Title: B'C' Tripartite First Nations Health Plan
1B.C. Tripartite First Nations Health Plan
- Vancouver Island First Nations Health Governance
Conference - March 11, 2009
2THE BC TRIPARTITE HEALTH PLAN
On June 11, 2007, the First Nations Leadership
Council (FNLC), the Province of British
Columbia (BC) and the Government of Canada signed
the BC Tripartite First Nations Health Plan to
create fundamental change and close the gaps in
health status between First Nations and other
British Columbians.
It is a 10-year health plan with four key
elements
- Governance, Relationships and Accountability
- Health Promotion / Injury and Disease Prevention
- Health Services
- Performance Tracking
3HOW DID WE GET HERE?
- A New Relationship (March 17, 2005)
- The Province of British Columbia and First
Nations Leaders agreed to enter into A New
Relationship guided by the principles of trust,
recognition and respect for Aboriginal rights and
title. - The New Relationship focuses on closing the gaps
in quality of life between First Nations and
other British Columbians. - First Nations Health Blueprint for BC (July 15,
2005) - Improve delivery of, and access to, health
services to meet the needs of all Aboriginal
peoples through better integration and adaptation
of all health systems. - Measures to ensure that Aboriginal peoples
benefit fully from improvements to Canadian
health systems. - A forward looking agenda of prevention, health
promotion and other upstream investments for
Aboriginal people.
4HOW DID WE GET HERE? (Contd)
- Transformative Change Accord (November 25, 2005)
- First Ministers and Aboriginal Leaders committed
to strengthening relationships on a
government-to-government basis and to focus
efforts on closing the gaps in education,
economic opportunities, housing and health. - Establish mental health programs to address
substance abuse and youth suicide. - Integrate the ActNow Strategy with First Nations
health programs to reduce the incidence of
diabetes. - Establish tripartite pilot programsto improve
acute care and community health services
utilizing an integrated approach to health and
community programs as directed by the needs of
First Nations. - Increase number of trained First Nations health
care professionals. - As part of the TCA, the Parties agreed that by
Dec. 2006, a detailed tripartite implementation
plan would be developed laying out specific
actions and building on a shared commitment to
undertake as many initiatives as possible in year
one of the 10-Year Plan (2006-2016).
5HOW DID WE GET HERE? (Contd)
- The bilateral First Nations Health Plan signed on
Nov. 27, 2006 builds on the BC Provincial
Health Officers Report (2001) - Recognizes First Nations must be full partners in
the design and delivery of health initiatives to
benefit them and their people. - Reciprocal accountability between governments and
First Nations is fundamental to addressing
socio-economic gaps. - The Tripartite First Nations Health Plan MOU
signed on Nov. 27, 2006 sets out an initial
framework for a Tripartite First Nations Health
Plan and identifies priority areas for
collaborative action. - The Tripartite First Nations Health Plan signed
on June 11, 2007 reflects a shared vision of - First Nations are fully involved in the
decision-making regarding the health of
their peoples. - Health and well-being of First Nations is
improved. - Gaps in the health between First Nations people
and other British Columbians closed. - Equitable access to quality culturally competent
services.
6SIMILAR ACTIONS IN OTHER SECTORS
- Tripartite Education First Nations Jurisdiction
Framework Agreement (July 5, 2006) - Power and authority to govern and control K-12
education on reserve that is recognized by
federal and provincial governments - First Nations Education Authority to exercise
jurisdiction in areas of teacher certification,
school certification, and establishment of
curriculum and examination standards - Child and Family Services
- Delegation agreements to Aboriginal agencies to
undertake administration of Child, Family and
Community Service Act - Levels of delegation include guardianship
services for children in continuing care full
child protection authority to investigate
reports and remove children
7WHY WE NEED TO ACT
- Many decisions on programs are made outside of
First Nations communities - Division of federal and provincial roles and
responsibilities leads to fragmented health
services and programming - Under-developed data, reporting, surveillance and
management tools - Services lacking in cultural competence
- Difficulty in collaborating between health and
other sectors and lack of a plan to address
health determinants
8FIRST NATIONS IN THE VANCOUVER ISLAND HEALTH
AUTHORITY REGION
9VANCOUVER ISLAND FIRST NATIONS
- Vancouver Island First Nations have been leaders
and at the forefront of FNIHBs transfer policy - 42 bands operating under a Health Plan (Transfer
or Flexible Transfer Agreement) - 2 bands operating under a Workplan (Integrated or
Transitional Agreement) - 6 bands operating under a Health Program (General
or Set Agreement) - There are 3 main First Nations entities on
Vancouver Island - Cowichan Indian Band
- Inter-Tribal Health Authority (Kwakutl District
Council are members) - Nuu-Chah-Nulth Tribal Council
10VANCOUVER ISLAND FIRST NATIONS
- Cowichan Indian Band
- One of the largest bands in BC
- Expected to move to a Flexible Transfer Agreement
in 2010 - Inter-Tribal Health Authority
- Largest First Nations multi-disciplinary health
service organization in British Columbia - Nuu-Chah-Nulth Tribal Council
- Signed the first 10 year Flexible Transfer
Agreement in Canada effective April 1, 2008.
