Trudeau to offer 10-year Canada healthcare funding of more than C$100
billion - The Globe and Mail
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[February 07, 2023]
(Reuters) - Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will present a
funding offer of over C$100 billion ($74.5 billion) for the country's
healthcare system in talks with provincial and territorial leaders on
Tuesday, The Globe and Mail reported on Monday.
Citing an unidentified senior federal source, the report said the
10-year funding proposal, designed to help fix the country's struggling
health care system from Ottawa, will include tens of billions of dollars
of new money, as well as earlier planned increases.
A large sum of the new money will be set aside for separate bilateral
deals that will target key areas such as primary care, the report added.
Quebec's government is hoping to be able to negotiate more new federal
money, the newspaper reported.
Last month, Trudeau had invited the premiers of all provinces to meet in
Ottawa on Feb. 7 to discuss a plan to provide health care funding for
provinces, as hospitals remain strained by long wait times made worse by
the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
talks virtually to seniors in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, May 3, 2021.
REUTERS/Blair Gable/File Photo
($1 = 1.3428 Canadian dollars)
(Reporting by Chandni Shah and Shivani Tanna in Bengaluru; Editing
by Kenneth Maxwell)
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