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NDP Associate Shadow Health minister Keith Jorgenson was in Prince Albert on Thursday. (Image Credit: Nigel Maxwell/paNOW Staff)
Provincial politics

NDP health care report outlines concerns around communication, retention, and addictions

Jun 25, 2026 | 5:00 PM

The Saskatchewan NDP says it wants to diagnose what is broken in the province’s health-care system.

The comment from associate shadow health minister Keith Jorgenson came during a stop in Prince Albert on Thursday, one day after the party released an interim health-care report for the ongoing Your Care Your Say project.

Over the past year, the party has engaged in more than 1,000 discussions with health-care workers, patients, researchers, municipal leaders, organizations, and Indigenous leaders. 

“We’ve heard everywhere we went throughout the province that the health-care system was badly broken and it’s not there for people when they need it to deliver the health care they need, when they need it,” he said. 

The NDP’s report covers a broad range of solutions, including making primary care the foundation of the health-care system and putting patients and communities back at the centre of decision-making. 

“All the time, health-care workers and patients complain the Saskatchewan Health Authority and the government have become disconnected from local health care, the needs of local health care, and ignore the skills and resources local communities have to deliver health care.” 

Other solutions include retention and recruitment, as well as improving transparency, accountability and access to information, such as when a hospital is open and what services are available on a given day. 

Jorgenson also acknowledged the province’s mental health and addictions crisis and said it can have an impact on someone waiting for an ambulance or needing a bed in the emergency room. 

“The mental health and addictions crisis is affecting all aspects of the health-care system here in Prince Albert, and the government has really ignored that crisis and allowed it to spiral out of control.” 

In the coming months, the NDP plans to work further on solutions to address the crisis in mental health and addictions. Jorgenson said he expects more specific policy suggestions to be released in the fall.

Response from the government 

In a statement emailed to paNOW by Health Minister Jeremy Cockrill, the document released by the NDP can hardly be called a health-care plan. 

“It does not actually include anything resembling a plan. It is incredibly vague, relying on statements like ‘make every dollar count,’ with no clear actions, original innovation or timelines,” he said. 

By contrast, Cockrill said the Patients First Health Care Plan is a comprehensive, provincewide strategy with specific actions and goals to improve access to care. 

Some of the government’s key actions include: 

  • removing more than 240 clinical policies to allow nurses to practise to their full scope 
  • increasing the number of undergraduate medical seats by 20 
  • increasing the number of physician residency seats by 10 
  • expanding access to virtual care 
  • adding six more urgent care centres throughout the province, for a total of seven 
  • continuing to recruit, train and increase the number of doctors, nurse practitioners, nurses and other health-care professionals 
  • working toward a target of 90 per cent of patients receiving diagnostic scans within 60 days by the end of 2028

“We’re working closely with health-care professionals, municipalities and people across Saskatchewan — and acting on what we hear, delivering on the actions we have identified and making real progress for Saskatchewan patients,” Cockrill said. 

“Promising “big, bold changes,” then delivering a plan this light on details, is exactly why nobody takes the NDP seriously.”

nigel.maxwell@pattisonmedia.com

On X: @nigelmaxwell