He said he came to hospital with issues that could have been addressed in the community because there is no one to help him and he can't afford to care for himself at home. The students and their teacher spent the next two hours trying to understand how this was possible.

A colleague of mine was teaching a group of medical students recently and they asked a patient why he was in hospital with an injured leg. He answered, "Because I have no money."

If he had been housed, with enough income to support himself at even the most basic standard of living, allowing him to eat properly, live with less stress, engage with community supports and primary health care, the tens of thousands of health dollars spent on him may well have been avoided.

In my life, the report's findings play out daily : last week I saw a patient who had spent over 10 years living in a ravine. He had been to hospital multiple times during that decade, with heart attacks, skin infections and serious depression.

I am not an economist, but the share of this cost that falls on me and my family is huge.

As a family doctor who works largely with people living on low incomes, poverty is at the root of many of the illnesses I treat. And, a dozen or so years into my career, my workload shows no sign of easing up. A shortsighted perspective would say: "good for me."

We also see the effects of poverty at home: the discomfort of living next to people who are struggling to survive, with the resulting anger and irritation this causes on both sides. Our children coming home from school talking about their friends who have to ask for help to go on a field trip or who hide their inadequate lunches out of shame.

To continue to avoid dealing with this situation is not only immoral, it makes no sense. This report highlights the negative side of continued poverty: Poor health and lost productivity. But to read the report from another angle, it tells me that a society with no poverty would be healthier, happier, and easier to live in. We would also likely save money in the long run.

How do we get there? We know what needs to be done. There has been an endless stream of reports and commissions looking at how to address poverty.

We have Toronto and Ontario poverty reduction strategies and are waiting for a federal version. We know we must address a lack of affordable housing or child care, inadequate social assistance rates and the rise of precarious work. We are pretty sure climate change is making the situation worse.

"I'd be more than happy to pay more taxes if I knew that money would help my community to be healthier and happier."

But the biggest barrier to ending poverty is the political orthodoxy we have lived by for the past 40 or more years, grounded in austerity: That good government is small government, that social programs must shrink and that taxes are evil. It is over this period that we have seen the most dramatic rise in poverty rates and income inequality, with a concentration of wealth in the top 1 per cent. It's time for a rethink.

I'd be more than happy to pay more taxes if I knew that money would help my community to be healthier and happier. I feel good and hopeful when provincial and federal leaders talk about initiatives that will make life easier for those who are most vulnerable and I am more than happy to put my money where my mouth is.

We need action now. The cost of poverty will only continue to go up if we do not start to see real action from government. Some hard choices will have to be made, but this report shows us that if we continue to make decisions without thought of our long-term well-being, we will pay.

I challenge us all to put me out of business.

I would be very happy to know the flow of patients to my door had dried up because we decided to put our resources where they have the most positive impact: Into truly ending poverty, in Toronto and beyond.

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