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Ford slammed by rivals over comments about Ontario's ERs
CBC
Progressive Conservative Leader Doug Ford is coming under attack from his rivals for comments he made Sunday about the long waits in many Ontario emergency rooms, suggesting people showing up with minor ailments were partly to blame.
Ford made the comments at a campaign stop in Sault Ste. Marie while responding to a reporter's question about his incumbent government's spending on health-care being the lowest per-capita in the country.
The PC leader defended his party's record but also said that the province needs to "streamline things" to improve the health-care system. He then pointed to a recent conversation he'd had with a doctor about the long line-ups for care at a hospital emergency room in Ontario.
"He says, 'Fifty percent of the people shouldn't be in here,'" Ford said.
"You got a little scrape on your knee or whatever, they should be at a clinic down the street."
Ford then gave another example about a call he'd had with a woman who had gone to the hospital about a sore throat.
"I said, 'Respectfully, that's the problem right there.' Do not go to the emergency department for a sore throat."
Leaders for the Ontario Liberals, NDP and Green Party say Ford's comments are out-of-touch with the challenges patients and health-care staff are facing.
"Where does he want them to go? Quite frankly, they go to the ER because they don't have a family doctor, because this is a situation that he has created," said Ontario Liberal Leader Bonnie Crombie.
"They go to the ERs to get their children's fevers checked out, to get antibiotics, or to address a wound because they don't have a family doctor to do all those things for them."
Crombie added that walk-in clinics are often full as well.
NDP Leader Marit Stiles said Ford's comments were "insulting" to the many Ontarians facing challenges getting health care. She said she's met people on the campaign trail who've traveled long distances to get to an emergency room only to find that it was closed, and even lost loved ones "because they had to travel too far and wide to get health care."
"I find it deeply irresponsible, and frankly, it's a bit rich coming from Doug Ford when he is responsible for the state of our health care system right now. He has been the premier for seven years," she said.
"The answer to our health care problems is not for people to stay home and get sicker."