Thank you very much. I want to begin by acknowledging that we are meeting today on land that is the traditional and unceded territory of the Algonquin Nation.
Thank you for the opportunity to appear in front of you on this very important issue.
Palliative care improves the quality of life of people facing life-limiting illness. It eases their suffering and supports their families. Though it is an essential part of health care, it is often overlooked, so I'm happy that the committee has decided to study palliative care in Canada.
Canadians approaching the end of their lives deserve to receive care in the setting of their choice and live out their final days in comfort and dignity.
As you'll hear from my colleague at the Canadian Institute for Health Information, the unfortunate reality is that three-quarters of Canadians say they would prefer to spend their final days at home, yet 61% of Canadians still pass away in the hospital.
Access issues are complex and occur in all settings due to a number of factors.
Our society has a cultural tendency to deny the reality of death and this leads to a lack of planning, acceptance, and appropriate referrals. Meanwhile, our health system defaults to acute care when home care is usually preferred, and always more economical.
A lack of available providers, lack of understanding of the benefits of palliative care, and simple geography in the case of rural and remote communities are additional barriers to accessing quality palliative care.
In terms of Government of Canada measures, budget 2017 provided $6 billion over 10 years in targeted funding for provinces and territories for home and community care, including palliative care. This was done through a series of bilateral funding agreements. This funding is being used right now by provinces and territories on activities identified in these bilateral agreements, which are posted publicly.
For example, British Columbia is working to provide 24-7 access by health care providers to consultations with experts on pain and symptom management. Prince Edward Island is implementing an integrated mobile health program, which uses community paramedics to support palliative patients at home. Saskatchewan is providing training to health care professionals in order to improve their ability to provide end-of-life care. Many other provinces are undertaking initiatives of that sort.
The current bilateral agreements are in place until 2021-22, and the government intends to negotiate renewal of these agreements for the next five years through to 2026-27. That means the whole five-year period.
We also have a number of other measures under way to enhance access to end-of-life care. In 2017, the government provided $184.6 million over five years to improve home and palliative care for indigenous communities.
I'll now move to the framework and action plan on palliative care in Canada.
On December 4, 2018, the government tabled a framework on palliative care in Canada, based on consultations with a broad range of stakeholders, to bring focus to the benefits of palliative care and the access issues faced by Canadians. The framework gives Canadians, governments, stakeholders, individuals, caregivers and communities a common reference point to help us better collaborate and coordinate our efforts.
In August 2019, Health Canada released an action plan on palliative care, which builds on the framework. The action plan lays out Health Canada's five-year plan to tackle issues identified in the framework, using federal levers.
The federal action plan aims to help improve quality of life for people with life-limiting illness, address concerns of families and caregivers, and enhance access to quality palliative care, through improved health care system performance.
The action plan aligns with the framework on palliative care in Canada and focuses on five key goals.
The first is to raise awareness and understanding of how advance care planning and palliative care improve quality of life until the end of life. For example, Health Canada is developing awareness-raising initiatives to increase understanding of the benefits of palliative care and how to access it.
Secondly, we aim to support health system quality by improving palliative care skills and supports for health care providers, families, caregivers and communities.
To this end, Health Canada has been pleased to support Pallium Canada's efforts to scale up post-graduate inter-professional training that provides essential palliative care competencies to health care professionals, such as paramedics.
The third goal focuses on supporting health system quality improvement through enhanced data collection and research. Through the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, or CIHR, the federal government is supporting innovative research to address knowledge gaps and develop new models and approaches to palliative care based on scientific evidence. For example, CIHR is currently supporting a five-year research project to promote access to home-based palliative care for patients across Canada. This project will implement and test the effectiveness of palliative care training programs for 53 primary care teams across Ontario.
The Canadian Institutes of Health Research, or CIHR, is also supporting a Canada Research Chair in Palliative Care to examine ways of preserving dignity at the end of life through bedside and clinical observations, and by tracking and examining large cohorts of Canadians at the end of life.
The fourth action plan goal is to improve access to palliative care for underserved populations, which include rural and remote communities, pediatrics and young adults, homeless people and LGBTQ2SI people. Furthermore, we know that some communities face cultural and linguistic barriers that prevent them from accessing palliative care in a timely way.
To address this, Health Canada is supporting projects such as an initiative to improve the uptake of advance care planning in the South Asian and Chinese populations in British Columbia. This project aims to decrease language and cultural barriers inherent in end-of-life care discussions so that members of these communities may access culturally sensitive palliative care.
The fifth and final goal focuses on the unique characteristics, needs and challenges faced by first nations, Métis and Inuit peoples, as well as urban indigenous people in accessing palliative care.
Health Canada is currently working with Indigenous Services Canada, national indigenous organizations and others on next steps to deliver indigenous-led consultations toward a separate distinctions-based framework on palliative care.
Meanwhile, we are supporting indigenous-led initiatives such as the Cree Board of Health and Social Services of James Bay project, which aims to inform culturally adapted care practice guidelines based on Cree beliefs and practices.
Some action plan projects are under way already. To date, Health Canada has invested almost $13 million in projects to advance the objectives of the action plan and improve access to palliative care both at home and in the community. Through the action plan, we are striving to address access issues evidenced through current data and research, and reported by providers, people with lived experience and provincial and territorial representatives.
We know that most people with a life-limiting illness wish to remain independent and receive the care they need at home or in their community. Improving access to palliative care across all settings is critical to making this happen.
The current focus on medical assistance in dying, or MAID, is drawing attention to the need for improved access to palliative care. Palliative care stakeholders and MAID opponents have raised concerns that people may choose MAID as the only means to relieve their suffering because of inadequate access to palliative care.
However, preliminary data out of Ontario shows this not to be the case, and that the majority of recipients received or were offered palliative care prior to receiving MAID.
It should be clear—this does not negate the need to enhance access to palliative care and to continue to monitor and study the situation. Our vision is that all Canadians have access to quality palliative care from diagnosis to end of life, regardless of whether they choose medical assistance in dying in their final days.
To conclude, we will continue to press forward to implement our action plan, and to build on the many promising practices in providing excellent palliative care.
We all want to live out our lives in comfort and dignity. Appropriate care must be available when it's most needed. I believe our work will help to move the marker forward on this.
I thank you for the opportunity to make these remarks. Sharon Harper and I will be pleased to answer your questions when the time comes.
Thank you.