N.S. government offers to defray some travel costs for surgery patients - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:17 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

N.S. government offers to defray some travel costs for surgery patients

The Nova Scotia government is offering to defray some of the costs incurred by low-income families who are willing to travel outside their home communities for their operations.

Province will pay 57 cents per km for driving, $85 per night for hotels

Three surgeons are seen in full gear operating on an unseen patient.
The province has set aside $946,000 for its travel assistance program which it hopes could help as many as 2,400 Nova Scotians. (CBC)

Starting June 1, some Nova Scotians waiting for surgery may be eligible for help from the Nova Scotia government to defray some of their travel costs.

The travel assistance program will be available to patients who have to travel within the province for certain procedures. The aid is only available to families who earn less than $35,000 a year and won't cover all travel-related expenses.

Tanya Penney, a senior executive director at the Department of Health and Wellness, said the pilot project was designed to encourage people to choose sites with shorterwaiting lists for the procedures they need.

"What we're hearing from people around the provinces is thatthe cost of hotels and the cost of gas has actually become a barrier for people to access care a little bit further away from home than than they prefer," said Penney. "And so this is really about assisting those folks, in reducing those costs to make sure that they get their surgeries in a more timely fashion."

The provincial government will pay57 cents per kilometre to offset some of the cost of gas and up to $85 a night for a hotel stay if the travel is more than 50 kilometres in each direction.

Penney acknowledged those rates would not cover the full costs incurred by those willing to travel for their care.

Gives partially coverage

"This is really a program to reduce costs and it was never really a program to cover all of the costs," said Penney. "That being said, we're really hoping that the $85 a night resonates with people."

"Over time we'll assess and make sure we're actually meeting the needs of people needing to travel."

The province has set aside $946,000 for this program which it hopes could help as many as 2,400 Nova Scotians.