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5 million adults without primary care, surgeries returning to normal: CIHI report

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TORONTO – A new report by the Canadian Institute for Health Information says 83 per cent of adults in this country have a regular primary-care provider, but that still leaves 5.4 million adults without one.

It says seniors 65 years and older are more likely to have access to a family doctor or nurse practitioner than younger adults between 18 and 34.

Access to primary care is highest in Ontario and lowest in Nunavut.

The CIHI report released Thursday morning measures the baseline of health priorities agreed upon by the federal government and the provinces and territories.

Federal health minister Mark Holland says there will be a report every year to measure progress across the country.

In addition to improving access to primary care, the priorities include reducing wait times for mental-health and substance-use counselling, recruiting more health-care workers, decreasing surgical wait times and increasing the use of electronic health information.

CIHI says it will also collect data to measure progress on two more health priorities in the near future, including ensuring seniors can age with dignity and improving cultural safety for Indigenous patients in the health-care system.

Thursday’s report says the surgical backlogs that happened during the COVID-19 pandemic have decreased and the number of surgeries performed has mostly returned to pre-pandemic levels across Canada.

Holland said each of the health-care funding agreements signed with the provinces and territories includes targets for the number of doctors and nurses that need to be added to the workforce.

Many rural and Indigenous communities are particularly hard-hit by the primary care shortage, the minister said in an interview by phone on Wednesday.

In addition to recruiting doctors, nurse practitioners and nurses from other jurisdictions, the solution requires a “sustained effort” to encourage more First Nations, Métis and Inuit people — as well as others living in small towns and rural areas — “to be choosing health careers and really seeing far more people serving their own communities,” Holland said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 24, 2024.

Canadian Press health coverage receives support through a partnership with the Canadian Medical Association. CP is solely responsible for this content.

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Small memorial set up outside Walmart where 19-year-old found dead in bakery oven

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HALIFAX – A small memorial of flowers, prayer candles and condolence cards has been set up in a parking lot just outside a Halifax Walmart where a young woman died in a walk-in oven over the weekend.

As the police investigation unfolds, few details have come to light about how the tragedy occurred Saturday night, before first responders arrived at the bakery section of the big box store in the city’s west end.

On Wednesday, young people stopped by the memorial to pay their respects to the 19-year-old Walmart employee whose identity hasn’t been released by police. The Maritime Sikh Society, which is in contact with the teen’s family, has said the Sikh woman and her mother are originally from India and came to Canada two to three years ago.

A Sikh woman visited the memorial with two friends and added a bouquet of flowers to the collection of items attached to a lamp post in the parking lot, saying her community is devastated by the teenager’s death. The woman, who declined to give her name, said that while she did not know the victim well, she and her friends have been shaken by the death.

“We can feel it. She is so much like us,” she said. “She is very young. She is like a sister. She is just working at a bread place. She was just doing her job.”

Halifax police spokeswoman Marla MacInnis released no new information on Wednesday, repeating previous police statements that the “cause and manner” of the 19-year-old woman’s death remain unknown, and that the investigation is expected to be “lengthy.”

A Walmart worker who declined to be named visited the closed store Wednesday to add a plastic flower to the memorial. He said he didn’t know the deceased — they worked in different departments — but he felt it was important he come to pay his respects, adding that he is thinking about her family.

The worker said his Saturday shift at the store ended in the afternoon, before the teen’s death. He was in shock later that night upon learning the news through a company email.

The store in the city’s west end remains closed, but a Walmart spokesperson says the company will pay employees for the shifts they had been scheduled to work. “We will consider alternate work arrangements in the event the store remains closed for a longer-than-anticipated period of time,” Amanda Moss said.

Harjit Seyan, president of the Sikh society, says the group is fundraising and helping arrange visas to bring the young woman’s father and other family members to Canada for the funeral.

“The Halifax Maritime Sikh Society will be contributing towards the travel. And then we’re trying to also set up a GoFundMe page to raise financial support for that,” he said.

“You know, the community is definitely shaken by the whole event,” he said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 23, 2024.

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Trudeau to announce massive drop in immigration targets: official

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OTTAWA – Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is expected to announce a major drop in the number of new permanent residents Canada will accept in 2025.

As first reported by The National Post, the government’s immigration levels are expected to drop to 395,000 in 2025, a huge decrease from the 500,000 that had previously been set as the target.

The information was provided by a government official with knowledge of the plan.

Trudeau and his immigration minister will also announce reduced targets for number of temporary residents for the first time.

The government’s goal is to reduce the number of temporary residents to five per cent of the population over the next three years, down from 6.5 per cent in March.

The moves come after years of rapid increase to the number of new permanent residents in Canada and a ballooning number of people coming to Canada on a temporary basis, which federal ministers have conceded put pressure on housing and affordability.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has accused the Liberals of destroying the national consensus on immigration.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 24, 2024.

