Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thanks to the committee for giving me the indulgence of asking a question as a guest here today.
Minister Michel, you mentioned in your opening comments the importance of making wise investments, finding efficiencies and reducing administrative costs. I'm going to ask a question that literally affects every single person in this country directly—and in fact, every person on the planet who has ever lived or ever will live. We are all going to die.
Some of my colleagues would know that I worked as a funeral director. I'm also a board director of a non-profit foundation working to build a palliative care hospice in my riding of Milton East—Halton Hills South.
In the spirit of wise investments, I'll refer back to a study in 2012 that the Canadian Hospice Palliative Care Association published on the cost-effectiveness of palliative care. It found that in the current environment of rising health care costs and concerns about the sustainability of publicly funded health care, policy-makers were paying more attention to the high costs associated with the last year of life. Hospice Palliative Care Ontario in my home province offered that a hospice bed cost is about one-third of the cost of a hospital bed for a dying person. Specific funding and investment were also found by HPCO to reduce or possibly reduce system savings by $200 million a year and up to $2 billion over 10 years in Ontario alone. It's not insignificant.
I understand that health infrastructure funding is dealt with through housing and infrastructure and that health is delivered by the provinces, but we do have a national framework on palliative care in this country.
As Minister of Health, can you comment on how Health Canada sees palliative care's role in providing quality cost-effective health care to dying Canadians?