CBC Radio's The House: Nursing the system back to health
Here is what's on this week's episode of The House
The widening vax gap
With hospitals still straining under the burden of new COVID-19 cases, countless surgeries have been cancelled and delayed, leading to growing public frustration.
Corina Heppner's five-year-old son has been awaiting life-changing surgery — a procedure that has been cancelled. She tells The House why she supports the idea of taxing the unvaccinated to reduce pressure on hospitals.
That idea — a tax on those who choose not to get the vaccine — was first floated by Quebec's government. It has further intensified the carrot-versus-stick argument over how best to encourage vaccination. But is it a good idea?
Three MPs — Liberal Marcus Powlowski, Conservative Stephen Ellis and New Democrat Don Davies — join the program to discuss the deepening divide between unvaccinated and vaccinated Canadians.
How can this country fix a health care system under pressure?
Every day brings new reports about rising COVID-19 hospitalizations and burned-out nurses and doctors.
What can provincial and federal leaders do to ease pressure on Canada's health care system, now and in the future?
An ER nurse from Montreal explains the stress being felt on hospital frontlines, and two former health ministers join The House to discuss: Jane Philpott, dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences at Queen's University and former health minister in the Trudeau government; and Fred Horne, adjunct professor at the University of Alberta's School of Public Health and former Progressive Conservative health minister under Alberta premier Alison Redford.
Will premiers pay the price in the polls?
With elections looming later this year in Ontario and Quebec, new polls out this week show Premiers Doug Ford and Francois Legault may face a more disgruntled public as the pandemic stretches on.
Host Chris Hall speaks to two pollsters — president of the Angus Reid Institute Shachi Kurl and executive vice-president of Leger Christian Bourque — about the current public mood and what it could mean for upcoming provincial elections.