Mr. Speaker, I am very pleased to take part in this debate, because I feel particularly concerned as a Bloc Quebecois member.
Today, we are debating a motion from the NDP asking that adequate moneys be put back into health to meet the various expectations in that sector.
A number of members addressed this issue, including some who are doctors by training.
Depending on which party we represent, we have a different reading of the situation. The Liberal Party—a fellow member who is a doctor addressed the issue—tends to put the blame on public servants, on those who manage health services.
Personally, I would rather agree with the opposition's reading of the health care situation. Obviously, this view does not agree with that of the Liberal Party. Members from opposition parties who have some experience in the health sector told us that there is also a serious funding problem.
This does not mean there is no need to review our ways of doing things, to adjust. We know that several factors are disrupting the traditional ways of doing things in the health sector.
I will talk about this issue, before dealing with our minor disagreement with a Liberal member about the $841 million in trust that were given by the Liberal government and that were supposed to be spent within three years. We could ask why the Liberal government is not putting back into the Canada social transfer moneys that come back year after year, to meet regular expenditures.
These are non recurrent amounts and the provinces probably have a hard time anticipating the necessary margins to deal with very urgent problems.
The dynamic in the health care sector in Canada and particularly in Quebec is such that a greater adjustment will be required for the ageing population. Fortunately for Quebec, although unfortunately in other ways, we have the lowest infant mortality rate of all Canadian provinces. That having been said, funding is needed so that we can meet the need for more health services.
For example, in Quebec the mortality rate is 4.6% for every 1,000 births while in Canada it is 5.6% or 5.7%. Earlier, I was a bit insulted to hear the Liberal member say that in Canada, and in Quebec in particular, they are doing a poor job of managing their budgets, that they are not spending them on the right services and that our health care system is not effective enough.
I would qualify this. If, for instance, our infant mortality rate is lower than the rest of Canada's, this means that our health care services—we must not be too partisan—generally meet the population's needs.
For five years now, there have been cuts to the system that have gone a long way towards eliminating the deficit. We know that public finances are in very, very good shape in Canada. The surplus was originally estimated at $95 billion, and is now estimated at $137 billion. Some put it at around $167 billion.
With such a large surplus, this government could have committed a much larger amount. But it announced $2.5 billion, again in a trust, that the provinces will be able to spend over a four-year period. It may well have thought this was enough but I think that the needs of the health care system are much more pressing than the government wants to admit.
The result is increasing pressure on demand. We know that there have been demographic changes, technological developments and the emergence of new needs. I will go into this a bit later on.
Major changes have been made to the organization of social and health care services in a very short period. Quebec had no choice. It was already behind other countries and some provinces.
Significant gains were made in the move to ambulatory care and in the increased efficiency of the health care network. However, there are weak spots and sectors to be consolidated, waiting lists for surgery, emergencies to be recognized, human resources to be shouldered and equipment to be replaced. All of this brings with it the challenges of rectifying the situation in the health care sector.
The network's financial situation must also be rectified and its functioning improved. We agree on that. However, the federal government has to help with financial support for the provinces.
Looking at the course of the health care system, we see that, between 1975 and 1994, public spending often grew faster than did the public purse. Since 1994, the Government of Quebec has taken major steps to balance the budget.
Health care spending increases by 4% annually. In the coming years, we will have to come to terms with this urgency to meet needs.
On the subject of the trust fund in Toronto, a certain perspective is required on the demands that will be made in the coming years, and this involves a variety of reasons, which I can give later. The population is ageing and this will lead to increased demand in various areas of health care.
The shift to ambulatory care means moving some medical procedures out of hospitals. We know we have to learn how to better deal with the new demands on the health care system. We have to increase the proportion of actual day surgery as compared to potential day surgery from 72% to 88%, bring down the hospitalization rate for surgery from 32.8 to 23.9 per 1,000, and lower the total number of hospitalizations by 11.5%. This is the approach we have to follow with regard to the shift to ambulatory care.
The average hospital stay needs to be shortened. In medicine, it should be 7.5 days instead of 8.8, and in surgery, 8.2 instead of 8.7.
There is still room for improvement to better deal with these new demands and meet the challenges of the shift to ambulatory care.
From a financial point of view, since 1994-1995, the Quebec government has been trying to put a lid on its expenses while still doing a good job, and it has worked. I will not get into the details of the cases reported on a daily basis by the papers over the last couple of years. I believe the Quebec government is trying hard to bring some measure of efficiency to the health care system while giving it the tools necessary to respond quickly and appropriately to health care needs.
Even in the institutions experiencing financial difficulties, there has been a significant effort to streamline operations. However, it has not been enough to offset the impact of the upward pressure on costs.
