New Quebec health plan promises better access to care, improved working conditions for nurses
The CAQ government plans major changes to health-care delivery by 2025

Quebec unveiled its plan to heal its beleaguered health care and social services system over the next three years, with a focus on accelerating access to front-line health services through a one-stop phone service, reducing emergency room wait times and improving working conditions for nurses.
But opposition parties are slamming the document, describing it as more of an electoral platform than a detailed plan for health-care reform.
The plan, outlined in a 90-page document called "Human and Efficient — Plan to implement necessary health changes," highlights some solutions to the system's challenges made worse by the pandemic, including lack of personnel, rising costs, and an aging population.
Health Minister Christian Dubé and Lionel Carmant, Quebec's junior health minister, rolled out the details of the plan Tuesday morning.
Dubé said one of his key objectives is to ensure all Quebecers have "the best patient experience and that they are proud of their health system."
Among the 50 proposed measures, which were leaked in a document obtained by Radio-Canada last week, are eliminating mandatory overtime for nurses, hiring of 3,000 new clerks by the end of the year to take on some of the paperwork, more home-care services for seniors, modernizing access to medical data and the creation of electronic health records accessible to patients.
WATCH | Christian Dubé explains why Quebecers should trust his government's plan:
The new health plan document doesn't include costs, but Dubé pointed to a budget increase of 6.3 per cent for the health system in the coming year.
Last week, Finance Minister Eric Girard said that increase will be put toward the revamping of the system.
But money is only part of the solution, Dubé said.
"It takes more than money — it takes a willingness to work differently."
However, Parti Québécois Leader Paul St-Pierre Plamondon said the plan is too short on details and financial commitments.
"With a few months until the elections, they come up with all those things [that are] not measured, no figures and no precise targets," he said.
One-stop service for Quebecers without family doctors
The government plans to change the way family doctors are paid, from a per-act to a per-patient basis, in an effort to get those doctors to take on more patients.
There are some 945,000 Quebecers who are still on the official waiting list for a family doctor, according to the document, but it's estimated the actual number of people without one is closer to 1.5 million.
Dubé said the government is still working on reducing the number of people on that list. But the government is backing away from a promise made in 2018 to get everyone a family doctor by the end of the CAQ government's first mandate this year.
The plan now calls for stepping up alternatives for front-line care, including giving nurse practitioners, paramedics and pharmacists more power to treat patients.
Under the plan, Quebecers will call a phone number which would act as a one-stop service, known as the guichet d'accès à la première ligne (GAP), where a nurse would direct patients to the appropriate medical service, whether that's seeing a doctor or lining them up with some other method of care.
"It's not only theoretical. It's already started," said Dubé, who pointed to a pilot project in the Lower Saint-Lawrence region.
Dubé said he hopes that "the majority" of people without a family doctor will be able to use the one-stop service by the end of the summer. However, that service was already supposed to be in place across the province by March 31.
The junior health minister, Carmant, underlined that the service will be managed regionally and will be accessible in English.
The hope is that under this plan, fewer Quebecers would need to go to a hospital emergency room for health issues that could be treated elsewhere.
But Liberal Leader Dominique Anglade said a phone line is not a replacement for a family doctor.
"That one person knows your file, knows your history," she said. "They can ensure a follow up, and for clinical problems, this is really fundamental."
Federation of family doctors welcomes plan
The federation representing general practitioners in Quebec supports the idea of the one-stop service, saying it could help match patient needs with the professional who is best-suited to address their needs, whether that be a nurse practitioner or a social worker.
Dr. Marc-André Amyot, president of the Fédération des médecins omnipraticiens du Québec