tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33052404.post4737344129860171052..comments2024-02-13T21:31:57.980-04:00Comments on Facing Autism in New Brunswick: The Two Autism Faces of Randy KampAnonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05838571980003579163noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33052404.post-25810309441474273832008-07-26T07:36:00.000-03:002008-07-26T07:36:00.000-03:00"anonymous"1) I disagree with your parsing of Rand..."anonymous"<BR/><BR/>1) I disagree with your parsing of Randy Kamp's comments. Mr Kamp's call for a National Autism Strategy was made in the context of the statements in the first paragraph cited, and a call for federal financing of ABA/IBI treatment for autism:<BR/><BR/> "Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to present a petition from the citizens of British Columbia, who rightly believe that IBI-ABA therapy can dramatically help children with autism. They are calling upon Parliament to amend the Canada Health Act and corresponding regulations to include therapy for children with autism as medically necessary treatment and require that all provinces provide and fund this essential treatment for autism," said Kamp.<BR/><BR/>2) I understand that the Canada Health Act does not currently require funding of specific therapies. That does not in any way prevent an AMENDMENT to the Act to do so for the first time to ensure proper treatment for all Canadians with autism disorder.<BR/><BR/>3)The constitutional argument is simply a variation on the argument that the Canada Health Act itself is a violation of Provincial Health care jurisdiction. By that logic there would be no medicare in Canada period. Which of course is the long held view of Stephen Harper. But the Canada Health Act has stood the test of time and even Harper does not, now that he is Prime Minister, dare attack openly an act which has helped so many Canadians.<BR/><BR/>Deborah Coyne, on her blog site, Canadians Without Borders, has responded to your, and Stephen Harper's, spurious constitutional jurisdiction argument:<BR/><BR/>"The time is long overdue to establish, at the national level, the services and medical treatments that should be available to all Canadians under Medicare. Canadians in all provinces must have equal access to, for example, extensive services for autistic children, physiotherapy, adequate cancer treatment, or MRIs.<BR/><BR/>The Harper government is wrong to claim that there is a constitutional barrier to such a step. Medicare funding decisions must be made in a coherent fashion in a national framework given that we invest no less than $160 billion annually, of which $113 billion is from the public purse. (See the analysis in the early 2008 publication of the Canadian Health Services Research Foundation by Colleen Flood, Mark Stabile, and Carolyn Tuohy - "Defining the Medicare Basket.")<BR/><BR/>The real issue is the lack of political will and determination among our elected representatives to bring coherence, consistency and accountability to the current mess of federal-provincial financial transfers, of which health care is a significant component."Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05838571980003579163noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-33052404.post-38844708863858513632008-07-25T17:44:00.000-03:002008-07-25T17:44:00.000-03:00You'll note that Kamp never called for an amendmen...You'll note that Kamp never called for an amendment to the Canada Health Act while in Opposition. He supported a National Autism Strategy.<BR/><BR/>If Murphy's bill would have simply called for a National Autism Strategy, without the unworkable tag of amending the Canada Health Act (an intrusion into provincial jurisdiction) I suspect Kamp could have supported it.<BR/><BR/>What's hypocritical is opposition MPs raising false hopes by promising to amend the Canada Health Act to force provinces to fund specific therapies. Read the Canada Health Act. You'll soon note that not a single therapy is mandated by the Act. The decisions on which types of therapies/programs to fund lies entirely with the provincial government.<BR/><BR/>Instead of wasting time on trying to amend the Canada Health Act to do something that it cannot do, autism therapy advocates should be lobbying their provincial politicians to fund autism therapy, as it's their job to determine what their health systems will or will not fund.<BR/><BR/>The feds can develop a "national strategy" and they can even give more money to the provinces for health care. But they cannot force the provinces to fund specific programs. Any politician who says otherwise is either ignorant or purposely misleading Canadians.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com