Previously, NTC managed a health service transfer
agreement for 20 years
11COLLABORATIVE ACTION HEALTH PROMOTION, DISEASE
PREVENTION AND SERVICES
- Aboriginal Physician Advisor (Dr. Evan Adams)
- Early Childhood Screening Programs (vision,
dental, hearing) - Mental Health and Substance Use (Aboriginal
Reference Group) - Tele-health (Centre of Excellence, E-health,
Tele-wound care MOU) - Patient Navigator Program (supported by AHTF)
- Gathering Wisdom 2008
- ActNow BC
12COLLABORATIVE ACTION GOVERNANCE
- There is a commitment to create a new structure
for the governance of First Nations health
services in BC that will be responsible for - Regional health planning and administration
- Health design, delivery and accountability
- Reflect the service delivery needs of First
Nations and, - Define the status of results to be achieved.
- The new governance structure for First Nations
health services in BC will have four essential
components.
13COMPONENTS OF A NEW FIRST NATIONS HEALTH
GOVERNANCE STRUCTURE
FIRST NATIONS HEALTH GOVERNANCE, RELATIONSHIPS,
AND ACCOUNTABILITY
First NationsHealth Council
Provincial Advisory Committee On First Nations
Health
First Nations Health Governing Body
Association Of Health Directors
14FIRST NATIONS INTERIM HEALTH GOVERNANCE COMMITTEE
(FNIHGC)
- FNHC has created the FNIHGC to lead this work for
First Nations in the discussions with BC and
Canada around the new structure to govern First
Nations health services in BC. - FNIHGC has three Co-Chairs Grand Chief Ed John
Grand Chief Doug Kelly and Chief Wayne
Christian. - 5 First Nations regional caucuses are being
formed to provide a mechanism for First Nations
to participate and drive the process. - Each Caucus will identify members to sit on the
FNIHGC.
15FIRST NATIONS HEALTH GOVERNANCE
- First Nations central to design and delivery of
all health services at community level - Control of First Nations health services by
First Nations. - Health Canada to become funder and governance
partner. - Governing Body Effective participation of First
Nations in - Enacting policies
- Identifying results
- Allocating resources
- Establishing service standards and,
- Implementing reciprocal accountability.
16HEALTH CANADA FUNDER AND GOVERNANCE PARTNER
- A New Funding Relationship
- A fair share of HCs First Nations dedicated
resources - Multi-year agreement with built in escalator
- A share of new program funding and,
- A flexible transfer like financial agreement.
- Reciprocal Accountability
- Maintenance of the historical First
Nations/Federal legal relationship - Accountable to meet its commitments and,
- Holding other partners accountable for their
commitments in the Tripartite Health Plan - A partner in health planning and evaluation.
- A new governance structure for FNIHB that gives
BC First Nations a role in shaping federal First
Nations health policies and programs. - A non-political professional relationship as
well as a separate political one.
17OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES
- What would happen if First Nations in BC were
free to design their own programs, create their
own priorities, allocate funding as they see fit? - Would the health programs and financial support
to First Nations be better or worse if First
Nations where to take over the functions of FNIH
regional office? - What would a health care system based on BC First
Nations community values look like? - What would happen if the provincial government
and First Nations in BC became close partners,
working together to provide health services to
First Nations people and other BC residents? - Can we manage a smooth transition so that First
Nations people receive ever improving health
services?
18POTENTIAL BENEFITS
- Decisions made by First Nations in BC for First
Nations in BC. - Services organized by needs of patient and skills
of organization not jurisdiction - Opportunity to pool/ re-allocate resources and
leverage funds to increase access and obtain
better care. - More effective and efficient programs and
services. - Community-based approach where the services are
reflective of regional particularities and also
provided closer to home. - Service delivery that makes sense within
catchments that could extend to urban
populations. - Increased collaboration across sectors and
effective action on health determinants. - Improved accountability.
19NEXT STEPS
- Communicating
- Continue talking, engaging and listening -
explaining what we are doing and why we are doing
it - Building
- Preparatory work to transition control of FNIH
programs, services and resources to a new FNHGB. - Strengthening the relationship between First
Nations and provincial health authorities. - Adapting and enhancing programs and services to
better serve First Nations. - Collaborating
- Developing the capacities, mechanisms, tools and
procedures to work more effectively together. - Performance Tracking
- Putting in place evaluation tools to measure
progress against that goals we have set for
ourselves.
20ANNEX A BC REGION EXPENDITURES
- Total Expenditures approximately 288,000,000
- Staff approximately 225
21ANNEX B BC REGION NON-INSURED BENEFITS
2007-2008 ( Millions)
Total 119.6M
22ANNEX C BC REGION COMMUNITY REGIONAL PROGRAMS
2007-2008 ( Millions)
Total 156.6M