Ontario's budget neglects health and key social supports amid desperate need

TORONTO, May 15, 2025 /CNW/ - Ontario's budget centred on tariffs fails to address the challenges facing the province's health system and the social and environmental conditions that shape people's health, say members of the Registered Nurses' Association of Ontario (RNAO).

Of paramount concern: the millions of Ontarians without timely access to a regular primary care provider – estimated at 2.5 million in 2023 and anticipated to grow to 4.4 million by next year – if we fail to act quickly. "We applaud the efforts of Dr. Jane Philpott, head of Ontario's Primary Care Action Team and the $2.1 billion announced pre-budget for the sector. RNAO wholeheartedly supports Philpott's plan of attaching within four years every Ontarian to a family physician or nurse practitioner (NP) working within interdisciplinary primary care teams. To reach that goal, however, much larger funding commitments than those announced are needed. Global evidence shows that a robust primary care sector is foundational to strong performing health systems," says RNAO President NP Lhamo Dolkar.

"Among Canadian jurisdictions, Ontario spends the least per capita in health care and social spending, except for Alberta, and this is reflected in Thursday's budget" says Dolkar adding that "alongside the primary care crisis are other troubling performance indicators pointing to long-standing underfunding of the province's health system. Hospitals remain under severe strain – one in five beds is occupied by patients awaiting alternate levels of care, and average emergency department wait times exceed 20 hours. Home care is underfunded and fragmented, leading to prolonged hospital stays, high readmission rates, and frequent emergency department visits. Long-term care continues to operate beyond capacity, with over 45,000 people on waitlists, rising acuity, and insufficient staffing." On this latter point, Dolkar says RNAO is pleased with the launch of a new capital development program, which should be targeted for not-for-profit organizations and municipalities that wish to build new LTC homes, expand or redevelop existing ones.

"The absence of necessary investment in community care in this province will continue to overcrowd and overburden Ontario's hospitals," says Dolkar. "Hallway health care and emergency room wait times are worse today than when the Ford government took power – a direct cause of underinvestment in the community care sector." What's needed, says RNAO, is greater emphasis on primary care and community care as outlined in the association's Enhancing Community Care for Ontarians, ECCO 4.0 report released this past Monday. It calls on the government to rethink how it allocates funding across the whole system and shift focus from a hospital-centric approach to prevention, health promotion and people-centred care in communities across Ontario.