Thank you very much.
It's a pleasure to be here. This is such an important issue that we are thrilled to be here to help support this.
To quickly come to the point of the matter, our society certainly recommends the acceptance of Bill C-277. We've been supporting this concept for quite some time. We're thrilled to see this coming forward and to see the uniformity across all parties in understanding this need and the importance of this issue. We're happy that this is moving forward. We're here to help make sure it moves forward, and we'll do what we can to support it.
I know that you have already had several presentations and are getting the big gist of things, but I want to bring us back to a big picture and down to earth a little. Despite Dr. Oz and all the wonderful health care you get through Dr. Google, the world mortality rate unfortunately is still at 100%. We'll all die eventually, so this is really the only issue that is non-partisan. It's non-faith-based. It's women, it's men, and it's children. This is something that affects everyone.
We're all going to be dealing with this at some point, but dealing with this today is different than it was even 50 years ago. With the advent of some of the advances in health care, dying has changed. It has become more complicated and we need to be able to address that.
I think the aging demographics that we're facing have been discussed before. The graph I have here is a nice one to give a good visual of where we are and the urgency with which we need to move these things forward. If you look at where we are on the graph, you'll see a very large jump from 2011 to 2021 in the number of people who are going to be 65 and older. We know we're human beings. We know we have parts that wear out and break down, and we can't get replacement parts very readily, so things are going to happen. This is going to be the largest part of the population that ends up driving the demand for palliative care services. Again, as that baby boomer generation is hitting this age group, we can see very dramatic increases in the numbers, very significantly so.
I've actually put myself on the graph. I'm coming into this, too, so one could say that this is a very self-serving thing for me, because not only do I want to make sure that I can get the care I'm going to need down the road, but I've put in my son, who's now 15, at where he will be at 65, so that coming down the road for my children and my children's children we will have a strong foundation for the type of care they're going to need as well.
As I look around the room, I see a couple of grey hairs here and there, so you know what? If there's no other good reason, folks, this is for all of us sitting in the room, and also, some day, for some of the younger people sitting off to the side.
Where are some of our current gaps? I've broken it down very basically into professional and human resources. We've talked about that a bit, about just the sheer numbers of people with a bit more of that advanced training in palliative medicine, or the specialty training, and that builds into the skilled providers. Along with that aging demographic, it includes those of us working in palliative care. We have an aging demographic of skilled labour as well, and that too needs to be replaced as time goes on.
In the current gaps in terms of public issues, access now has been well documented as a big issue. There are pockets of places where access is pretty good but likely could be better. I know that in our neck of the woods—because on the east coast we do have some of that aging population—we're probably a little bit skewed on the curve. We have wait-lists now to access palliative care services, which is just atrocious, but that's the reality of the world right now.
As I said earlier, people are living longer with multiple comorbidities because we've been able to manage their renal failure and manage their heart failure. As well, they may have a couple of new arteries in their heart, so they're pumping longer. We've advanced some things, but at the end of the day we still have people with more chronic comorbidities that complicate things as they are getting older, and as these organs and parts still continue to wear out.
There's a higher complexity from the physical nature of it, but it's also a higher complexity because of our generation too. We have a lot of people who have been moving back and forth across the country for work opportunities the way our children do, so often there are not as many caregivers around family-wise to help provide the care in the home that we used to have years ago.
Again, with the aging demographic, we have higher numbers requiring care, and because people are living longer, often there are lower numbers of care providers. If someone is 91 and their spouse is 92 and a fair bit of physical care needs to happen, there are limitations, because of that age range, in what they can and cannot provide physically.
As far as informational gaps that we're facing go, again we still don't have national indicators for palliative care across the country. We don't have our national standards. There's no national reporting and there's no national oversight. That's one of the key things I think this bill can actually bring to the table and really needs to bring to the table. We need that large-scale look at how things are going in a unified way so we can start to look at how things are being done across the country and optimize best practices and make sure they get translated across the country so that we can all do better.
Some great work and some great projects have been done. Now is the time to be taking those and implementing those across the country. As I've said in the past, the time of pilot projects should be done. We need to be moving forward.
I'll just very briefly make one statement, and I think maybe Mr. Oliver made a comment on this earlier. Medically assisted dying is not a choice when there is no other choice. Unfortunately, that's the way it is in Canada right now because of the lack of access to palliative care services.
Bill C-277 would fulfill some of the recommendations that were brought forward in the Special Joint Committee on Physician-Assisted Dying. Specifically number 19 was to:
re-establish a Secretariat on Palliative and End-of-Life Care; and that Health Canada work with the provinces and territories and civil society to develop a flexible, integrated model of palliative care by implementing a pan-Canadian palliative and end-of-life strategy.
