporting Ontario manufacturing and innovation, the province is now producing a wide variety of PPE and critical supplies and equipment (CSE), including N95 respirators at a newly-expanded 3M facility in Brockville, with 93 per cent of the forecasted PPE spend for the next 18 months with Ontario or Canadian sources.
In addition to these measures, and as the province continues to invest in PPE and CSE, the Plan and legislation, if passed, will:
Building More Hospital Beds
Since the outset of the pandemic, the government has added nearly 1,000 more intensive-care unit hospital beds with the capacity to now handle 2,915 critical care patients. The Plan to Stay Open will do more by implementing a capital plan expansion with more than 50 major projects that would add 3,000 new beds over 10 years and invest to support the continuation of over 3,100 acute and post-acute beds in hospitals and alternate health care facilities, and hundreds of new adult, paediatric and neonatal critical care beds.
“While the pandemic is not over, we are now in a place where we can use the lessons learned over the past two years and take actions to ensure our health system is even better, stronger and more resilient in the face of any future challenge,” said Christine Elliott, Deputy Premier and Minister of Health. “Our government is making investments to keep Ontario open, support growing demands and address longstanding challenges in patient care to ensure Ontarians continue to have access to safe, high-quality health care now and in the future.”
Additionally, the Pandemic and Emergency Preparedness Act, if passed, will strengthen emergency oversight and coordination by: