Canada's socialist healthcare system
500 supporters rally for hospital
Cambridge residents fear they'll have to drive to other cities for treatment if services get cut
March 23, 2009
April Robinson
RECORD STAFF
CAMBRIDGE
TheRecord.com - CanadaWorld - 500 supporters rally for hospital
Eric Dahlin relies on Cambridge Memorial Hospital.
He was diagnosed with bladder cancer last year, and has returned for surgeries, checkups and treatments.
Then the cancer came back.
As his local hospital looks ahead to an operational review, and service cuts that may follow, Dahlin is angered by the prospect of driving to Kitchener for treatment.
"I'm not normally politically active," said the 61-year-old yesterday at a rally to get fair funding for the Cambridge hospital. "But I think what's going on is wrong and we've got to fix it."
More than 500 people gathered at the Cambridge Newfoundland Club then marched down Hespeler Road.
They heard brief speeches from local politicians and Cambridge doctors, and asked a few questions of their own.
"How many people have to die before we get what we deserve?" asked Ed Schmeler, who recently had triple bypass surgery. "When you have a serious health problem, you need quick action.
"Why should you have to go to another town?"
Rasa Mazeika has two frail, 87-year-old parents living in Riverbend Place, next to the hospital.
"They're hanging on," she said. "And they're not taking up nursing home beds. How are these people going to get to Waterloo?"
A review of Cambridge Memorial Hospital's budget is underway to cut a projected $3.5 million deficit in the next year. The hospital is required to balance its $104 million budget by the end of 2009-10.
Residents and doctors are worried they'll lose valuable services -- such as obstetrics, oncology and ophthalmology -- and be forced to drive to Kitchener or Guelph for care. They are also frustrated by delays in a much-needed expansion.
"Somehow, in 2003, Cambridge Memorial Hospital fell off the radar of the Liberal government, and it has never been there again," Kitchener-Waterloo MPP Elizabeth Witmer told the cheering crowd.
Both the City of Cambridge and the Region of Waterloo have set aside funding for the expansion.
Sandra Hanmer, of the Waterloo-Wellington Local Health Integration Network, which ordered the budget review, said it's important for all of the local hospitals to "live within their means."
"I think all of us have the same goal in mind today -- a strong community hospital in Cambridge," she said. "It needs to be a sustainable hospital."
A four-person team will report back to the health network this spring, Hanmer said. It's not now known how much the review will cost, or who will pay for it.
Many at the rally questioned the purpose of the Waterloo-Wellington network, and whether it distributes provincial funds fairly. "It's a poor concept," Dahlin said. "It's for government to duck responsibility."
"I'm not sure why we've been centred out to be treated this way," Dr. Glenn Martin told the crowd. "I have strong suspicions we haven't got all the money from the (network) we're supposed to."
Hanmer said it's important to have the structure to make health care decisions "close to home."
Cambridge isn't being targeted, she added. All area hospitals are reviewing their budgets to ensure beds and services are used as efficiently as possible.
Hospitals in Waterloo Region and Wellington County received $730 per resident in 2008-09. That's $279 less than the average for 11 local health networks, according to the Growing Communities Healthcare Alliance.