National Health Policy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 64
About This Presentation
Title:

National Health Policy

Description:

Main issue in Canada: ... HEALTH CARE in CANADA in 2004. The main concern of the Canadian ... Canada - Health care is publicly administered. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:187
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 65
Provided by: ervinbpo
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: National Health Policy


1
National Health Policy

Ervin B. Podgorsak McGill University Montreal,
Quebec, Canada
2
  • North America
  • Canada
  • USA
  • Mexico
  • Canada
  • Federal parliamentary monarchy
  • Federation of
  • 10 provinces
  • 3 territories
  • USA
  • Federal presidential republic
  • Federation of
  • 50 states

3
  • North America
  • Canada
  • USA
  • Mexico
  • Tenets of Constitution
  • USA
  • Life
  • Liberty
  • Pursuit of happiness
  • Canada
  • Peace
  • Order
  • Good government

4
North America (2003)
U.S. Canada U.S./Canada Populatio
n (million) 288 32 9
1 GNP (billion US) 10 450 728
14.4 1 (1 0.07) GNP per capita (
US) 34 320 27 130 1.3 1 (1
0.77) SOURCE HDR 2003
5
UNITED STATES vs.CANADA
  • Similar political systems
  • Similar economic and social systems
  • One anothers best trading partner
  • Differences between the two countries
  • - World view
  • - Foreign policy
  • - Gun control
  • - Organization and financing of health care

6
Canada versus the United States
Canadians see themselves as part of the
world. Americans see themselves as part of the
United States.
7
Health Care
  • The most important characteristics
  • of a health care system are
  • Quality Cost Access

8
MODELS FOR HEALTH CARE FINANCING
  • Nationalized
  • public
  • single-payer
  • not-for-profit
  • Privatized
  • multi-payer
  • for-profit
  • Combination of public and private

9
Health Care in North America (2003)
Shares of total health expenditures
  • Public () Private ()
  • Canada 71 29
  • United States 44 56
  • OECD average 72 28
  • SOURCE OECD

10
THE GREAT AMERICAN HEALTH CARE DEBATE
  • Americans are aware that their health care
  • system is expensive, overly bureaucratic,
  • inequitable, and socially unjust.
  • Americans agree in principle that all residents
  • of the U.S. should have access to high quality
  • health care regardless of their ability to pay
  • however, there is not enough political will
  • to reform the system.

11
THE GREAT AMERICAN HEALTH CARE DEBATE
  • Despite numerous attempts by various presidents
  • during the past 2 decades to reform the U.S.
    health
  • care system, the reform of the system is as
    elusive
  • as ever.
  • Despite having by far the most expensive health
  • care system in the world, in ranking on health
  • care indicators the U.S. achieves only a mediocre
    place among the 30 OECD countries.

12
THE GREAT CANADIAN HEALTH CARE DEBATE
  • Canadians are both proud of, and unhappy
  • with, their health care system.
  • During the 1980s and 1990s the debate
  • concentrated on perceived excessive costs.
  • During the past 5 years the debate shifted to
  • a much more ominous symptom
  • the problems with access to diagnostic
  • and therapeutic services.

13
THE GREAT CANADIAN HEALTH CARE DEBATE
  • Canadians generally agree that their health
  • care system needs reform.
  • There is no agreement on how to solve
  • the current problems.
  • Proposed solutions range from pumping
  • much more public money into the system
  • to an outright privatization.

14
Health Care in North America (2004)
  • Main issue in Canada
  • How to best ensure the universal and timely
    access to the public health care system in an
    era of severe fiscal restraint by governments.
  • Main issue in the United States
  • How to use government intervention to make the
    current health care system universally
    accessible and more cost- effective.

15
Health Care in North America
  • During 1970s and 1980s Americans have paid
    considerable attention to the structure and
    history of the Canadian health care system with
    its
  • universal coverage
  • lower cost
  • high standards
  • public administration
  • clinical autonomy of physicians
  • During 1990s health care reforms in the United
    States failed and, concurrently, the Canadian
    health care system run into serious financial
    trouble.

16
HEALTH CARE in CANADA in 2004 The main concern
of the Canadian Governments is the high cost
of health care. The main concern of the Canadian
public is access to health care.
17
CANADIAN HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
  • The Canadian health care is financed publicly and
    has three primary players
  • Provincial governments Under the Canadian
    Constitution health care is the jurisdiction of
    provincial governments who manage, deliver and
    plan health care services.
  • Federal government Sets and enforces national
    health care standards through the Canada Health
    Act and assists the provinces in health care
    system financing through the transfer of tax
    revenue to the provinces.
  • Private physicians paid on a fee-for-service
    basis by provincial governments to deliver
    publicly-funded health services. The fees are
    negotiated between the provincial goverments and
    physician associations.

