![Health-care collaboration on the table as Atlantic premiers finally get in-person meeting](https://i.cbc.ca/1.6392497.1647895026!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/atlantic-premiers.jpg)
Health-care collaboration on the table as Atlantic premiers finally get in-person meeting
CBC
The four Atlantic premiers held their first in-person meeting since before the pandemic on Monday, where they discussed a regional approach to health care and other key regional issues.
At the meeting, held in Halifax and chaired by Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston, the premiers talked about a unified effort to recruit and retain health-care professionals and using potential "excesses" to assist patients in neighbouring provinces.
New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs said the four provinces are not in competition with each other and will be working together to attract health-care workers to the region.
Higgs also said they discussed how provinces can share existing resources. For example, if one area has an "excess" of some service, it could be used by patients from other provinces.
"If we have excess capability and we can utilize that, let's not get hung up on where it is," Higgs said at a wrap-up briefing with the media following the Council of Atlantic Premiers meeting.
He said the patient's home province would pay for the service, but the patient would have to travel to where the service is being offered.
Houston said all four Atlantic provinces are experiencing similar challenges when it comes to health care.
"It's safe to say that health care remains top of mind for each of our provinces and our populations. The shortage of health-care workers is not exclusive to Atlantic Canada, certainly not exclusive to Nova Scotia. It's felt everywhere."
Making it easier for health-care workers to travel between provinces is part of the solution, he said.
Currently, licensing criteria and fees structures are unique to each province and complicate mobility between provinces.
Making it easier for health-care workers to travel between provinces means they could "move around and help each other out," Houston said.
"We are one region and there's lots of family ties between them," he said. "And so those are the opportunities that I'm looking forward to."
Houston said there was a "high degree of interest in harmonizing that stuff."
Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Andrew Furey said "one of the lessons learned from COVID … [is] that health-care mobility is important."