Medicare (Canada): Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Canada's publicly funded, single-payer health care system}} |
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:''This article refers to medicare, a name for Canada's publicly-funded health insurance system for hospital and physician services. For similarly named programs in other countries, see [[Medicare]].'' |
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{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2022}} |
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{{Healthcare in Canada sidebar}} |
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'''Medicare''' ({{langx|fr|assurance-maladie}}) is an unofficial designation used to refer to the [[publicly funded health care|publicly funded]] [[single-payer]] [[healthcare in Canada|healthcare system]] of Canada. Canada's health care system consists of 13 provincial and territorial health insurance plans, which provide [[universal healthcare]] coverage to [[Canadian citizen]]s, [[permanent residency in Canada|permanent resident]]s, and depending on the province or territory, certain temporary residents. The systems are individually administered on a provincial or territorial basis, within guidelines set by the federal government.<ref>{{cite web|title=Canada's health care system|url=https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/services/canada-health-care-system.html|website=Canada.ca|publisher=Health Canada|access-date=August 18, 2017|date=August 22, 2016}}</ref> The formal terminology for the insurance system is provided by the ''[[Canada Health Act]]'' and the [[health insurance]] legislation of the individual [[provinces and territories of Canada|provinces and territories]]. |
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The name is a contraction of ''medical'' and ''care'' and has been used in the United States for health care programs since at least 1953,<ref>Oxford English Dictionary, s.v. "Medicare".</ref> with [[Medicare (United States)|Medicare]] becoming that nation's official national health insurance program in 1965. |
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{{main | Canada Health Act}} |
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The term '''medicare''' (in lowercase) ([[French language|French]]: ''assurance maladie'') is the unofficial name for [[Canada]]'s [[universal health care|universal publicly-funded health insurance system]]. The formal terminology for the insurance system is provided by the ''[[Canada Health Act]]'' and the health insurance legislation of the individual provinces and territories. |
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Under the terms of the Canada Health Act, all "insured persons" |
Under the terms of the ''Canada Health Act'', all "insured persons" are entitled to receive "insured services" without [[copayment]]. Such services are defined as medically necessary services if provided in hospital or by practitioners (usually physicians).<ref name="Canada Health Act Overview">{{cite web|title=Canada Health Act|url=https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/services/health-care-system/canada-health-care-system-medicare/canada-health-act.html|website=Canada.ca|publisher=Health Canada|access-date=August 18, 2017|date=July 26, 2004}}</ref> Approximately 70 percent of expenditures for [[healthcare in Canada]] come from public sources, with the rest paid privately (through both private insurance and out-of-pocket payments). The extent of public financing varies considerably across services. For example, approximately 99 percent of physician services and 90 percent of hospital care are paid by publicly funded sources, but almost all dental care is paid for privately.<ref>{{cite web | author=Canadian Institute for Health Information | date=September 27, 2005 | title=CIHI exploring the 70–30 split | url=http://www.cihi.ca/cihiweb/dispPage.jsp?cw_page=AR_1282_E | access-date=December 21, 2007 | author-link=Canadian Institute for Health Information | url-status=dead | archive-url=https://archive.today/20060319000252/http://www.cihi.ca/cihiweb/dispPage.jsp?cw_page=AR_1282_E | archive-date=March 19, 2006}}</ref> Most physicians are self-employed private entities that enjoy coverage under each province's respective healthcare plans. |
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Services of non-physicians working within hospitals are covered; conversely, provinces have the option to cover services by non-physicians if they are provided outside hospitals. Changing the site of treatment may thus change coverage. For example, pharmaceuticals, nursing care, and physical therapy must be covered for inpatients, but there is considerable variation from province to province in the extent to which they are covered for patients discharged to the community such as after day surgery. The need to modernize coverage was pointed out in 2002 by both the [[Royal Commission on the Future of Health Care in Canada|Romanow Commission]] and the [[Michael J. L. Kirby|Kirby]] committee of the Canadian Senate (see External links below). Similarly, the extent to which non-physician providers of primary care are funded varies. For example, [[Quebec]] offers primary health care teams through its [[CLSC]] system. |
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==History== |
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{{Main|History of medicine in Canada}} |
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Prior to [[World War II]], health care in Canada was privately funded and delivered, with the exception of services provided to the sick poor that were financed by local governments. The [[Great Depression in Canada|traumatic experience of the 1930s]] left many Canadians in challenging financial situations. As personal financial situations deteriorated, the municipal governments were overwhelmed. Though the provinces provided relief payments for food, clothing, and shelter, additional medical costs were beyond the capacity of most of the provincial budgets. Many Canadians were not receiving adequate medical care, and those that did were overwhelmed with the associated costs. As such, preventable diseases and deaths were still common occurrences.<ref name = "Taylor">Taylor, Malcolm G. (1978). ''[http://mqup.mcgill.ca/book.php?bookid=2351 Health Insurance and Canadian Public Policy]'', McGill-Queen's University Press, Montreal.</ref> |
