December 7, 2024

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National nurse practitioner association calls for N.L. to embrace public funding model

National nurse practitioner association calls for N.L. to embrace public funding model
A nurse wearing blue scrubs and sneakers pushes medical equipment down a hallway.
Nurse Practitioner Association of Canada CEO Stan Marchuk says there isn’t a simple solution to funding health care. (Radio-Canada)

Calls are mounting to allow private nurse practitioner clinics the ability to bill Newfoundland and Labrador’s public health-care system, but the head of the province’s nurses’ union is worried that could pull nurses into private practices.

Currently, nurse practitioners in Newfoundland and Labrador can set up private clinics but cannot bill their services under any government program.

Last month the Newfoundland and Labrador Nurse Practitioner Association submitted a funding model proposal that would allow nurse practitioners to bill the province — similar to how physicians bill through the provincial Medical Care Plan (MCP).

It’s a move welcomed by Stan Marchuk, chief executive officer of the Nurse Practitioner Association of Canada.

“We need to modernize the way in which health care is delivered,” he recently told CBC News.

However, Marchuk said there hasn’t been much movement to embrace the model in N.L.

“They’ve been stymied-in quite a bit by government, which I think is really unfortunate,” he said.

“I do think that they’re missing the mark. You know, what’s the barrier? Why not have the political will to move forward?”

LISTEN | The CBC’s Bernice Hiller speaks with Nurse Practitioner Association of Canada CEO Stan Marchuk:

CBC Newfoundland Morning8:16National association of nurse practitioners urges NL to publicly fund nurse practitioner-led clinics

Nurse practitioners in NL say they’re not getting far in achieving their goal. In late April, the Newfoundland and Labrador Nurse Practitioner Association submitted a funding model proposal to the provincial government. The association wants government to allow privately-run, nurse practitioner-led clinics to be paid for through the public system. Right now, nurse practitioners with their own clinics must have patients pay out of pocket. The association would like the profession to have its own public funding model, similar to the way doctors in private practice can bill through MCP. The national group that represents nurse practitioners would also like to see that. Stan Marchuk is chief executive officer of the Nurse Practitioner Association of Canada.

Marchuk said he isn’t worried that nurse practitioners might leave the public health-care system to set up their own clinics.

“I don’t see that to be the case because I think there’s already precedent in the country that says otherwise,” he said.

“I think it’s like anything, you know, you have to create opportunity. And I don’t think that in Newfoundland they have created opportunity for a long, long time — despite asking for it.”

Marchuk said Alberta is moving to bring in a new payment model so that nurse practitioners with a practice are paid directly by the province.

Drain on public health-care system

Yvette Coffey, president of the Registered Nurses’ Union of Newfoundland and Labrador (RNUNL), said she’s hearing patients are being charged up to $75 for a visit with a nurse practitioner in private clinics.

“We need to have nurse practitioner-led clinics under the public health-care system, under N.L. Health Services, to meet the needs of patients in the province,” she said.

She worries that the model being proposed would pull nurses out of the public system or it could appeal to recent nursing graduates because they might see it as a way to avoid being micromanaged.

A woman wearing a yellow blouse with a black cardigan stands in front of a beige wall with posters on it.
Yvette Coffey, president of the Registered Nurses’ Union Newfoundland and Labrador, says no one should ever have to pay for health care. (Peter Cowan/CBC)

Her obligation is toward her union members who are nurses working in the public health-care system, Coffey said.

“We always support a publicly funded, publicly delivered health-care system where a patient does not have to pay at the end of the day,” she said.

“And I do believe that there’s enough room for everybody in the system right now and that no patient should ever have to pay for care.”

She also said the nurses’ union is in talks with government about a funding model in the public health-care system.

Earlier this month, PC health critic Barry Petten suggested in the House of Assembly that nurse practitioners should be paid through the MCP.

In response, Health Minister Tom Osborne said it sounded like Petten was calling for privatized health care. 

Osborne told reporters that paying nurses through MCP would turn them into business owners and would make it harder to move them around the province to where they are needed.

“What we are interested in is following the plan that’s in place, the Health Accord,” Osborne said. “The Health Accord calls for interdisciplinary teams, family-care teams throughout the province that are public clinics, operated and run by public health-care professionals paid for and supported by the provincial health authority.” 

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