We are faced with dealing with new technology. We are faced with dealing with a more expensive approach to care than 20 years ago. The shift to ambulatory care has allowed the streamlining of the system, but other factors are putting upward pressures on expenses, namely demographic changes, the development of new technologies, and new needs.
It is said that the number of people over the age of 65 will be 60% higher in 2011 than it was in 1991, and the increase will be even greater for the 85-plus age group. In 2011, there will be 84% more people aged 85. In 2030, 25% of Quebecers will be over the age of 65.
This means that the changes that have just been made in the health system are intended precisely to respond to the fact that the population of Quebec is ageing more rapidly than elsewhere in Canada and other countries as well.
I have a table here which illustrates the fact that it will take 35 years for the percentage of the Quebec population aged 65 or over to rise from 12% to 24%. It shows 35 years for Quebec to reach that level; Canada, 45; Germany, 65; France, 70 and England, 75. There were many children born at a certain time in our history. A number of my colleagues are baby-boomers, and they will reach the honourable age of 60 or 65 in about another ten years and be users of the health system.
The population of Quebec is ageing at an amazing rate. This must be addressed. A strategy is needed for the approach to health care, but money is needed as well, in order to support all the new technologies and all the new methodologies. It is said that the ageing of the population of Quebec will be twice that of the European countries.
The health system is experiencing the pressures of demographic change. I will explain the implications of this.
In the emergency departments, for example, there were 50,000 more people lying on stretchers in 1998 and 1999 than there were in 1994 and 1995. Of these, 56% were age 75 and older. The reason for overcrowding in emergency rooms is that more people have been going there since 1994.
In radiation oncology, needs are increasing rapidly, particularly for people over 50. The first baby boomers have already reached that age. New cases of cancer are increasing at the rate of 3% a year. We must be able to respond to this increase.
The same is true in cardiology. Needs are increasing, particularly from age 50 on. More coronary bypasses are being performed on seniors. The number of heart surgeries is increasing by 3.6% a year and there has been a 260% increase in angioplasties in the last ten years.
In other specialties, the fact that people are living longer and that there is an increase in the number of very elderly people is adding to needs. The number of cataract surgeries has increased by 8% in the last three years, and 30% in the last two.
There is an increasing need in various specialties to cope with all those who need treatment and who require new technologies, more doctors, and more people who are able to respond adequately to all these emergencies.
There was a boom in the 1980s, particularly with respect to medical technologies, drugs and information. For example, medical imaging technologies now allow speedier and more effective intervention but cost more. The Liberal member who says that we are not capable of spending money effectively has a short term view of what is going on in the health care sector.
She really does not know what is going on. She really must not be familiar with the new dynamics, the new pressures resulting from demographic change or the system's difficulties in meeting these needs.
Spending on medication can be said to have increased, and Quebec is a leader in this area with a drug plan. There are also new requirements in the field of health, new problems have arisen, such as AIDS, Alzheimer's disease and related illnesses. In 1999, there were 66,183 such cases, and today there are 103,783. Some people require more services in their community.
In looking at the annual 4% increase in spending in the health sector, we must also look at all the new dynamics. We cannot say it is the fault of the provinces for having badly managed health services. We must take a new tack in dealing with this.
I do not think anyone is acting in bad faith. There are new dynamics, perhaps they were unforeseen, but they must be dealt with in the coming years. With the money we get from the federal government, more has to be done with less.
The Canada social transfer was higher in 1993 than it is today. When we are told the figure will be $2.4 billion compared with what we were given prior to 1993, when there were fewer requirements, I can understand why everything is going awry. I can understand as well that the problem does not lie in Quebec alone. It is present in other provinces.
We heard members of the NDP, the Reform Party and the Progressive Conservative Party from all regions of Canada describe the same problem. Therefore, I am a little disappointed to hear overblown speeches that are disconnected from the reality of everyday life, this for the sole purpose of boasting about giving $2.4 billion, again in a trust.
A trust is not what will enable us to implement long term strategies to determine how much hospitals can spend on supplies and on staff.
We are certainly prepared to look at the situation, but we still need money to support those who work in the health sector. We hear that some people feel exhausted and belittled. I think that even nowadays the pay, the work and the achievements of these people should make them feel appreciated. A decent salary allows a person to take a vacation and to feed his or her children.
We should look at the health sector as a whole and not use a piecemeal approach to avoid doing our duty. If we ask a lot from the federal government, it is because we give it billions of dollars in taxes, $31 billion to be precise.
I would have a lot more to add, but I will conclude by saying that the way the government intends to fund the Canada social transfer, that is in an ad hoc fashion, through trusts, will not allow the provinces to plan in the long term and to meet long term needs in the years to come.
I spoke about our ageing population. We need to pay attention to this phenomenon, as we may be the next ones to ask for adequate care, because of health problems.