Thank you, Madam Chair.
On behalf of Health Canada, I would like to thank the committee for the opportunity to participate in your study on health human resources. I'd like to focus on two things in my remarks this afternoon. First, I'd like to provide an overview of Health Canada's health human resources, or HHR, initiatives, which I did discuss with you in some detail when we appeared last April.
Second, after our last appearance in April, your clerk indicated that the committee had a specific interest in the work of a federal-provincial-territorial committee, called the Advisory Committee on Health Delivery and Human Resources, or ACHDHR. I'm the federal co-chair of that committee, along with my provincial-territorial co-chair, Dr. Joshua Tepper of the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care. Dr. Tepper is not here with us today, but based on the committee's interest, I will try to provide you with a quick overview of the advisory committee's current work.
Health human resources, or HHR for short, has been a priority for Health Canada since 2003, at which time Canada's first ministers made a commitment to work together to secure and maintain a stable and optimal health workforce in Canada. In April, I talked about Health Canada's investments in three key HHR initiatives: first, the pan-Canadian health human resource strategy, which is funded at $20 million per year; second, the internationally educated health professionals initiative, with funding annually of $18 million; and third, the aboriginal health human resources initiative, which is a five-year initiative with total funding of $100 million.
In all three areas, Health Canada's investments are intended to complement the more significant investments that provincial and territorial governments make in the area of HHR, and that's of course in the context of their responsibility for delivery of health care to the vast majority of Canadians.
So just as I said, to take each of the three Health Canada initiatives briefly in turn, beginning with the pan-Canadian health human resource strategy....
A significant proportion of the projects funded under the strategy focused on recruitment and retention of health professionals. Health Canada has supported undergraduate medical education programs to adapt their curricula to encourage more medical students to enter family practice. We have noticed a 44% increase between 2003 and 2008 in the number of Canadians exiting post-MD training in family medicine.
We have also invested in several initiatives to promote inter-professional education and a more collaborative approach to the provision of care. This has resulted in a greater number of institutions as well as educators providing mandatory inter-professional education courses, more health professionals trained for collaborative practice, and increased sharing of best practices related to collaborative care.
In 2005-06, Health Canada's second HHR initiative, the internationally educated health professionals initiative, or IEHPI, was launched specifically to reduce barriers to the integration of health professionals trained outside Canada, by promoting access to information and path-finding, competency assessment, training, orientation, and other supports for integration into the workforce.
The bulk of the funding, some 90% of the funding under IEHPI, is directed to provincial and territorial governments that are developing innovative initiatives in the areas of credential assessment, bridge training, career counselling, information services, and orientation.
There are many examples, but just to give you one quick example, there's a new one-stop information, counselling, and path-finding service that was established in Ontario, with Health Canada's support, which is providing service to over 5,200 clients.
In the nursing profession--a second example--there's a new competency assessment program for internationally educated nurses that was developed originally in Alberta but is now implemented in all of the western provinces and also in Nova Scotia.
Health Canada's third health human resources initiative, the Aboriginal Health Human Resources Initiative, was announced in 2005 to develop and implement health human resources strategies which respond to the unique needs and diversity among aboriginal peoples. The goal is to address the need for both more aboriginal health practitioners and more non-aboriginal practitioners with some cultural competency in the care of aboriginal patients.
AHHRI, as we refer to it, the aboriginal health human resources initiative, was designed to lay the foundation for longer-term systemic change in the supply, demand, and creation of supportive environments for first nations, Inuit, and Métis health human resources for aboriginal communities with the goal of improving health status, with a particular emphasis on increasing the numbers of aboriginal health professionals.
Currently in its final year, the AHHRI has achieved impressive results. For example, we've increased the number of aboriginal students receiving bursaries and scholarships for health career studies to a total of 1,398 students over the four-year period from 2005-06 to 2008-09. Working with our partners, we've developed a number of tools to be used by Canada's 17 medical schools to help decrease barriers to admission and to increase enrolment of aboriginal medical students.
A mid-term program review of AHHRI has recently been completed and the results are very positive. The review found that the initiative has made significant inroads in facilitating the conditions for increased aboriginal participation in the health care system in Canada.
Finally, as I said at the outset, I'll say a few words on the advisory committee on health delivery and human resources.
The Advisory Committee on Health Delivery and Human Resources, first created in 2002 by the federal/provincial/territorial Conference of Deputy Ministers of Health, has the following mandate. First, to provide policy and strategic advice to the deputy ministers on the planning, organization and delivery of health services, including health human resources, and, second, to provide a national forum for discussion and information-sharing.
In addition to representatives of all 14 governments, the committee includes representatives from the Health Action Lobby, First Nations communities, the Council of Ministers of Education, Canada, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Canadian Institute for Health Information, a regional health authority, and Human Resources and Skills Development Canada.
I'll provide you, just quickly, with a few concrete examples of how this federal-provincial-territorial committee is pursuing its mandate. In the area of HHR planning, the committee recently undertook a comprehensive update of an inventory of health human resource forecasting models and convened a series of workshops to share knowledge related to those models.
ACHDHR recently examined the issue of self-sufficiency in health human resources and has released a discussion paper entitled, “How Many Are Enough? Redefining Self-Sufficiency for the Health Workforce”.
ACHDHR is focused on strengthening collaboration between health and education ministries to better manage requests that are received from professions and educational institutions for changes in entry-to-practice credentials. In that regard, we've established a permanent subcommittee that advises governments on whether specific proposed changes in credentials would serve the interests of patients and the health care system more broadly.
Building on work funded by Health Canada, ACHDHR has recently identified gaps in the Canadian approach to interprofessional education and collaborative practice, which I mentioned earlier, and is in the process of developing a strategy to address these gaps.
As a final example, ACHDHR has made a significant contribution to the integration of internationally educated health professionals, in particular physicians and nurses. For example, ACHDHR recently endorsed a business case for the development and implementation of a new standard national assessment for international medical graduates coming into Canada and hoping to enter the national postgraduate medical education training match.
Finally, ACHDHR in general continues to provide a strong mechanism for communication and collaboration across jurisdictions and within the range of stakeholders who are committed to strengthening Canada's HHR.
I'll stop there, Madam Chair.