- Healthy Environment
- Aircraft Noise in the Vicinity of Airports
- Arsenic in Drinking Water
- Dioxins and Furans
- Drinking Water Chlorination
- Effects of Lead on Human Health
- Electric and Magnetic Fields at Extremely Low Frequencies
- Fluorides and Human Health
- Health Risks of Asbestos
- Hearing Loss and Leisure Noise
- Indoor Air
- Mercury and Human Health
- PCBs
- Radon
- Road Traffic and Air Pollution
- Smog and Your Health
- The Safety of Manmade Vitreous Fibres
- Ultraviolet Radiation From the Sun
- Vermiculite Insulation Containing Asbestos
OHIP - Ontario Health Insurance Plan
Ontario residents are eligible for provincially funded health coverage - Ontario Health Insurance Plan (OHIP). A resident of Ontario must have a health card to show that he or she is entitled to health care services paid for by OHIP. The Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care pays for a wide range of services, however, it does not pay for services that are not medically necessary, such as cosmetic surgery.
Most of your Ontario health benefits are covered across Canada. The province or territory you are visiting will usually bill the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care directly for hospital and physician services. In Quebec, you may have to pay for physician services and then submit your receipt to your local ministry office for payment.
OHIP coverage normally becomes effective three months after the date you establish residency in Ontario. The ministry strongly encourages new and returning residents to purchase private health insurance in case you become ill during the OHIP waiting period.
