|
|
Young patients at the Prince Albert Sanatorium in Saskatchewan (ca. 1955). |
For a long time it had been recognized that private resources were inadequate to meet the costs of tuberculosis treatment, often prolonged for several years. Under the old system, TB was not being eradicated. Indeed, it tended to spread as patients, unable to meet the costs, returned to their homes and communities against the advice of the physicians. Worry about financial costs militated against recovery.
Mr. Andrew B. Cook was sheriff of Regina and second
president of the Saskatchewan Anti-Tuberculosis League. In 1922, a report which recommended free
diagnosis and treatment was written by commission member, Dr. R. G. Ferguson. Free treatment for
tuberculosis sufferers by the pooling of facilities in the various municipalities of the province.
Ferguson was also largely responsible for the report's implementation as the General Superintendent of
the Anti-TB League. After more than six years of deliberation, an amendment was made to the Sanatoria and
Hospitals Act, effective 1 January 1929 by the administration of Premier James G. Gardiner.
Saskatchewan thus became the first province to treat all tuberculosis patients without charge to the
individual, the cost being met by taxation. As a result of the stimulation triggered by the success of
this program, medicare was introduced.
|