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Protecting Seniors and Vulnerable Ontarians
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Provincial Parks Open for 2013 Season
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Helping At-Risk Youth Succeed
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More Support for New Nurses in Ontario
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Provincial News
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Ontario Plans to Extend Highway 427
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Reducing Auto Insurance Costs for Ontario Drivers
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More Support for Low-Income Families
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A Budget for a Prosperous and Fair Ontario
    New Ontario Government Helps Create Jobs And Supports People
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Ontario and OMA Reach Agreement McGuinty Government and OMA Protecting Gains in Health Care

The McGuinty government and the Ontario Medical Association (OMA) have tentatively agreed on a new Physician Services Agreement that runs to March 2014.

The OMA Board of Directors has unanimously recommended the agreement for ratification by its members.  The physician ratification process will occur in early December. 

The agreement protects and builds on the gains made for patients over the last nine years through the partnership of the McGuinty government and the OMA. Main elements of the agreement include:

  • Modernizing the delivery of health care and lowering wait times through e-consultations, enabling patients to communicate with their doctor more easily, allowing for more virtual connections between family doctors and specialists, and an expansion of telemedicine services.
  • New priority investments to expand access to family doctors for seniors and patients with higher needs, including an expansion of house calls.
  • A 0.5 per cent payment discount for all physicians that the OMA and Ministry of Health will work to replace by finding additional evidence-based savings.
  • New evidence-based changes that support the sustainability of the health care system and the protection of high quality patient care, including: reducing unnecessary pre-op cardiac testing for low-risk, non-cardiac patients; modernizing the annual health exam, personalizing it to the individual needs of healthy adults and reducing unnecessary tests; and aligning the frequency of colonoscopies and cervical cancer screening to meet Cancer Care Ontario guidelines.
  • Savings from physician-influenced health system reforms will allow the physician services budget to increase by a cumulative $100 million over two years. These savings will be used to help new doctors join the health care system. Physician-influenced reforms include reducing unnecessary lab testing, streamlining physician-influenced hospital equipment purchases, and more evidence-based drug prescribing.
  • After careful review of the regulatory changes made in May, six fees will be adjusted: the self-referral fee, the Optical Coherence Tomography fee, the after-hours premium, the anesthesia flat fee, the laparoscopic premium, and the Coronary Intensive Care premium.  Obligations are being changed in the Schedule of Benefits for lumbar spine X-rays and CT scans.

The Ministry and the OMA have also clarified and formalized their partnership through an agreement that establishes a process to resolve disputes in the future.