18
Health Care in Canada (2004)
  • Difficulties with financing
  • Decline in public support
  • Shortages of staff and equipment
  • Low morale among health care workers
  • Increased tension between federal government
    and provinces
  • Restricted access to specialists
  • Waiting times for diagnostic procedures
  • Waiting times for non-emergency surgery and
    cancer therapy

19
Health Care System in Canada
  • IN PRINCIPLE
  • The single payer, publicly-administered health
    care system
  • provides universal access to health care for
    all citizens
  • is less expensive and more efficient than the
    private health care system
  • - because of its lower administrative costs
  • - because governments can set global budgets
    for hospitals and negotiate fees with
    physicians

20
Health Care in North America
  • Canada
  • - Health care is publicly administered.
  • - All residents enjoy universal access to
    hospital care and physicians services without
    any cost-sharing requirements.
  • United States
  • - Health care financing is based on
    profit-driven private insurance plans and
    health maintenance organizations (HMOs).
  • - Publicly financed are Medicare and
    Medicaid, covering 40 of the population for
    hospital insurance and 25 of population
  • for medical coverage.
  • - An estimated 44 million Americans are not
    insured.

21
Milestones Health Care in the United States
  • 1935 Social Security Act (does not include
    health insurance)
  • 1939, 1943, Attempts to introduce a national
    health insurance
  • late 1940s plan were defeated by the Congress
  • Early 1960s President Kennedys attempts were
    unsuccessful
  • 1964 Medicare and Medicaid programs pass

22
Milestones Health Care in the United States
  • 1973 Health Maintenance Organization (HMO) Act
  • encourages development of prepaid group plans
    to restrain providers and centralize health
    care delivery.
  • 1982 to control Medicare costs the government
    introduces a fee schedule based on Diagnostic
    Related Groups (DRGs) and beneficiaries were
    encouraged to use Preferred Provider
    Organizations.
  • 1992 President Bush proposed a tax credit and
    health insurance voucher program.
  • 1993 President Clintons Health Security Plan
    which would ensure health coverage for all
    Americans and control costs through managed
    competition is defeated.

23
Milestones Health Care in Canada
  • 1957 Hospital Insurance and Diagnostic Services
    Act
  • universal hospital insurance plan
  • administered by provinces
  • financed jointly by the provinces and the
    federal government on a 5050 basis

24
Milestones Health Care in Canada
  • 1966 Medical Care Insurance Act
  • universal health care plan providing coverage
    of
  • hospital care, diagnostic services, and
    physicians fees
  • Administered by provinces.
  • Financed by provinces and the federal
    government on a 5050 basis.
  • Patients have free choice of hospitals and
    physicians.
  • Hospitals are paid through the imposition of
    annual global budgets.
  • Physicians are reimbursed for their services
    according to negotiated fee schedules.

25
Milestones Health Care in Canada
  • 1977 Established Programs Financing Act
  • Replaced cost sharing with block grants that
    were tied to the GNP growth and transferred
    federal tax points to the provinces to raise
    additional revenues.
  • Federal government abandons the 5050 cost
    sharing formula and its share of total health
    care expenditures declines from 50 in 1977 to
    15 in 2002
  • 1977 (50) 1980 (45) 1990 (37)
    1997 (23)
  • 2002 (15)

26
Milestones Health Care in Canada
  • 1984 Canada Health Act
  • amalgamated hospital and medical insurance
    into one statute
  • banned extra-billing by physicians
  • banned user fees for insured health services
  • proscribed five health act principles
  • - universal coverage
  • - equal access to health care
  • - comprehensive benefits
  • - portability across provinces
  • - public administration

27
CANADA HEALTH ACT (CHA)
  • The CHA sets the Canadian national health care
    standards and ensures that all Canadian residents
    have access to necessary health services
    regardless of their ability to pay.
  • Provincial insurance plans must meet CHA
    standards to qualify for full federal health
    contributions.

28
CANADA HEALTH ACT (CHA)
  • CHA stipulates the following five criteria
  • (1) Public administration
  • (2) Comprehensiveness
  • (3) Universality
  • (4) Portability
  • (5) Accessibility

29

It is no longer acceptable morally, ethically,
or economically for so many of our people to
be uninsured or seriously under-insured.
JAMA 1991 15 years later, not much has
changed.
30
Human Development Index (HDI)
  • Serves as an alternative measure of social
    development, supplementing GNP
  • Accounts for three distinct indicators
  • - longevity and health care
  • - adult literacy rate and education
  • - GNP per capita (real and PPP adjusted)

31
Human Development Index (HDI)
  • Indicators
  • - Life expectancy at birth (health care)
  • - Education
  • literacy of adults (2/3)
  • attendance at 3 levels of
    schooling (1/3)
  • - Income
  • Goals
  • - Life expectancy 85 years
  • - Education accessible for all
  • - Reasonable income for all

