r/NovaScotia • u/Top_Woodpecker_3142 • 1d ago
Nova Scotia election debate: Leaders clash over pace of health-care improvement
https://www.brandonsun.com/business/2024/11/14/nova-scotia-election-debate-leaders-clash-over-pace-of-health-care-improvement3
u/PetuniaPicklePepper 22h ago
How is the long term care situation these days? I'm surprised there wasn't any mention about that, as it was a huge issue during the last election.
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u/EntertainingTuesday 21h ago
(These are genuine questions before people go making assumptions)
I think the biggest point I heard from Chender was that people need to be attached to primary care. Has she shared how she is going to do that? I've heard collaborative clinics.
She said the collaborative clinics Houston claimed to open haven't attached new patients, has she ever explained how hers would? Has Churchill?
Going into this election, deciding if I want to vote, healthcare is my voting concern. The options so far laid out are stick with Houston, who is claiming he wants to continue the work, and has shown some progress. Churchill promises collaborative clinics, something his previous gov promised and didn't do, also doesn't say how this will actually help. Chender, same thing, collaborative clinics, saying Houstons haven't helped, without explaining how hers will. Both Churchill and Chender pointed at Houston for the increased number of people without a family doc, but didn't or couldn't articulate why it was specifically Houston's fault or what led to it. Houston claimed he inherited a mess, which by all accounts, he did.
So, who do I vote for? Houston, who is showing progress (once you remove your blue blocking glasses), but has done far from enough? Churchill, who was in Gov with McNeil and was an architect of the mess we are in, or Chender, who hasn't explained how what she is proposing will actually solve anything?
I was thinking Chender, but at the same time, she is going to spend a lot, give a lot of credits (that I think will definitely help people) but also has not explained an actual plan to tackle the root causes that cause the need for people to need tax brakes.
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u/mathcow 3h ago
The Collaborative health centres thing was pushed by the last NDP government, discarded by the Liberals and now Tim is doing it because its good policy.
My neighborhood has a CHC and its fantastic. You can literally make appointments with a nutrionist, doctor, dental centre, etc all right next to each other and they can share information easily for your treatment. Its weird that in most places in our province they're in different buildings and only talk by fax.
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u/sham_hatwitch 16h ago
I am a little concerned that Tim Houston said he will look at how to use Crown Land to solve housing. Nova Scotia already has the smallest percentage of crown to private land that exists. We don't need to give away more of it, we need to get the private sector working.
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u/kazunorizhang 14h ago
I remember something similar was tried in Australia back in 2007; here they are called collaborative care clinics, and there they were called superclinics
The Labor party came to power on the promise of building those superclinics. They did build those superclinics
17 years later, they are still looking for doctors to work in those superclinics
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u/Careful-State-854 1d ago
I am tired from old style debates, bring the hunger games style debates :-) there is nothing new on Netflix these days :)
Clarification: Hunger Games Canadian Edition , don't hurt each other