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Court asked to review Ontario decision to form personal support worker agency

The Home First Alliance for Patients is seeking a judicial review of a government decision to create a central body for agencies that provide home care. Getty Images

TORONTO – A coalition of Ontario’s home-care providers is asking a court to review a government decision to create a central body for delivering personal support care, saying the province did not consult industry members on the move.

The Home First Alliance for Patients, consisting of 11 home-care providers, has filed an application for judicial review of the government decision announced last fall.

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It argues the new agency, which has not been fully launched, would ultimately harm patients as it would introduce uncertainty into the system and could compromise quality of care.

READ MORE: Ontario to boost pay for personal support workers

The application argues the move violates the providers’ collective right to procedural fairness and seeks to have a judge quash the government decision.

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The Ministry of Health and Long-term Care did not immediately respond to request for comment.

The alliance, comprised of high-profile providers including the Victorian Order of Nurses for Canada and Saint Elizabeth Health Care, takes aim at then health minister Eric Hoskins, who stepped down Monday to take a job with the federal government.

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