Sunday, January 18, 2026
ADVT 
National

Aboriginal children suffer as governments shuffle files: report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Feb, 2015 11:38 AM
  • Aboriginal children suffer as governments shuffle files: report

A study suggests that aboriginal children often get poorer health care than other kids because of disputes between governments about who pays the bill.

Vanda (WAHN'-dah-nah) Sinha (SIHN'-hah) of McGill University says it's hard to put numbers on the problem because nobody is tracking it.

But she says a survey of front-line workers turned up plenty of stories about children suffering as their files are shuffled between federal, provincial and First Nations governments.

Sinha says the federal government has told the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal that such bottlenecks don't exist — or, if they do, they aren't Ottawa's problem.

She says Prime Minister Stephen Harper's Conservatives are trying to solve the problem by defining it so narrowly it disappears.

The study was done by the Assembly of First Nations, the Canadian Paedeatric Society and several universities.

MORE National ARTICLES

Woman Who Broke Leg On Tube Ride Sues B.C. Mountain Resort For Negligence

Woman Who Broke Leg On Tube Ride Sues B.C. Mountain Resort For Negligence
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A Kamloops, B.C., woman has filed a lawsuit against Sun Peaks Resort Corp., after a bumpier-than-expected tube ride left her with a broken leg.

Woman Who Broke Leg On Tube Ride Sues B.C. Mountain Resort For Negligence

Key recommendations from report on fatal shootings of Mounties in Moncton

Key recommendations from report on fatal shootings of Mounties in Moncton
MONCTON, N.B. — Some of the key recommendations in a report released Friday on the fatal shootings last year of three Mounties in Moncton, N.B.:

Key recommendations from report on fatal shootings of Mounties in Moncton

Review of fatal RCMP shootings in Moncton highlights number of problems

Review of fatal RCMP shootings in Moncton highlights number of problems
MONCTON, N.B. — RCMP officers responding to the fatal shootings of three Mounties in Moncton last year faced a number of challenges that included communicating accurate information, accessing high-powered weaponry and securing hard body armour, says a review released Friday.

Review of fatal RCMP shootings in Moncton highlights number of problems

Second man guilty in Rehtaeh Parsons case apologizes, gets year of probation

Second man guilty in Rehtaeh Parsons case apologizes, gets year of probation
HALIFAX — The young Halifax-area man who posed for an explicit photo showing him having sex with 15-year-old Rehtaeh Parsons apologized in court Thursday to her family but said he wasn't a bully as he was sentenced to a year of probation for distributing child pornography.

Second man guilty in Rehtaeh Parsons case apologizes, gets year of probation

Smaller communities shocked by Target closure, worry about job losses

Smaller communities shocked by Target closure, worry about job losses
The closure of Target's Canadian stores might be a disappointment to some big-city shoppers but it comes as a body blow for some smaller communities across the country.

Smaller communities shocked by Target closure, worry about job losses

PQ's Drainville calls for secular charter to ward off extremists

PQ's Drainville calls for secular charter to ward off extremists
QUEBEC — The Parti Quebecois politician behind the doomed values charter wants the province to adopt a modified version in order to fight ''extremists who commit crimes and kill people.''

PQ's Drainville calls for secular charter to ward off extremists