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Title: About the case summary


1
About the case summary
  • 12 Font size Times New Roman
  • Average 2-3 pages
  • Name and student number
  • First case summary due on September 26

2
Canadian health care systems the past and the
future
  • Objectives
  • Understand principles of Canadian health care
    system
  • Understand its evolution and how the system works
  • Understand the current problems in the system

3
QuizTesting your knowledge about the Canadian
Health Care System
  • The health insurance plan of a province must be
    administrated and operated on a non-profit basis
    by a public authority accountable to the
    provincial government.
  • True False

4
  • Medically services provided by hospitals and
    physicians are covered by Medicare.
  • True False

5
  • All people living in Canada are entitled for the
    insured health services on uniform terms and
    conditions.
  • True False

6
  • Additional charges to insured patients for
    insured services are not allowed.
  • True False

7
  • Canadian residents are entitled to coverage when
    they move to another province within Canada, but
    not covered when they travel aboard.
  • True False

8
Principles of Medicare
  • Public administration
  • Comprehensiveness
  • Universality
  • Accessibility
  • portability

9
Canadian health care system
  • Publicly financed, privately delivered
  • The responsibility of provincial government -
  • Management and delivery of health care services
  • The responsibility of federal government
  • Setting and administering of national principles
  • or standards for the health care system
  • assisting in the financing of provincial health
  • care services through fiscal transfers,
    fulfilling
  • functions for which it is constitutionally
  • Responsible, and responsible for health
  • protection, disease prevention, and health
  • promotion.

10
  • Rely extensively on primary care physicians
  • Account for 51 of all active physicians in
    Canada
  • Paid on fee-for-services basis
  • Act as gatekeeper of the Canadian health care
    system

11
  • 95 hospitals are non-profit entities
  • Run by community boards of trustees, voluntary
    organizations or municipalities.
  • Accountable to the communities they serve, not to
    the provincial bureaucracy

12
Evolution of universal health insurance
  • Prior to 1940s, private medicine dominated
    health care in Canada resulting in access to care
    being based on ability to pay.

13
Evolution (contd.)
  • 1947 the province of Saskatchewan introduced a
    public insurance plan for hospital services
  • 1956 federal government, seeking to encourage the
    development of hospital insurance programs in all
    provinces, offered to cost-share hospital and
    diagnostic services on a roughly fifty-fifty
    basis.

14
Evolution (contd.)
  • By 1961, all ten provinces and the two
    territories had signed agreements establishing
    public insurance plans that provided universal
    coverage for at least in-patient hospital care
    that qualified for federal cost-sharing.

15
Evolution (contd.)
  • Public medical care insurance began in the
    province of Saskatchewan, providing coverage for
    services provided by physicians outside
    hospitals.
  • By 1972, all of the provincial and territorial
    plans had been extended to include physicians
    services. The objective to have a national health
    insurance plan for hospital and medical care in
    Canada had been realized.

16
How does the system work?
  • Payers
  • Provincial government Ministry of Health (MOH)
  • Covers insured hospital and physician services
  • Covers costs of certain non-insured services for
    certain specific population groups
  • Controls the rate of adopting and diffusing
    expensive medical technology

17
  • Insurance companies
  • Cover a range of health services that remain
    outside the national health insurance framework
  • Workplace safety and insurance board
  • Provide insured benefits to workers with
    work-related injuries or illness

18
  • Providers
  • Hospitals teaching hospitals, general/community
    hospitals, small hospitals and mental health
    hospitals
  • Physicians general physicians and specialists
  • nurses

19
  • Other health care providers
  • Include dentists, chiropractors, opticians,
    occupational therapists, etc.
  • Voluntary organizations
  • Ontario Gerontology Association (is an
    incorporated voluntary organization concerned
    with aging, thereby promoting quality of life for
    older adults. Its membership provides an
    inter-disciplinary forum for those involved in
    the field of gerontology)

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Problems in the health care system
  • Emergency overcrowding
  • Doctor shortage
  • One in four Ontario doctors will retire in four
    years
  • By 2020, 30 of Ontarios population will be over
    the age of 55.
  • Waiting time
  • Access to health care providers, diagnostic
    tests, specialty treatment, hospital beds

34
  • Waiting time examples
  • Six months to obtain a hip replacement
  • Five months to get a CAT scan
  • Some patients wait more than a year for cardiac
    surgery
  • Some cancer patients go to the States for
    treatment
  • 2/3 Canadian physicians are finding it difficult
    to get appropriate resources such as diagnostic
    tests, referrals or operating room time for their
    patients.

