Harm reduction is vital to save lives and build healthier communities -- Our statement on Ontario's Safer Streets Stronger Communities Act

On December 4, the Government of Ontario passed the Safer Streets Stronger Communities Act, legislation that will permanently close vital supervised consumption services in communities across Ontario. At the same time, the government is removing critical harm reduction tools from its new model of care that help save lives, keep used needles off our streets, and allow people to access mental health and addictions services.

Ontario's community health sector launches campaign, profiling staffing challenges and impacts on patient care 

Today, the Alliance for Healthier Communities, along with nine other provincial associations representing Ontario’s community health sector and its hundreds of thousands of dedicated staff, are standing together to raise wide awareness of the large and growing wage gap impacting the care that millions of people in Ontario rely on.

On Truth and Reconciliation Day, we focus on the truth, and reflect on actions needed now on Indigenous health

To mark this Truth and Reconciliation Day, we recognize truths that remain unheard, and actions that still need to be taken. We’re also celebrating the work currently underway to advance Indigenous health, while calling for increased access to culturally appropriate and safe care to address ongoing health inequities in Indigenous communities all across these lands.

Ontario Needs a Strategy for Francophone Health and Wellbeing that Works

As we celebrate Franco-Ontarian Day today, and all the contributions that Francophones make to the culture and communities across the province, we call for action from Ontario on a provincial Francophone Primary Care Strategy. The health outcomes of thousands of Francophones living in Ontario depend on urgent action to ensure health equity for French speakers in the province.

Eliminating access to vital harm reduction care and programs will have high costs for Ontario families – including more deaths due to toxic drugs + increased costs to our health system

Today’s announcement by the Ontario government to close 10 Consumption and Treatment Services (CTS) sites, seven of which are embedded within Community Health Centres across Ontario, is hugely disappointing. This decision means vitally needed services and programs will disappear at a time when they’re needed most. It means that people will disappear in far greater numbers in months and years ahead, from fatal and avoidable poisonings. Moms, sons, daughters, dads, uncles, cousins, friends, colleagues will disappear from people’s lives forever with this sudden policy change.

On International Women's Day, a call to action on women's health

We mark and celebrate International Women’s Day with a call to action in support of women’s and girls' health in Ontario, in Canada and around the world.

Women’s health touches a vast array of advocacy fronts at local, national, and international levels. These include access to housing, settlement and refugee services; reproductive health care including access to abortion services and no-cost contraception options; mental health care and supports for women and girls facing domestic violence; and more. All of these things are interrelated.

Black History Month 2024: Learning, listening and taking action on Black health and wellbeing

Each February, as we pause to reflect, celebrate and to listen during Black History Month, we’re invited into a space to recognize and reckon with the past, to take accounting of the present, and to dream, plan for and commit to equitable and just futures for Black people and communities in Canada.

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