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News Archive


Fact Sheets: the Fraser Institute and SecondStreet
Ontario Health Coalition 22 Jan 2026 In the context of Ontario’s public health care system under unprecedented stress, following years of austerity budgets and a global pandemic, powerful organizations have ramped up efforts to push for privatization. Right-wing think tank push for privatized two-tier health care in Canada, among other policies. They have aggressively pushed for the privatization of health care services and a two-tier system to address record-long wait tim

Ontario Health Coalition
2 days ago


Myth Buster: European Health Care Models
Ontario Health Coalition 22 Jan 2026 Pro-privatization groups, some of which are funded by or linked to right-wing American organizations and corporate interests, have turned to making false claims about two-tier European health care systems in their push to privatize. This tactic is an attempt to divert attention from the American health care system that the Canadian public generally knows more about and understands to be a failure. Nonetheless, Canadians are often subject t

Ontario Health Coalition
2 days ago


We’re already facing the consequences of two-tier health care. Doug Ford is opening the door to make it even worse.
Jan. 20, 2026 Ontario Health Minister Sylvia Jones attends a news conference at the Michener Institute of Education in Toronto, Dec. 1, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young By Lhamo Dolkar and Doris Grinspun, Contributors Lhamo Dolkar is a practicing NP and the president of the Registered Nurses’ Association of Ontario (RNAO). Dr. Doris Grinspun is RNAO’s chief executive officer. Alberta’s push toward for-profit health care has been making headlines, drawing criticism and p

Lhamo Dolkar
6 days ago


Ontario hospitals facing 'difficult decisions,' association warns
Costs for hospitals have been going up by about six per cent a year due, OHA president Anthony Dale said, while in recent years funding increases from the province have averaged around four per cent. By Elizabeth Payne Published Jan 16, 2026 A file photo of a sign directing visitors to the emergency department at CHEO in Ottawa. Photo by ADRIAN WYLD /THE CANADIAN PRESS Ontario hospitals will face tough choices in the next few years that will likely affect the services they of

Elizabeth Payne
Jan 17


Are Ontario’s waitlist incentives leading some doctors to drop current patients to take new ones?
The Physician Services Agreement, which came into effect last year, increases the financial incentive for doctors accepting patients from the province’s centralized waitlist from $350 to $500. 1/13/2026 Canadian Healthcare Network Staff Ontario is giving family physicians money to take on new patients from the provincial waitlist. But is this incentivizing some doctors to drop their current patients in favour of taking on new ones? In a story published on last week in the

Canadian Healthcare Network
Jan 16


2026 Ontario Health Coalition Health Action Assembly
Saturday January 24 10 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Sunday January 25 9 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. Central YMCA, 20 Grosvenor Street, Toronto You can come in person or join by Zoom. Everyone must register to attend. Posted 8 Jan. 2026 By the Ontario Health Coalition THIS IS OUR MOST IMPORTANT MEETING OF THE YEAR. Hear local coalitions from all over the province report in on the fightback. Learn what the Ford and Carney governments have planne

Ontario Health Coalition
Jan 8


Ontario nurse calls recent patient deaths in Canada a ‘systemic failure’ of health-care system
Nurse Amie Archibald-Varley criticizes provincial leadership, saying promises to fix health care have gone unmet. Posted 2 Jan 2026 Devon Banfield, NOW Toronto Archibald-Varley warns healthcare delays are happening across the country, arguing that provincial governments must be held accountable, and privatization will only worsen the crisis. This comes after the recent deaths of Mandy Wood (left) and Prashant Sreekumar (right) who both died after experiencing delays in receiv

Devon Banfield
Jan 7


Doctors fear CDC vaccine recommendation changes will fuel vaccine hesitancy in Canada
TORONTO - Sweeping changes to the childhood vaccine schedule in the U.S. are concerning doctors who say Canadian parents might get the false impression that it’s unsafe to immunize their children. Jan. 6, 2026 By Hannah Alberga, The Canadian Press TORONTO - Sweeping changes to the childhood vaccine schedule in the U.S. are concerning doctors who say Canadian parents might get the false impression that it’s unsafe to immunize their children. Ontario Medical Association Pre

Hannah Alberga
Jan 7


Dreaming of a bold and courageous health-care system for all
Don your scarves and pull your toques on tight. But is that winter frost or the bitter chill of progressive health policies put on ice? Dec 18, 2025 by Maddi Dellplain It’s been quite a year for Canadian health policy. Several controversial bills have come into play across the country, leaving many vulnerable patients and health-care workers wondering if they’ll be left out in the cold. This month, Alberta yet again invoked the “notwithstanding clause” to shield it

Maddi Dellplain
Dec 26, 2025


Health minister says Canada can’t rely on U.S. health institutions anymore
Friday, December 26, 2025. 12:22 PM EDT Canada needs reliable partners who are looking to science on subjects like vaccines, says Minister Marjorie Michel. Minister of Health Marjorie Michel rises during question period on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Monday, June 2, 2025. Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press By Sarah Ritchie, The Canadian Press OTTAWA - Health Minister Marjorie Michel says she can no longer trust American health agencies as reliable partners. Michel says Canada

