Trudeau lays out $196-billion, 10-year health-care offer to premiers
OTTAWA — The federal government has presented a new health-care funding offer that would see Ottawa shift $196 billion to the provinces and territories over the next 10 years in exchange for commitments to massively upgrade health-care data collection and digital medical records.
The offer was met with a heavy dose of disappointment but also reluctant acceptance by the country’s premiers, who learned of the proposal during a long-awaited first ministers’ meeting in Ottawa Tuesday.
About one-quarter of that is money not previously promised through existing health-care transfer formulas and deals. The new money will mainly be divided between bigger increases to the annual Canada Health Transfer — an additional $17 billion over 10 years, over and above the previously planned increases — and $25 billion for targeted funding for family doctors, mental health, surgical backlogs and health data systems.
There will also be an immediate one-time $2 billion top-up to this year’s Canada Health Transfer to help provinces ease the intense pressure on emergency rooms and children’s hospitals.