Number 18 was to:
ensure that culturally and spiritually appropriate end-of-life care services, including palliative care, are available to Indigenous [people].
This bill would also ensure that palliative care is provided to the people the federal government is responsible for providing health care to. The groups under federal jurisdiction include first nations people living on reserves, the Inuit, serving members of the Canadian forces, eligible veterans, inmates in federal penitentiaries, and some groups of refugee claimants. We need to ensure that we have national standards in this for that population as well.
The bill talks a little bit about the Canada Health Act. When we really start to look at the Canada Health Act, we see that it says that all Canadians should have universal complete access to care. Approval of Bill C-277 would ensure that Canada set the standards for access to quality palliative care for all ages including children, all geographies, and all diagnoses.
To ensure that Canadians have access to high-quality palliative care, we have developed a couple of documents recently that we sent to all the members previously and can certainly make available again. The web connection is present there for you. Basically we're stating clearly that we need to look at implementing the palliative approach to care as outlined in the national framework document “The Way Forward”, which you've heard about today and, I think, previously as well. That document is a good foundation for how things should be moving forward. We, along with many other palliative care organizations and other organizations throughout the country, have endorsed that.
Again, we don't need to start from scratch. One of our key messages is that we need to start to work on implementation as opposed to doing further development.
The second document, which we released just a couple of weeks ago, was looking at the cost-effectiveness of palliative care. Very briefly, some of the different studies looked at lowering costs of delivery by up to 30%. Even more importantly when you look at the delivery of this care, it will also help to free up scarce resources in acute care such as beds in intensive care units for patients who truly need them.
When palliative care can be involved early on, you start to have some of those discussions about goals of care and what the patients' wishes are and their understanding of their illness. They can realize that going into the ICU may not be what's really in their best interests. It's not going to fix things. If we can keep people out of the ICU, for whom there really isn't going to be true benefit, that will open up those beds for somebody else who truly can benefit from using up those very limited resources.
Again, we come back to that aging population. There's going to be a bigger demand on everything throughout health care. There are going to be more people who will need those intensive care beds, so we need to be really making sure we utilize our resources as efficiently as possible. At the same time, while we're offering the same type of care, we're improving quality of life and quality of care for patients with serious illnesses and for their families.
Health care costs have been escalating as a consequence of our failure to adapt to the changing demographics of Canadians and advances in chronic disease management, including cancer. Change is now long overdue. Continued failure to invest in palliative care will be a lost opportunity to achieve better efficiencies, improve outcomes, and reallocate budgets to other priorities. The status quo really neither meets Canadians' needs nor is financially sustainable.
What we're recommending certainly is the forward movement and acceptance of Bill C-277. We'd really like to see an established well-funded secretariat, and the formation of a small, nimble, high-level working group made up of key national organizations to start working with the secretariat on implementation.
Focus needs to be on administrative cost containment so that funds can see their way to the delivery of services. We've seen other projects go on and lots of money put into major infrastructure, which unfortunately hasn't translated into a lot of key things hitting...your rubber hitting the road. This is something where there's lots of good work happening across the country. We have shown in the palliative care world that we work well together. We've been doing things on a shoestring for years. This can be done efficiently. We want to see the monies get to providers out in the areas with increased resources so that we can actually make those differences that need to happen.
We need to bring in additional stakeholders, when and where required, to develop the efficiencies, gain the insights, and mobilize strategies. Having another 100-body committee to work on things is going to be very slow and tedious. Again, you see by that demographic curve, we're into it now. We don't have 10 or 15 years to be doing this. Our hospitals are already starting to be overloaded. I know in Nova Scotia they have overcrowding. They're having to develop new terms to label the levels of overcrowding we're having in some of our hospitals because of this aging demographic and the demands.
What is needed? Again, we need to start with what we know. We really need to be collecting standardized national data. That can happen as well through a national secretariat to help move that forward and make sure we're doing this: setting, monitoring, and enforcing national standards and indicators for palliative care in Canada; and making accreditation of health care services both in hospitals, long-term care homes, home care services, etc., all mandatory and contingent on palliative care services being provisioned to nationally accepted standards. We also need to—and my colleague here will be speaking to this, I think, a bit more—standardize and insist on integration of core competencies in the schools of health care professionals.
We had the opportunity to hear from the Canadian Nurses Association today. I know for medicine, for nursing, for social work, and for pharmacy in particular the core competencies are developed. The big challenge has been getting those integrated within the health care professional schools. That is something for which we may need some federal pressure to help make that happen. We've been advocating. We've been trying to get that to happen, but there's so much competition for that time within our professional schools that you have to look to take something out to add some more time in. But, at the end of the day, what we're doing is so fundamental it needs to be there.