OMA President’s Update: OMA Board Unanimously Rejects Government Final Offer, Ministry to Impose Further Cuts to Medical Services
PRESIDENT’S UPDATE
Vol. 20, No. 1
January 15, 2015
OMA Board Unanimously Rejects Government Final Offer, Ministry to Impose Further Cuts to Medical Services
Today,
the OMA Board of Directors unanimously rejected a final offer from the
Ontario government that would cut an additional 4% in medical services,
and place an arbitrary ceiling on the physician services budget, which
would cap the number of services physicians are able to provide to our
patients.
The government’s final offer, submitted late Wednesday evening, included:
· $580 million in cuts over two years, including
- $259 million through 9 specific cuts in physician payments, the majority of which impact family practice;
- $50 million in system savings;
- Increasing the current 0.5% payment discount to 1% on all physician payments;
- Further additional increases to the payment discount by specialty of practice.
· A 1.4% one-time payment in year 3.
The
Ministry warned the OMA that if we did not accept this punitive offer,
it would pursue unilateral action against physicians immediately. We
have received details of this arbitrary action and are assessing its
potential impacts.
The
OMA and the physicians of Ontario have worked hard to build and
maintain a positive relationship with government. We have negotiated in
good faith to improve the health care system for our patients. In 2012,
Ontario’s doctors did our part and contributed more than $850 million in
fee concessions and health system savings. To impose a further $580
million in cuts to medical services and payments is unwarranted and
destabilizing.
The
government’s position will lock in system underfunding for future years
and subject physicians to open-ended liability for growth in the
utilization of medical services that is beyond our control. It will
limit training opportunities in primary care, mental health, and many
other specialties. Also, the government’s pattern of heavy-handedness
toward doctors, and unwillingness to negotiate reasonable agreements
with the profession, will make Ontario an undesirable place to practice.
The
OMA will be active in the media and other venues to ensure that the
public and our patients understand the truth and the real impacts of the
government’s final offer and its arbitrary measures.
We
anticipate the government will claim to have offered the profession a
modest raise based on the language in its proposal — this is
disingenuous and misleading. In fact, government plans to set an
arbitrary baseline for the physician services budget that is more than
$80 million below current levels, and fund growth of no more than 1.25%
per year, despite the current growth of 2.7%. This difference will be
funded through cuts to physician payments. Also, the government intends
to claw back from physicians through reconciliation any expenditure that
exceeds its arbitrary budget.
While
we have rejected the government’s final offer, and it has been
withdrawn by the Ministry, the OMA Board considers it vital that we
share the government’s proposal with all members. We know that members
will have many questions, and we will work to ensure that you get the
information and answers that you need in a timely and effective manner.
The
OMA will undertake an extensive member education campaign to provide
all details of the rejected government offer, as well as the Ministry’s
unilateral cuts. We are organizing a series of face-to-face meetings and
teleconferences across the province.
OMA
Council will meet in the near future to review these developments and
plan how we intend to move forward championing our patients and
supporting our members in the face of the government’s cutbacks.
The
OMA has been negotiating with government for more than a year. These
talks have been difficult. Since the outset, the government focused
exclusively on cutbacks and balancing its budget. We concluded the first
round of negotiations in August and were unable to reach an Agreement.
We then moved to facilitation, and subsequently conciliation with former
Chief Justice of Ontario Warren Winkler. Here too, we were unable to
reach a deal. Justice Winkler submitted his report to the parties on
December 11. In his report, he suggested the OMA should reconsider the
government’s offer, and we did.
The
OMA called a meeting of physician leaders, which was held December 20.
More than 150 physicians from across the province attended. The Board
outlined the negotiations timeline, the government position, and the
results of our facilitation and conciliation process. We detailed the
challenges at the negotiations table and the significant gap between
both sides. We circulated the offer on the table from government at that
time and we shared Justice Winkler’s then-confidential report, which
will be available on the OMA website. We set out the positives and
negatives of the government position, and reviewed the Winkler
recommendations and the critical elements not referenced in the final
conciliator’s report. Physician leaders provided valuable perspective to
inform the final stage of the negotiations process.
The
OMA and Ministry reconvened for a brief final round of negotiating that
concluded January 9, with the government tabling its final offer on
January 14. Today, the OMA Board met to review that offer. After careful
consideration of the potential impacts of the proposal, threatened
unilateral action, and the valuable input from more than 150 physician
leaders who attended the December 20 meeting, the Board voted
unanimously to reject it.
This
offer will not improve quality of care, nor will it improve public
access to medical services. In fact, we know the opposite will result.
In the face of this arbitrary action, the OMA and Ontario’s doctors, on
behalf of our patients and our partners in the health care system,
intend to candidly and aggressively inform the public and all
stakeholders about the truth of the government’s offer and the real
implications for health care.
I
urge all members to stay focused on our patients and avoid divisive
actions or any actions that will compromise patient care. We need to
monitor the impacts of the government’s measures on the system and our
ability to practice. We need to work together as a profession and with
our partners in the system to assess our relationship with government,
and establish our collective strategy going forward.
I
want to thank all members for your tremendous patience during the past
year. The Board recognizes that these developments will be frustrating
for physicians and have significant implications for your practice and
your patients. We have made every effort to convince government that
heavy-handedness is not the solution, however, it is clear the government is entirely focused on fiscal targets and not patient care.
The
OMA will be communicating regularly with you in the coming days.
Documents will be posted on the OMA website and the site will be updated
on a continuing basis (www.oma.org).
Once
again, I encourage all members to maintain focus on patient care and
professional unity as we assess the current circumstance, and let’s work
together to address this challenge collectively on behalf of our
patients and our colleagues.
Dr. Ved Tandan MD(Tor.1989) FRCS(C)
OMA President
(Hamilton General Surgeon)
|
A FORUM on ONTARIO MEDICINE: business and professional Information from various contributors edited by Dr.Alex Franklin MBBS(Lond.)Dip.Phys.Med(UK) DPH & DIH(Tor.)LMC(C)FLex(USA).Fellow Med.Soc.London, Liveryman of London Society of Apothecaries. Freeman of City of London. Member Toronto Faculty club & Toronto Medico-Legal society.
15 Jan 2015
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
GPs can avoid OHIP payments by forming "Wellness clinics" charging about $3,500/year and providing extra services such as Diet, Massage, Physio. Patients can visit at will with no bill sent to OHIP for visits.
ReplyDeleteEntrepreneur GPs are avoiding State medicine by practicing Cosmetic Medicine which not being "medically necessary" is not covered by OHIP and can be charged at Free Market rates.
ReplyDelete