
Some Manitobans can now obtain medical services in hospital without a health card
Hospital physicians can now bill the health-care system for certain patients without a health card, Doctors Manitoba said.
The change applies to people who are eligible for coverage but don't have a personal health I.D. number, such as newborns, people experiencing homelessness, new residents to Canada and people who've recently been incarcerated.
Doctors Manitoba president Nichelle Desilets said the move will reduce the administrative burdens on physicians and allow them to get reimbursed faster, all while ensuring more patients receive medical care.
"I've seen dramatic, life-threatening situations develop due to folks not seeking care as early as they could have for this reason," she said. "The good faith billing option is really helpful. It definitely puts us more in line with other provinces."
Tobi Jolly, community wellness director at Siloan Mission, said while people without health cards can usually access emergency medical services, they find it difficult to receive ongoing care or visit specialists.
"We've had community members who have come in and been fearful of going to the hospital, because, 'They're going to ask for my health card,' " Jolly said, adding she hopes the new good faith billing process changes this.
"It's really exciting for us to know that our community members will get the care they need at the hospital as well."
Jolly said expanding good faith billings to clinics and other settings outside hospitals, including Siloam, would alleviate even more barriers to health care.
Some Manitobans without health cards now have hospital visits covered
4 minutes ago
Duration 2:09
Doctors Manitoba says hospital physicians can now bill the province's health-care system for certain patients who don't have a health card, including newcomers to Canada and people who are homeless, bringing relief to at least one organization that works with vulnerable patients.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
28 minutes ago
- CTV News
‘That's how we talk': Camp for kids who stutter launches in Calgary
A camp for children who stutter underway in Calgary is taking a different approach, encouraging kids to embrace the stutter and speak with confidence. A camp for children who stutter is in Calgary this week, and it is taking a different approach to how people handle the speech disorder. Instead of trying to change how someone with a stutter talks, 'Camp Dream. Speak. Live' encourages people to embrace it and speak with confidence. 'We are learning about communication and owning our space when we're talking in front of the whole group,' said Theo Greening, 8, who is one of the more than a dozen attendees. The camp is a partnership with the Arthur M. Blank Center for Stuttering Education and Research at the University of Texas at Austin. Similar camps have been held every year internationally, but this week marks the first stop in Canada. On Wednesday, the children paraded through parts of Fish Creek Park to show off handwritten signs and then took turns on a microphone to share their messages about stuttering. A camp for children who stutter is in Calgary this week, and it is taking a different approach to how people handle the speech disorder. A camp for children who stutter is in Calgary this week, and it is taking a different approach to how people handle the speech disorder. The kids hope to take the lessons they're learning this week back to their friends and classmates next school year. 'I think I'll be talking to them about how we stutter and why we stutter,' said Ibukun Akinwamide, 8. 'We are made like this. That's how we talk,' the girl said. The family of 10-year-old Oliver Netsko, who spoke to CTV News last year about his efforts to change the stigma around stuttering, played a big part in bringing the camp to Calgary. 'We're also learning about voice, to not speak too loud and too quiet. It's been very fun,' said Netsko. The week-long camp is free for the children to attend. The goal is to hold it annually in Calgary. 'It's been really exciting to see the kids right from the first day; they get up and they're so confident and they stand with that microphone. That is what we're teaching—just to be confident communicators, regardless of whether you stutter or not,' said Carmen Archibald, a speech-language pathologist.


CTV News
28 minutes ago
- CTV News
‘Helps me greatly': Alberta team explores exercise benefits for cancer patients
An Alberta team is studying how exercise after—and even during—cancer treatments can provide survival benefits. Results will be released soon. An Alberta team is studying how exercise after—and even during—cancer treatments can provide survival benefits. Results will be released soon. Study on exercise after and during cancer treatment looking positive An Alberta team is studying how exercise after—and even during—cancer treatments can provide survival benefits. Alberta Community Exercise (ACE) programs have been held throughout the province since 2017, and the research team is expected to release results soon from its study of more than 2,500 participants. Some participants are already touting the benefits. 'Very helpful, and it's very important that they are here to guide us to do the exercises that are good for us individually,' said two-time breast cancer survivor Lynne Farley of Calgary. Two-time breast cancer survivor Lynne Farley. Two-time breast cancer survivor Lynne Farley. Research is already revealing promising data about exercise programs in oncology treatment, including an 18-year study on colon cancer patients from all over the world recently published in the New England Journal of Medicine. 'Hard data showing the survival benefits of exercise and those benefits, they're comparable to what you would see with some of the drug treatments,' said Dr. Nicole Culos-Reed, a University of Calgary kinesiology professor and founder of Alberta Community Exercise (ACE). This information is validating but not surprising for Culos-Reed, who started the ACE program for people with all kinds of cancer. 'It's not just early stage; we're seeing metastatic disease … really higher-risk cancers like neural oncology brain tumours,' said Culos-Reed. Participants range from recent post-cancer to those waiting for or in the middle of treatment. A specially trained team helps tailor exercises for individual needs and abilities. 'We've had people contact, and they say, 'I have a walker; can I do your program?' And I think at first it was like, I don't know—let's try it out and see, and then we can get these people into the class.' said Jessica Danyluk, a clinical exercise physiologist with ACE. Alberta Community Exercise founder Dr. Nicole Culos-Reed, two-time breast cancer survivor Lynne Farley and clinical exercise physiologist Jessica Danyluk. Alberta Community Exercise founder Dr. Nicole Culos-Reed, two-time breast cancer survivor Lynne Farley and clinical exercise physiologist Jessica Danyluk. The social side of the class is just as important. 'Just being able to talk to people in the same situation as I am just helps me greatly,' said Farley. People who qualify for ACE get the first 12 weeks free thanks to donors, but continued programs cost participants about $7 a class. The program isn't currently funded by the province, but people involved with ACE hope that changes. 'Because people need it. It will help them build confidence, build strength, empower them,' said Danyluk. All of which is vital for people who have faced a lack of control due to disease. 'You've got to keep going—do these programs. Live each day and make the most of each day,' said Farley.


CTV News
28 minutes ago
- CTV News
Study on exercise after and during cancer treatment looking positive
Calgary Watch An Alberta team is studying how exercise after—and even during—cancer treatments can provide survival benefits. Results will be released soon.