"The gap gets bigger and bigger and bigger," Mehra said. "The hospital cuts have been very deep, indeed, and another year of inadequate funding for hospitals is going to mean more problems for patients, accessing care and services."
In an earlier interview Thursday with The Sault Star, Mehra said Ontario, "by every reasonable measure," underfunds its hospitals and has cut services more than any other "comparable jurisdiction."
"The evidence is overwhelming," she said. "It's irrefutable that the cuts have gone too far and are causing harm. The issue is levelling political power and what we have is the vast majority of Ontarians do not support the cuts. They want services restored in their local hospitals and that's a priority issue for every community that I've been too ... And I've spent 16 years traveling the province non-stop."
Northern Ontario, principally due to its geographic challenges, is especially getting short shrift," Mehra said.
"Because of the distances involved and because of the costs involved for patients, the impact is much more severe on people," she said, adding