Sask. to start covering part of cost of transporting sick kids out of province - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Sask. to start covering part of cost of transporting sick kids out of province

Health Minister Everett Hindley has reversed what hecalled a "long-standing policy" of the Saskatchewan government.

Change comes after family raised issue at legislature last week

A man standing
Saskatchewan's Minister of Health Everett Hindley says the province will change a long-standing policy and provide some compensation to families that need to travel outside the province for necessary medical procedures for children. (CBC News)

Saskatchewan's Ministry of Health will now provide financial assistance for children and their families who need to travel outside the province for necessary medical procedures.

It's a change to what Health Minister Everett Hindleycalled a "long-standing policy" of the provincial government.

"The procedures themselves are are covered, but travel and accommodations and those sorts of costs are not covered," Hindley said, last week.

The policy change comes about a week after afamily travelled to the provincial legislature from Saskatoon asking for help.

In 2020, Zachary Engenwas diagnosed witheosinophilic esophagitis, a chronic condition that causes inflammation and contraction of the esophagus.

WATCH| Sask. family can't afford trips to Toronto for specialists not available at home:

Sask. family can't afford trips to Toronto for specialists not available at home

6 months ago
Duration 2:40
The Weber family visited the Legislature Wednesday to describe the financial struggling of going out-of-province to find specialist care for their 16-year-old son, Zach. Saskatchewan has lost its gastroenterologists over the past couple years, but is currently finalizing contracts for two and recruiting more.

The 15-year-old requires a gastronomy tube to eat and struggles to even swallow water.

Until recently,Engen had a pediatric gastroenterologistin Saskatchewan, but after they closed their practicethe family is now forced to travel to Toronto for treatment.

Alyssa Weber, Engen's mother, said trips to Toronto for treatment are, "now necessary, but not financially sustainable."

"My husband can't work because of injury," she said."We have three other children at home. We're travelling, leaving them behind or with family, because we have to travel to Toronto with our son."

Hindley announced this week that the province will now cover up to $2,000 per trip.

He admitted that many of the details of the program will need to be worked out, but said Saskatchewan will model it after what is offered in other provinces.

"If it's determined that this is necessary for the child, for the patient, that this is something that needs to happen and it can't be done here in in Saskatchewan and that child needs to be sent outside of our borders to get that necessary care, that would be part of the criteria," Hindley said Wednesday.

The change will be retroactive to April 1, 2024.