35
  • Waiting time for the access to health care
    services
  • Waiting time for unmet need and/or inadequate
    resources within the health care system

36
Health care crisis or Really?
37
Environmental factors
  • Aging population (30 of Ontario population over
    55)
  • Physicians leave outnumber those who have
    returned
  • ¾ family physicians are unable to accept new
    patients
  • Funding constraints
  • People demands high quality services

38
Long-term impact
  • Personal life
  • Work
  • Economic development
  • The Canadian health care system is one of the
    central determinants of our industrial
    competitiveness and our quality of life.
    (Conference Board of Canada, 1998)

39
Causes
  • The system
  • Organized around acute care, rather than chronic
    care (reactive vs. proactive)
  • Task-oriented rather than customer-oriented
  • Lack of integration
  • Lack of cost-saving incentives
  • Hospitals
  • Physicians
  • patients
  • Gatekeeper, is it necessary?

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  • Ourselves
  • Lack of medical knowledge
  • Misuse
  • Healthy life style

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Changing paradigm
  • Old New
  • acute care continuum of care
  • treating illness maintaining and promoting
    wellness
  • Individual patients defined population
  • Provider similar differentiation
  • Inpatient admission people health
  • Fill beds provide timely care
  • Separate org. Integrated system
  • Run organization oversee a market
  • Managers as depart.heads operate across
    organizations
  • Coordinate services purse quality improvement

44
Possible solutions
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Reforming the Canadian health care system
  • Reforming primary health services (150
    physicians, 220,000 patients, 7 sites)
  • Availability of a nurse practitioner to enhance
    access to primary care
  • 24-hour access to care
  • No change in the waiting time
  • Quality of care is considered to be good or very
    good
  • Patients were very satisfied

49
  • Hospital Services Restructuring Committee (HSRC)
  • Horizontal integration within the hospital sector
  • Result in extensive cost reduction and
    rationalization of services within the hospital
    sector
  • But heavier load for hospital personnel

50
  • Physicians
  • High level of satisfaction except those in
    Chatman
  • No change in their practice patterns
  • Some found unable to offset the extra costs of
    information technology
  • Found difficult in providing on-all coverage
    (since they cant bill for the telephone advice)
  • Unrealistic expectations from the government
  • Information technology acquisition process
    (lengthy, resource-intensive, inefficient, and
    fragmented)

51
The Western Canada Waiting List Project is a
consortium of medical associations, regional
health authorities, health research centres, and
ministries of health, which will develop valid
reliable, clinically transparent and useful tools
to assist the management of waiting lists in
cataract surgery, children's mental health,
general surgery, hip and knee replacement, and
MRI scanning
52
Sources of information
  • http//www.hc-sc.gc.ca/
  • http//www.cihi.ca/

53
Fully 82 agree with the idea that we need long
term, sustainable funding to improve the health
care system in Canada. Moreover, almost half
(49) think government spending on health care
should be increased even if it means higher
income taxes.
54
  • Health care misuse

55
  • Privatization
  • Pay for some services
  • Expanding the public health care system (cover
    all costs)

56
What does the waiting time telling us?
57
What do Canadians think their system?
  • Generally speaking, Canadians assign the overall
    quality of the health care system a fairly
    positive rating.
  • At least six in ten give the health care system a
    B grade or better in terms of overall quality,
    choice of
  • health services, and their most recent
    interaction with the system.

58
  • They are most positive about access to their
    family doctor, to walk in clinics, and access
  • for children and seniors (at least five in ten
    assign a B grade or better). Across the other
    accessibility
  • dimensions tested (e.g., access to medical
    specialists, diagnostic equipment, and emergency
    room
  • services) Canadians are less positive in their
    assessment of the health care system. The
    majority assign a
  • C grade or worse in terms of accessibility to
    these health care services.

59
  • Only
  • 5 give the federal government's performance in
    dealing with health care in Canada a very
    positive
  • rating (i.e., an A) six times as many (30) give
    the federal governments performance in this area
    a
  • failing grade. Similarly only 6 think the
    provincial government is doing a very good job in
    dealing with
  • health care in their province (A rating), while
    fully 35 give their provincial government a
    failing grade.

60
  • Confidence in Various Players to Improve Health
    Care
  • When asked how much confidence they have in each
    of a range of players to improve the health care
    system, health professionals such as doctors and
    nurses, and voluntary health organizations are
    given the highest confidence levels among the
    players tested. Two in three Canadians feel
    confident these groups can help to improve the
    health care system. Confidence levels drop
    sharply for both the federal and provincial
    governments. Only one in five Canadians express
    confidence in either federal or provincial
    government officials and politicians to help
    improve the health care system. Over twice as
    many express little confidence in the two senior
    levels of government to improve health care.

61
Canadians express mixed views regarding the
health care system. The majority (61) believe
that manypeople misuse the health care system.
Fifty-three per cent think the Health care system
needs a completeoverhaul (only 14 disagree with
this idea). Moreover, only 17 believe there is
nothing wrong withCanadas health care system
(three times as many disagree).
62
  • Despite these pessimistic views of health care, a
    majority of Canadians (58) think Canadas health
    care system is one of the best in the world (only
    12 disagree with this notion), and a substantial
    minority (45) think the current health system
    provides the best possible health care for them
    and their family.
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