After controversial directive, Quebec now says anglophones have right to English health services

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By Staff The Canadian Press

Posted September 23, 2024 12:04 pm

1 min read

 'QCGN reacts to government’s promise to clarify new health-care directive'

4:56 QCGN reacts to government’s promise to clarify new health-care directive

RELATED - The Quebec government has promised to clarify its new language directives in health care following a meeting held earlier this week with representatives in the English-speaking community. One group that did not attend the meeting but is a strong advocate for the Anglophone community is the Quebec Community Groups Network. Director-General Sylvia Martin-Laforge joins Global News Morning’s host Laura Casella with more – Aug 15, 2024

The Quebec government has published a new health-care directive clarifying that anglophones have the right to receive health and social services in English.

The five-page document states multiple times that English speakers do not have to prove their identity to receive care in their language.

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It is meant to replace an older directive, published in July, that raised concerns the government was limiting access to health care in languages other than French.

The government promised last month to revise the directive following criticism from anglophone groups and some federal MPs.

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Health Minister Christian Dubé said on X that the government never intended to restrict services, and the updated directive is meant to be easier for health-care workers and the general population to understand.

The updated directive says health-care workers can speak to people in a language other than French if patients request it or don’t appear to understand French.

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