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Ontario Hospitals Demand $1 Billion to Address Funding Shortfall

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Ontario hospitals are calling for an additional $1 billion in funding this year to manage rising operational costs driven by population growth and inflation. The Ontario Hospital Association (OHA) reports that hospitals across the province are facing severe financial pressures, significantly higher than the deficits recorded at the end of the previous year.

In 2024-25, the overall hospital deficit was $360 million, reduced from an initial projection of $706 million due to year-end revenues, including government support. Despite this reduction, hospitals are entering the 2025-26 fiscal year with lingering deficits and additional unfunded cost pressures. The OHA estimates that these factors necessitate an extra $1 billion in funding, even with the $1.1 billion allocated in the provincial budget earlier this year.

Complex Challenges Facing Hospitals

Melissa Prokopy, OHA’s vice-president of policy and advocacy, highlighted the multifaceted challenges confronting hospitals. “Hospitals are facing a multitude of complex challenges—financial challenges, operational challenges, and pressures such as inflation and increased demand for services,” she stated in an interview. Prokopy emphasized that while hospitals have sought efficiencies and are recognized as the most efficient in Canada, there are limits to what can be achieved through measures like managing admissions and innovating care procedures.

The provincial government is preparing to release its fall economic statement, which acts as a mini-budget, in the coming weeks. However, a spokesperson for Health Minister Sylvia Jones, Ema Popovic, did not confirm whether additional funding for hospitals would be included. She noted that the government continues to collaborate with hospital partners to ensure that facilities have the necessary resources to provide quality care.

Need for Long-Term Planning and Support

This year marked a 4 percent funding increase for the hospital sector, marking the third consecutive year of such increases. Despite these increments, Prokopy stressed the need for more multi-year planning to enhance budget predictability and stability. “The pressures aren’t new for this year,” she said. “Many of them are structural in nature and have been building for years. It is crucial to sustain service delivery in the short term while also planning for longer-term needs, especially considering the aging population and the complexity of care.”

Lee Fairclough, the Liberal Party’s hospitals critic and a former hospital president, pointed out that labor costs constitute the majority of hospital expenditures, limiting financial flexibility. “What are our other options? Continuing to reduce the quality of the food?” she questioned. Fairclough suggested exploring alternative revenue sources, although options like increasing parking fees are often not favored due to their impact on patients.

Fairclough emphasized the urgency of the situation, stating, “At a certain point, you can’t tell a hospital, ‘You can’t cut services, but you still have to pay for everything.’” As hospitals strive to manage their budgets effectively, the call for enhanced government support grows louder.

This report underscores the critical financial challenges faced by Ontario hospitals and the pressing need for a robust funding strategy to ensure the continued delivery of essential health services.

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