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National Heart Failure Care Plan

Full Title: An Act to establish a national framework on heart failure

Summary#

This bill directs the federal Minister of Health to create a national framework to improve prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and evaluation of heart failure care across Canada. It requires broad consultations, at least one conference within 12 months, a framework report to Parliament within 18 months, public posting, and a 5‑year effectiveness review. The framework must address early detection, equitable access, patient and caregiver supports, use of telehealth and remote monitoring, and national data and performance indicators (Development (1); Content (2); Consultation (3); Conference (4); Report to Parliament).

  • Sets a plan, not new programs or benefits now. The Minister must table the framework within 18 months and report on results within 5 years (Tabling of framework (1); Report (1)).
  • Requires consultations with provinces, Indigenous governing bodies, clinicians, researchers, patients, and others, plus at least one conference within 12 months (Consultation (3); Conference (4)).
  • Calls for measures for a national heart failure registry and clearer performance indicators, including patient‑reported outcomes like quality of life (Content (2)(f)-(g)).
  • Seeks to address gaps in rural, remote, and underserved areas and to include mental health supports for patients and caregivers (Content (2)(b)-(d)).
  • Emphasizes early detection and guideline‑directed therapy, including virtual visits and remote monitoring (Content (2)(a), (c)).

What it means for you#

  • Households and patients

    • No immediate change in services. The bill sets timelines for planning and reporting, not direct benefits today (Development (1); Tabling of framework (1)).
    • The framework must propose ways to improve early detection, access to diagnosis and treatment, and patient education and mental health supports (Content (2)(a)-(b)).
    • The framework must include measures to use virtual care and remote monitoring, which could reduce travel and wait times if later implemented by provinces or providers (Content (2)(c)).
  • Caregivers

    • The framework must include education and support for caregivers, including mental health resources (Content (2)(b)).
  • Health care professionals

    • Expect consultations and a national conference within 12 months to inform the framework (Consultation (3); Conference (4)).
    • The framework must promote guideline‑directed therapy and multidisciplinary care, and define system‑level indicators and patient‑reported outcomes (Content (2)(c), (g)).
    • If governments adopt the framework’s measures later, providers could face new reporting and data collection tied to indicators and a registry; the bill itself does not impose these changes now (Content (2)(f)-(g)).
  • Provincial/territorial and Indigenous governments and organizations

    • Invited to consult on the framework and attend at least one conference (Consultation (3); Conference (4)).
    • The bill does not mandate provincial implementation or spending; it requires the federal Minister to develop and table the framework (Development (1); Tabling of framework (1)).
  • Researchers and data organizations

    • The framework must propose measures to build health data infrastructure, including a national heart failure registry, optimize the Canadian Community Health Survey, and close data gaps with outcome‑driven research and reporting (Content (2)(e)-(f)).

Expenses#

Estimated net cost: Data unavailable.

  • No fiscal note or official costing is provided. Data unavailable.
  • The bill contains no direct appropriations or funding amounts (entire Act).
  • It requires at least one conference within 12 months, a framework report within 18 months, public posting within 10 days of tabling, and a 5‑year effectiveness report, which imply federal administrative costs; amounts are not stated (Conference (4); Tabling of framework (1)-(2); Report (1)-(2)).
  • Any costs to build or operate a registry or new data systems would depend on decisions made after the framework is developed; the bill only requires that the framework include measures addressing these items (Content (2)(f)). Data unavailable.

Proponents' View#

  • Coordinated action is needed because heart failure has close to 100,000 new diagnoses each year and causes tens of thousands of deaths annually; it is the third‑leading cause of hospitalization (Preamble).
  • A national framework can reduce inequities by improving early detection and access, especially in rural, remote, and underserved areas (Content (2)(a), (d)).
  • Standard indicators and a registry would guide care, track outcomes, and enable better resource planning and evaluation (Content (2)(e)-(g)).
  • Encouraging guideline‑directed therapy, multidisciplinary care, and telehealth can improve outcomes and access to specialists (Content (2)(c)).
  • Patient and caregiver education, including mental health supports, can improve quality of life and self‑management (Content (2)(b)).
  • Broad consultation and a required conference ensure provincial, Indigenous, clinical, and patient voices shape the framework (Consultation (3); Conference (4)).

Opponents' View#

  • Unfunded scope: The bill lists ambitious measures (e.g., registry, indicators) but includes no funding or cost estimate, creating uncertainty for implementation (Content (2)(f)-(g); entire Act).
  • Jurisdiction and overlap: Health care delivery is mainly provincial. A federal framework could duplicate or conflict with existing provincial programs; the bill does not require provincial adoption or coordination mechanisms beyond consultation (Consultation (3); Development (1)).
  • Data privacy and governance: A national registry would involve sensitive health data. The bill does not specify privacy safeguards, consent processes, or data‑sharing agreements (Content (2)(f)).
  • Administrative burden: New indicators and patient‑reported measures can add reporting workload for providers and systems. The bill does not address how to minimize burden or fund data collection (Content (2)(g)).
  • Accountability limits: While a 5‑year effectiveness report is required, the bill sets no specific targets or enforcement tools for results (Report (1)).
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