Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I am pleased to appear before your Committee once again - this time to discuss Main Estimates for the Health Portfolio. I expect that all of you have some questions for me today and I would like to start by making a few points that will provide some context for the discussion.
Many of my remarks will refer to budget 2007 items that may not appear in the main estimates but will be included later in supplementary estimates. I want to discuss our overall vision for a healthier Canada, of which budget 2007 is a major part.
First, at Health Canada we're pursuing a new way of doing things. Across our agenda, we're getting results by working with a wide range of partners. This includes provincial and territorial health ministers, of course, but also health care experts, providers, and practitioners. It includes patient advocates, patients, and industry as well.
All of our efforts aim squarely at serving the needs of patients and improving the health of Canadians.
The best known example is our work with partners to modernize and transform the health care system.
Mr. Chairman, a year ago, the question for some was whether we could work toward the patient wait times guarantees that our government promised. A year later, the investments made through Budget 2007 are enabling all provinces and territories to show how these can be delivered.
I'm proud that every province and territory has agreed to develop at least one patient wait time guarantee by 2010.
Mr. Chairman, another important related commitment in budget 2007 is the $400 million invested in the Canada Health Infoway. The additional funding for this public, not-for-profit organization will support early movement toward patient wait time guarantees, through maximizing the benefits of information technology.
All of this is in addition to our government's launching four wait time guarantee pilots, three involving diabetic care and prenatal screening for first nations on reserve, and one linking Canada's 16 pediatric surgical centres.
All of these steps forward are grounded in our commitment to collaborate with our partners. For example, we're working closely with first nations and Inuit partners to find new and results-focused ways of improving health outcomes. Of significance are the joint initiatives under way with the Assembly of First Nations and the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, along with a tripartite initiative with the B.C. government and the B.C. First Nations Leadership Council. I believe each of these are revolutionary, quite frankly, but each of these sets the stage for improved health outcomes.
As minister, I'm collaborating with many partners to take on numerous other health challenges facing Canada as well. Canada's new government is creating a new Canadian mental health commission, which will consist of experts, patients, and policy-makers. This commission will work to reduce the impact of mental health on our families, and in our workplaces and communities in Canada, by focusing on mental health prevention, recovery, and education. This is the first time in Canadian history that there will be a high level, strongly led, national arm's-length body.
Our government also took the leadership last fall to announce a new non-profit organization called the Canadian Partnership Against Cancer. By drawing on expertise from across Canada and internationally, this new agency will serve as a clearing house for state of the art information about preventing, diagnosing, and treating cancer. With $260 million from budget 2006, this agency will implement a strategy for cancer control with such goals as reducing the number of new cases of cancer amongst Canadians, as well as enhancing the quality of life of those living with cancer, and finally, improving the likelihood of survival for Canadians with cancer.
Of course, we know that science will contribute to our progress in fighting cancer, and science is also central to the chemicals management plan our government launched last December. Through an investment of $300 million over four years, Canada will become a world leader in testing and regulating the chemicals used in thousands of industrial and consumer products.
The chemicals management plan is an example of one of the most effective ways to improve the health of Canadians: preventing us from getting sick in the first place. This is the most effective way to reduce wait times, and this approach will become increasingly important as our population ages. I place particular emphasis on efforts involving prevention and protection.
Let me give you a prime example: obesity. It is one that we know will translate into higher rates of diabetes and cardiovascular disease if we do not act. In fact, we are developing a response to your recent report on childhood obesity right now.
In the meantime, we are building from consultations with experts to inform Canadians on making healthier choices. Our new partnership with ParticipACTION and a children's fitness tax credit will encourage more Canadians to lead more active and healthier lifestyles.
Meanwhile, the 2007 version of Canada's Food Guide and also the food guide for first nations, Inuit, and Métis offer Canadians guidance, helping all of us to make more informed, healthier eating choices.
Certainly direct disease prevention is also part of our agenda. This is what's behind our drive to develop a national heart health strategy, and of course this inspired budget 2007's $300 million investment, enabling provinces and territories to launch the HPV vaccine program, protecting women and girls from cervical cancer.
In addition, budget 2007 invests $64 million over two years in a national anti-drug strategy. This will provide a focused approach to supporting innovative approaches in treatment, developing system improvements, and reducing the supply of and demand for illicit drugs.
Of course the ultimate goal is ensuring that our communities are safer and healthier. Protecting the health and safety of Canadians is at the heart of the blueprint for renewal of health products and food regulation. This year, we will continue this effort to modernize our regulatory framework, ensuring we have the tools to protect Canadians in a world of rapidly evolving science and increasingly complex products.
But we also remain focused on the readiness for the influenza pandemic, which many health experts anticipate. The federal-provincial-territorial collaboration that has updated the world-renowned pandemic preparedness plan for Canada is helping considerably as we work to create a North-America-wide plan under the security and prosperity partnership.
Mr. Chairman, before I conclude my remarks, I want to touch briefly on our government's initiatives relating to health research and sharing knowledge. Our new initiatives take many forms, including the commitment of up to $111 million for the Canadian HIV vaccine initiative, in partnership with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; budget 2007's $37 million annually in increased funding for the Canadian Institutes of Health Research; and the $30 million allocated to the Rick Hansen Foundation.
These are investments that translate research into practical benefits. This is a concept by which we focus on applying better what we already know, and this is of vital importance to sustaining our health care system. It's a concept that ultimately could save millions of dollars, but also improve productivity and of course improve the quality of life for thousands of Canadians.
Our research efforts also strive to ensure we're getting results in modernizing Canada's health care system. This is what budget 2007's $22 million per year for the Canadian Institute for Health Information is all about. It will help us track emerging issues and mark pan-Canadian progress on wait times.
And a final item I should note is our government's sponsorship of a national autism spectrum disorder research symposium, coming later this year. We expect that it will further the development of knowledge and communication between health care professionals, stakeholders, and of course Canadian families.
Mr. Chairman, the health portfolio estimates cover an extremely wide variety of responsibilities and actions.
Our government is working with many partners to use new models to get results. We are working together to put the patient at the centre of the system's modernization and necessary evolution. We are taking action to inform people's choices for a healthier population.
So your committee's efforts are a valuable contribution to those strategies and choices, Mr. Chairman.
I look forward to taking your questions today and of course to working with all of the members of the committee in the future.
Thank you very much.