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Table of Contents
EDITORIAL/ÉDITORIAL
Year : 2020  |  Volume : 25  |  Issue : 1  |  Page : 7-8

President's Message. Care delayed is care denied


Department of Family Medicine, Queen's University, Kingston, ON, Canada

Date of Submission16-Oct-2019
Date of Acceptance07-Nov-2019
Date of Web Publication19-Dec-2019

Correspondence Address:
MD, FCFP, FRRMS Margaret Tromp
Department of Family Medicine, Queen's University, Kingston, ON
Canada
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Source of Support: None, Conflict of Interest: None


DOI: 10.4103/CJRM.CJRM_89_19

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How to cite this article:
Tromp M. President's Message. Care delayed is care denied. Can J Rural Med 2020;25:7-8

How to cite this URL:
Tromp M. President's Message. Care delayed is care denied. Can J Rural Med [serial online] 2020 [cited 2023 May 31];25:7-8. Available from: https://www.cjrm.ca/text.asp?2020/25/1/7/273542



Rural physicians are daily witnesses to the effects of the disparities in social determinants of health on their rural and indigenous patients and communities.

On 6 September 2019, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal (CHRT) ordered the federal government to compensate thousands of indigenous children who were taken into care unnecessarily. The CHRT said that the Canadian government was 'willful and reckless' in its discrimination against indigenous children living on reserves. One month later, the federal government announced it would appeal the ruling.

Cindy Blackstock, a plenary speaker at the 2015 Society of Rural Physicians of Canada Rural and Remote conference, gave a moving account of the dispute between federal and provincial funders that made it impossible for Jordan Anderson, a child with a chronic terminal illness, to return to his home on a reserve in Manitoba. She emphasised the continuing disparities in funding, documented for nearly 20 years, for indigenous children living on reserve versus children living off reserve. In 2000, a national review concluded that the First Nations Child and Family Services agencies received 22% less funding per child than the average province. Inadequate funding particularly affects the provision of 'least disruptive measures', those measures that are provided to children at significant risk of maltreatment so that they can remain safely in their homes. Right now in Canada, three times as many First Nations children are separated from their families as were in residential schools.

In 2006, the Assembly of First Nations and the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society of Canada launched a formal human rights complaint. In January 2016, the CHRT ruled that the federal government knowingly underfunded child welfare and medical services for 165,000First Nations children living on reserves. The Tribunal has subsequently issued eight non-compliance orders because so little action has been taken by the federal government.

The recent Tribunal ruling was a follow-up to the original one and specified monetary compensation for the indigenous children and families that were separated in a context of inadequately funded social services.

On October 6, the federal government launched an appeal to the CHRT decision, saying that 'irreparable harm to Canada and the public interest if the stay is not granted exceeds the harm to the Respondents if the stay is granted'. Unfortunately, this means that these disparities will continue for the foreseeable future, as will their negative health effects. Can Canada do better?

For more information please see https://fncaringsociety.com/i-am-witness-tribunal-timeline-and-documents






 

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