Ottawa's restructured LHIN now stretches to Scarborough - Action News
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Ottawa

Ottawa's restructured LHIN now stretches to Scarborough

The Champlain Local Health Integration Network (LHIN) has been replaced with atemporary body to administerhealth care for a much larger geographic region.

Ontario Health, local health teams to take over as 14 LHINs dissolved

Under the province's new system, Ontario Health Teams will take over services such as home care. (Darron Cummings/The Associated Press)

The Champlain Local Health Integration Network (LHIN) has been replaced with a temporary body to administer health care for a much larger geographic region.

As part of a provincewide shakeup announced Wednesday, Ontario Health will take over theChamplain LHIN's planning functions,while services such as home care and physiotherapy in schools will be handed over to local care co-ordination organizations called Ontario Health Teams.

For now, Ottawa will fall within an eastern region that includes a wide swath of the provincesouth to the St. Lawrence River andwest to communities along Lake Ontario,bordering the Toronto suburb of Scarborough.

It's made up of what used to be the Champlain, South East and Central East networks.

Thattemporary regional authoritywill beheaded byRenatoDiscenza, formerly CEO of the South WestLHIN.

Catherine Butler, who had been the Champlain LHIN's interim CEO, is back in her previous role as vice-president of home and community care with this new agency.

The Champlain LHINpreviously served1.3 million people in eastern Ontario, the South East LHIN about half a million and the Central East LHIN about 1.5 million.

Millions in savings, province says

This province said eliminating the14 LHINsand consolidating agencies such asCancerCare Ontario and eHealthOntario will resultin an estimated $350 million a year in savings.The Ontario Health Teams, which will bemade up of local health-care providers, will"guide patients" between the various providers they need, the province said.

Each team will receive a block of funding to deliver a range of health-care services for the region it covers, but the province has yet to identify the teams, including ones that will serve eastern Ontario.

Ontario Health Minister Christine Elliott promises patients won't notice any interruptions during the transition. (The Canadian Press)

Rose AnneDevlin, aneconomist at the University of Ottawa who specializes in health issues, agrees local teams may indeed be able to provide smoother integration of health-care services for example, a patient's transition from cancer care to home care.

"But right now we don't know how many there will be, what is the optimal sizeand how much they will cost. It's a bit risky," Devlin said.

Devlin said the criticism that the LHINs were top-heavy may have been valid, but she cautionedtheir replacements will need similar administrative structures to keep them running smoothly and that will cost money, too.

"You're kind of feeling along in the dark," she said. "If you don't actually know the costs and outcomes,you could be going from the frying pan into the fire."

No service interruption, minister promises

Ontario Health Minister Christine Elliott promisedthere will be no interruption to health-care services during the transition.

"Yes, yes it will be seamless," she said. "The most important thing is that the patient receives good quality care, and if they haven'treceived it we intend to make sure that they do."

Elliott also rejected the idea that there won't be cost savings.

"We know that with the changes we have made thus far that there have been savings of $250 [million], and [rising]to $350 million next year, and that will be put back into front-line health care."

Elliott said the province has received 31 applications to fill the 150 Ontario Health Teams, and ministry staff will be visiting those local agencies to makesure they're ready to get started.

"We expect to announce the first of the health teams by the end of the year, and they will be up and running then," she said.

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story said Catherine Butler was fired as CEO of the Champlain LHIN. According to a spokesperson from the LHIN, Butler had been interim CEO and has returned to her role as vice-president of home and community care with the LHIN.
    Nov 14, 2019 4:41 PM ET