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How a Montreal school reignited a debate over secularism and Bill 21 in Quebec

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MONTREAL – An investigation into a climate of fear at a Montreal primary school has reignited a debate about secularism in Quebec’s education system, with the provincial government pledging to consider new measures to keep religion out of classrooms.

Quebec’s education minister says the province’s secularism law, known as Bill 21, was not being respected at the school and could be strengthened. His comments follow a report released earlier this month that found a group of teachers at Bedford school, many of North African descent, subjected children to physical and psychological violence.

The issue has dominated Quebec headlines this week, after the opposition Parti Québécois labelled it “a case of Islamist infiltration” into the public school system, with the Coalition Avenir Québec government quickly following suit.

But critics say the focus on religion is a red herring that distracts from the fact authorities let the situation at Bedford continue for years without taking action.

On Tuesday, Quebec Premier François Legault made his first comments on the affair in a social media post, saying he was “very shocked” by the “attempt by a group of teachers to introduce Islamist religious concepts into a public school.”

It was a shift in tone for his government, which had previously avoided linking the situation at Bedford to religion.

The Education Department released its report on Bedford school on Oct. 11, the result of an investigation triggered by reporting last year from a Montreal radio station, which documented how a dominant clan of teachers imposed autocratic rule at the school.

The report found that teachers yelled at and humiliated students, and that some teachers didn’t believe in learning disabilities and attributed students’ difficulties to laziness. Subjects like science and sex education were either ignored or barely taught, and girls were prevented from playing soccer.

The investigation revealed that most members of the dominant faction were of North African descent, and that teachers were influenced by the local mosque. But it also pointed out that some teachers of North African heritage opposed the dominant clan, and the report characterized the situation as a clash of ideology rather than culture.

Eleven teachers at the school were suspended with pay over the weekend. On Tuesday, Education Minister Bernard Drainville said the teachers — a mix of men and women — have had their teaching licences suspended pending the outcome of disciplinary investigations.

In an appearance on popular Quebec talk show “Tout le monde en parle” on Sunday, more than a week after the report’s release, Drainville chose his words carefully, saying it was important not to stigmatize teachers of North African descent.

“Before saying that there is an issue of secularism or that there is an attempt by a religious movement to want to take control of one or more schools in Montreal, I have to be careful,” he said.

This week, that tone changed. On Monday, Parti Québécois Leader Paul St-Pierre Plamondon came out swinging, claiming there is a problem of “religious and ideological infiltration” in Quebec schools.

On Tuesday, Legault announced that he’d asked Drainville and Secularism Minister Jean-François Roberge “to look at what we can do as a government to strengthen controls and secularism in schools.”

Drainville told reporters the government has “a responsibility to look into what could be done to strengthen (Bill 21) in relation to Bedford and possibly in relation to other schools in Quebec.”

Investigations are underway at three other Montreal schools. On Wednesday, Drainville said he was looking into a fifth school following the publication of a news report about parents of North African origin who have decided to remove their child from the school over concerns about Muslim religious indoctrination.

But Louis-Philippe Lampron, a professor of human rights at Université Laval, said the government is using secularism as a smokescreen to distract from other issues. Teachers were forbidden from imposing their religious beliefs in classrooms well before the passage of Bill 21 in 2019, Lampron said, and the government already has “all the tools” it needs to deal with such matters.

The 2019 law banned teachers and other public sector workers from wearing religious symbols in the workplace.

The real scandal, Lampron said, is that the problems at Bedford school persisted for several years before the government’s investigation. “It’s a situation that’s gone on far too long,” he said. “Let’s call a spade a spade.”

Lampron said this week’s debate reminds him of Quebec’s reasonable accommodation crisis nearly 20 years ago, which was fuelled by public anxiety about minority groups. That crisis was driven in part by several incidents that received widespread media coverage, including accommodation for Muslim prayers at a traditional sugar shack, and a code of conduct for immigrants published in the hamlet of Hérouxville that was widely derided as Islamophobic.

A public commission struck to examine the issue found in 2008 that there was no real problem concerning the accommodation of minorities in Quebec, but Lampron said the subject remains “extremely politically sensitive.”

Tensions around the Bedford school report are running high this week. On Tuesday, Liberal member Marwah Rizqy, who has been speaking out about the school since last year, said she had requested police protection and feared for her safety. Earlier in the week, controversial imam Adil Charkaoui publicly accused Rizqy of exaggerating the problems at the school.

Samaa Elibyari, co-president of the Montreal chapter of the Canadian Council of Muslim Women, said it’s unfair to use Bedford school to fuel a broader debate about secularism.

“The impression I get is that there is a deficiency at the base of it. Those teachers, they are not well trained, they are not well adjusted, and this reflects of course in the ways of teaching,” she said. “I don’t see at all where religion comes in.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 24, 2024.



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