32
Human Development Index (HDI) Ranking of 175
countries
  • 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003
  • Canada 1 1 2 3 8
  • USA 2 3 5 6 7

33
Human Development Index (HDI) 2003
  • 1. Norway 6. Belgium
  • 2. Iceland 7. United States
  • 3. Sweden 8. Canada
  • 4. Australia 9. Japan
  • 5. Netherlands 10. Switzerland

34
HEALTH CARE COSTS as percentage of GDP
USA
CANADA
GNP
35
Health Care Expenditures (2002)
  • Per capita ( US) Percentage of GNP
  • United States 4887 13.9
  • Germany 2808 10.7
  • Canada 2792 9.7
  • Japan 2009 8.0
  • United Kingdom 1992 7.6
  • OECD average 2117 8.4
  • Source OECD 2004

36
Health Care Expenditures as percentage of GNP
  • 1960 1975 1990 1993 1998 2001
  • Canada 5.4 7.2 9.2 9.9 9.1 9.7
  • United States 5.2 8.4 12.6 13.3 13.0 13.9
  • Japan 3.0 5.6 6.1 6.6 7.1 8.0
  • U.K. 3.9 5.5 6.0 6.9 6.9 7.6
  • Germany 4.8 8.1 8.7 10.0 10.6 10.7
  • source OECD 2004

37
Health Care Indicators
  • Accessibility
  • Per capita spending on health care
  • Percentage of GNP spent for health care
  • Life expectancy
  • Infant mortality rate
  • Maternal mortality rate
  • Waiting lists for diagnostic and therapeutic
    procedures
  • Access to high technology equipment

38
Life expectancy at birth (years)
  • Japan 81.3
  • Sweden 79.7
  • Canada 79.2
  • United Kingdom 77.4
  • United States 76.9
  • China 71
  • India 64
  • Range 34 to 81.3
    SOURCE HDR (2003)

39
Life expectancy at birth (years)
  • Cigarettes of
  • per adult
    population
  • per year daily
    smokers
  • Japan 81.3 2950 31
  • Sweden 79.7 1085 19
  • Canada 79.2 1820 18
  • United Kingdom 77.4 1553 27
  • United States 76.9 2092 19
  • China 71 1780
  • India 64 112
  • Range 34 to 81.3
    SOURCE HDR (2003)

40
United States
Canada
41
Infant mortality (per 1000 live births)
  • Japan 3.1
  • Sweden 3.4
  • Canada 5.3
  • United Kingdom 5.6
  • United States 6.9
  • Range 3.1 to 182 SOURCE OECD (2003)

42
Maternal mortality (per 100 000 live births)
  • Sweden 5
  • Canada 6
  • United Kingdom 7
  • United States 8
  • (whites 6, hispanics 10, African Americans
    25)
  • Japan 8
  • Range 5 to 1800 SOURCE HDR 2003

43
United States vs. Canada
  • HDI indicators U.S. Canada OECD
  • Life expectancy 78.6 79.4 74.3
  • (years)
  • Infant mortality 6.9 5.3 6.6
  • (per 1000 live births)
  • Maternal mortality 8 6
  • (per 100 000 live births)
  • Population over 65 years 12.4 12.7 13.9

44
Health Care in North America (2002)Physicians
and Nurses
  • United States Canada
  • Physicians
  • number 690 000 60 900
  • number per 1000 population 2.7 2.1
  • population per physician 370 476
  • Nurses
  • number 2 300 000 231 500
  • number per 100 000 population 8.1 9.9
  • population per nurse 123 101

45
Physicians per 1000 population
  • U.K. 1.6 (1 per 610)
  • Canada 2.1 (1 per 476)
  • Japan 2.0 (1 per 508)
  • United States 2.7 (1 per 370)
  • Italy 5.7 (1 per 176)
  • Range 1 - 5.9 (world average 1.2) SOURCE
    WHO and OECD

46
Medical Schools
  • Accredited by the Liaison Committee on Medical
    Education (LCME)
  • United States 125
  • Canada 16

47
Health Care in Canada Physicians (2002)
  • Total number 60 900
  • Family physicians 31 500
  • Specialists 29 400
  • Estimated needs
  • 2500 per year to compensate
  • for retirement (2100) and emigration (400 per
    year)
  • Actual increase
  • 1750 per year (Canadian graduates and
    immigrants)
  • Source Southam Medical Database

48
Health Care in Canada Cost containment during
1990s
  • Policy of restricting supply
  • Reduction in number of students enrolled in
    Canadas medical and nursing schools.
  • Tight restrictions on the purchase of high
    technology medical equipment through a
    centralized approval process.
  • Closing or merger of hospitals resulting in
    decrease in number of hospital beds.