Sarah Ritchie
Dec 26, 2025


Canada doesn’t need another headline about doctors — it needs a plan
Dec. 22, 2025 “Canada’s problem is not a lack of potential physicians, but a failure of planning and foresight,” writes Dr. Debakant Jena. Dreamstime By Debakant Jena Contributor Dr. Debakant Jena is chief of orthopedic surgery at Medicine Hat Regional Hospital, associate professor at the University of Calgary and a first-generation immigrant to Canada. In May, 96-year-old retired teacher Dorothy Lamont placed a small classified ad in the Halifax Chronicle-Herald titled “See

Debakant Jena
Dec 23, 2025


Alberta is privatizing health care and it threatens public health care across Canada
Ontario Health Coalition Urgent Briefing December 16, 2025 Alberta Premier Danielle Smith pictured speaking at a news conference earlier this year. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press) Alberta's government, led by Danielle Smith and the United Conservative Party, passed a new law, Bill 11 The Health Statutes Amendment Act, last week. With its passage the existential threat for public medicare in Canada is here. The new law sets up two-tier medicare and private health insuranc

Ontario Health Coalition
Dec 16, 2025


Urge Minister Michel: Stop Alberta’s Two-Tier Health Care Law
December 11 2025 Canadian Health Coalition Alberta has passed dangerous legislation that threatens public health care across Canada. What's happening: Bill 11: The Health Statutes Amendment Act, 202 (No. 2 ) , allows doctors to charge unlimited fees at for-profit clinics for medically necessary procedures while also working in the public system. This is American-style health care that opens our system to private insurance corporations. Alberta is creating two-tiered

Canadian Health Coalition
Dec 13, 2025


The evidence is clear: universal pharmacare saves lives. Ontario needs to act
Dec. 10, 2025 By Robin Lennox and Adil Shamji Contributors Robin Lennox is MPP (NDP) for Hamilton Centre. Adil Shamji is MPP (Liberal) for Don Valley East. Both are physicians with experience caring for Ontarians. Dr. Robin Lennox, left, MPP for Hamilton Centre and Dr. Adil Shamji, MPP for Don Valley East, are part of a multi-party group of elected officials calling for universal pharmacare in Ontario. Alix Gould and Jenna Muirhead Across Ontario, too many people are making

Robin Lennox
Dec 10, 2025


Ontario to licence 4 private orthopedic surgery clinics next year: Jones
By Codi Wilson Published: December 08, 2025 at 1:44 PM EST Ontario Health Minister Sylvia Jones speaks at a news conference on Monday, Dec. 8, 2025. The province says early next year it will be issuing licences to four new community surgical and diagnostic centres to perform orthopedic surgeries in Ontario. The move is part of the Ford government’s plan to spend $125 million over the next two years to ramp up orthopedic surgeries at private clinics , allowing the centres

Codi Wilson
Dec 9, 2025


Funding Cuts Plunging Public Health in Ontario into Crisis, Experts Warn
Ontario is facing a startling rise in infectious diseases, and public health inspectors say they know who to blame — Premier Doug Ford’s government. Public health nurse Betty Wu-Lawrence (left) and public health inspectors Merima Kostecki (centre), and Chris Eaton (right) speak to reporters at Queen's Park. Photo: CUPE by Richie Assaly November 26, 2025 Frontline public health workers are sounding the alarm about the state of sexually transmitted infections, waterborne il

Richie Assaly
Dec 8, 2025


Ontario forced to slow new medical school plans after ignoring warnings: AG
By Isaac Callan & Colin D'Mello | Global News Posted December 2, 2025 Toronto Metropolitan University’s School of Medicine is seen, in Brampton, Ont., on Aug. 25, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sammy Kogan A lack of planning in the Ford government’s expansion of Ontario’s medical schools meant the province has created family medicine spaces more slowly than it had planned, the auditor general has found. As part of its plans to improve access to primary care, the government anno

Colin D'Mello
Dec 5, 2025


Ford government not cracking down on doctors’ overcharges and failing to fix doctor shortage, auditor finds
Watchdog Shelley Spence diagnosed a lack of effort to crack down on an estimated $1 billion in potential overcharges by physicians — including 59 who billed for more than 24 hours in a day. Dec. 2, 2025 By Rob Ferguson Queen’s Park Bureau, and Robert Benzie Queen’s Park Bureau Chief Ontario’s auditor general Shelley Spence speaks to media following the release of her annual report at the Ontario legislature in Toronto, on Dec. 2, 2025. Sammy Kogan/The Canadian Press Premi

Rob Ferguson
Dec 4, 2025


Fighting for public health care
Tracy Glynn, Canadian Health Coalition November 28, 2025 With unprecedented attacks on Canada’s public health care system, hear from frontline defenders of public health care in Ontario, Quebec, Alberta and B.C. who are using various strategies to protect Canada’s universal public health care system. From going to court to filing complaints, mobilizing experts and local activists, these champions of public health care are leading the charge for better Medicare. Monday, Decem

Tracy Glynn
Nov 29, 2025


Canadian doctors predict government actions will reduce access to health care
Hospital News Published on November 27, 2025 New data from the Canadian Medical Association (CMA) show that Canadian physicians are sounding the alarm over government decisions threatening the health care system. The findings reveal doctors’ widespread concern about the impact on patient care, workforce stability and physician morale. Recent government actions, such as Alberta’s Bill 26 and Quebec’s Bill 2, which interfere with doctors’ abilities to take care of their

Hospital News
Nov 28, 2025
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