49
Health Care in Canada Results of Cost
Containment
  • Education
  • - First year medical students (16 medical
    schools)
  • 1983 (1887) 1998 (1581)
  • - Nursing school students
  • 1993 (12 621) 1997 (5063)
  • High technology equipment
  • Of the 30 OECD countries, Canada is in the
    bottom third.
  • Hospitals
  • 1991 (1128 hospitals - 175 000 acute care
    beds)
  • 1998 (877 hospitals - 122 000 acute care
    beds)

50
United States (2300)
United States 8.1 Canada 2.5
OECD average 6.5
Canada (80)
Number of MRI units per million population
51
Canada
United States
52
United States vs. Canada
  • U.S. Canada OECD
  • Health expenditures 13.9 9.7 8.4
  • ( of GDP)
  • Health expenditures 4887 2937 -
  • ( US)
  • Health expenditures 44 71 72
  • ( public share)
  • Prescription drugs 12.4 16.4 -
  • ( of total)
  • Private insurance 35.6 11.4 -
  • ( of total)

53
Aging and Health Care Cost
54
United States vs. Canada
  • U.S. Canada OECD
  • Life expectancy (years) 76.8 79.4 74.3
  • Infant mortality (per 1000) 6.9 5.3
    6.6
  • Maternal mortality 8 6
  • Population ( over 65) 12.4 12.7 13.9

55
CANADIAN HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
  • The Canadian health care is financed publicly
  • and has three primary players
  • Provincial governments
  • Federal government (Canada Health Act)
  • Private physicians

56
CANADIAN HEALTH CARE REFORM
  • Current options
  • Status quo.
  • Make the present system work better.
  • Modify the Canada Health Act and introduce a
    two-tier health care system that will allow
    private, for-profit organizations to insure and
    provide services already offered by the public
    system.

57
Health Care in North America (2003)
  • U.S. Canada U.S./Canada
  • Population (million) 288 32 9 1
    (1 0.11)
  • GNP (billion US) 10 450 728 14.5
    1 (1 0.07)
  • GNP per capita (US) 34 320 27 130
    1.6 1 (1 0.63)
  • Health care costs 13.9 9.7 1.43
    1 (1 0.7)
  • ( of GNP)
  • Health care costs 1400 89 16
    1 (1 0.064)
  • (billion US)
  • Health care costs 4887 2792 1.75
    1 (1 0.57)
  • (per capita US)

58
United States Canada
  • Area (million sq. km) 9.16 9.22
  • Area (million sq. miles) 3.54 3.56
  • Population (millions) 288 32
  • Population density (people/sq. km) 3.4 0.27
  • GNP ( US per person per year) 38 100 23 100
  • Government Presidential Federal
  • federal
    parliamentary
  • republic monarchy
  • Federation 50 states 10 provinces/
  • 3 territories

59
CONCLUSIONS
  • Health care should not be treated as an ordinary
    market commodity, because, when left completely
    unregulated, the outcomes are not optimal, either
    in terms of peoples health or in terms of
    economic efficiency.
  • Too much bureaucratic government involvement in
    health care, on the other hand, results in
    mediocre services, inefficient workforce, and
    shortages of staff and equipment.

60
CONCLUSIONS
  • Canada uses a mixed public (71) and private
    (29) health care system. The public component is
    shared between the provinces (83) and the
    federal government (17).
  • Canadas expenditure for health care at 9.7 of
    its GNP is above the OECD average (8.4) but
    considerably lower than that of the U.S. at
    13.9.
  • Health care indicators place Canada among the
    best performers in the OECD group, ahead of the
    U.S.

61
CONCLUSIONS (cont.)
  • Both the U.S. and Canada have severe problems
    with access to, and financing of, health care
    services.
  • In the U.S. some 44 million people have no
    health insurance because they cannot afford the
    cost of private insurance.
  • In Canada long waiting lists for diagnostic and
    therapeutic services persist because of
    equipment and health personnel shortages.

62
CONCLUSIONS (cont.)
  • The U.S. spends almost 14 of its GNP on health
    care, yet 15 of its people are not covered by
    health insurance.
  • Only 44 of health care costs in the U.S. are
    financed publicly, the remaining 56 are
    financed privately.
  • Administrative costs of the U.S. health care
    system amount to 25 of the total health care
    costs.

63
HEALTH CARE IN THE U.S. AND CANADA
  • Public perception in both countries
  • Health care systems in both countries are in
    serious trouble.
  • Americans have no respect for the Canadian
    approach to health care financing and delivery
    Canadians have similar feelings about the
    American approach.
  • Problems with cost and access must be corrected
    urgently.
  • The 2004 federal election in Canada will feature
    health care as one of the most important domestic
    issues.
  • The 2004 presidential election in the U.S. will
    again side-track the health care issue.

64
A healthy man has a thousand wishes, a sick
man has only one. Slovenian proverb
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com