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Ten years of economic depression, followed by six years of worldwide war, formed the social context of ambitious federal Green Book proposals. In a bid for unprecedented cooperation between the federal and provincial governments, these initiatives formed the foundations of a national program for social security, including provisions for health insurance. However, the failure to come to a consensus on the required allocation of tax resources at the [[First Ministers' conference|Dominion-Provincial Conference]] in August 1945 precluded adoption and delayed subsequent action.<ref name = "Taylor" /> Although the Green Book proposals were not adopted, they effectively created an appetite for government-funded health services.<ref name="Civilization">Canadian Museum of Civilization (2010). [http://www.civilization.ca/cmc/exhibitions/hist/medicare/medic-5h02e.shtml Making Medicare: The history of health care in Canada, 1914–2007].</ref> |
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Following the Green Book proposals, Saskatchewan in 1947 and Alberta in 1950, under provincial governments led by the [[Co-operative Commonwealth Federation]] (CCF) and the [[Social Credit Party of Canada|Social Credit party]] respectively, led initiatives to implement publicly funded health care at the provincial level.<ref>{{cite book|last=Quinlan|first=Don|title=The Canadian Challenge|year=2008|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Canada|isbn=978-0-19-542647-2}}</ref> The first implementation of public health care at the federal level came about with the ''[[Hospital Insurance and Diagnostic Services Act]]'' (HIDS), which was passed by the Liberal majority government of [[Louis St. Laurent]] in 1957,<ref name="Turner">{{Cite journal | last = J. Gilbert Turner | title = The Hospital Insurance and Diagnostic Services Act: Its Impact on Hospital Administration | journal = Canadian Medical Association Journal | volume = 78 | issue = 10 | pages = 768–770 | pmc = 1829926 |
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| year = 1958 | pmid = 13523526}}</ref> and was adopted by all provinces by 1961. The HIDS implemented a high degree of federal regulation of the provincial health systems.<ref>[https://www.historymuseum.ca/cmc/exhibitions/hist/medicare/medic-4h21e.html Canadian Museum of History – Making Medicare: "Achieving National Standards for Hospital Insurance".]</ref> |
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[[File:Tommy_Douglas_crop.jpg|thumb|upright=0.5|Premier Tommy Douglas, who introduced the medicare bill in Saskatchewan]] |
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[[File:Woodrow Stanley Lloyd-M. West, Regina.jpg|thumb|upright=0.5|Premier Woodrow Lloyd, who implemented medicare in Saskatchewan]] |
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The fight for a broad publicly funded system began at the provincial level, and was originally led by Saskatchewan Premier [[Tommy Douglas]] and the CCF,<ref>[https://www.historymuseum.ca/cmc/exhibitions/hist/medicare/medic-5h02e.html Canadian Museum of History – Making Medicare: "Saskatchewan Leads the Way".]</ref> who won the [[1960 Saskatchewan general election]] on a campaign promise of publicly funded health care, over the opposition of the medical profession.<ref>[https://www.historymuseum.ca/cmc/exhibitions/hist/medicare/medic-5h03e.html Canadian Museum of History – Making Medicare: "Medical Opposition in 1960".]</ref> When Douglas resigned to become the leader of the new federal [[New Democratic Party]] in 1961, the task of implementing Medicare fell to [[Woodrow Stanley Lloyd]], who succeeded Douglas as premier.<ref>[https://www.historymuseum.ca/cmc/exhibitions/hist/medicare/medic-5h06e.html Canadian Museum of History – Making Medicare: "Conflict and Compromise".]</ref> Lloyd overcame considerable public opposition to the plan, including a [[Saskatchewan doctors' strike|strike by the province's doctors]], who withdrew their services from the public in opposition to the proposed medicare plan.<ref>[https://www.historymuseum.ca/cmc/exhibitions/hist/medicare/medic-5h07e.html Canadian Museum of History – Making Medicare: "The 1962 Doctors’ Strike"]</ref> The resolution of the dispute was assisted by mediation by a British Labour peer, [[Stephen Taylor, Baron Taylor|Lord Taylor]], who had been involved in the development of the National Health Service in Britain.<ref>[https://www.historymuseum.ca/cmc/exhibitions/hist/medicare/medic-5h10e.html Canadian Museum of History – Making Medicare: "Mediation through Shuttle Diplomacy".]</ref> |
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The next stage in the development of Medicare was the Royal Commission on Health Services, 1961 to 1964,<ref>[https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/services/health-care-system/commissions-inquiries/federal-commissions-health-care/royal-commission-health-services.html Royal Commission on Health Services, 1961 to 1964]</ref> often cited as the Hall Commission, after its chair, Supreme Court Justice [[Emmett Matthew Hall|Emmett Hall]]. The commission was created by another Saskatchewanian, Prime Minister [[John G. Diefenbaker]], who appointed Hall, also from Saskatchewan, to chair the commission. Both Diefenbaker and Hall were [[Progressive Conservative Party of Canada|Progressive Conservatives]], unlike the CCF government of Saskatchewan.<ref>[https://www.historymuseum.ca/cmc/exhibitions/hist/medicare/medic-5h12e.html Canadian Museum of History – Making Medicare: "The Royal Commission on Health Services".]</ref> In 1964, after intensive study and public consultations, the Hall Commission released the first volume of its report, calling for federal funding for a national medicare plan.<ref>[https://www.historymuseum.ca/cmc/exhibitions/hist/medicare/medic-5h17e.html Canadian Museum of History – Making Medicare: "Canada’s First Health Charter".]</ref> |
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By the time the Hall Commission made its report, the Diefenbaker government had been defeated in the [[1963 Canadian federal election|1963 federal election]]. The new prime minister, Lester Pearson, had campaigned on establishing a national health care system. He began to work towards implementing a plan. His first Minister of Health, [[Judy LaMarsh]], continued internal reviews and consultations with her provincial counterparts to implement the proposals. Pearson also consulted with the provincial premiers, and encountered provincial opposition.<ref>[https://www.historymuseum.ca/cmc/exhibitions/hist/medicare/medic-5h18e.html Canadian Museum of History – Making Medicare: "Creating Medicare: National Politics".]</ref> Alberta,<ref>[https://www.historymuseum.ca/cmc/exhibitions/hist/medicare/medic-5h19e.html Canadian Museum of History – Making Medicare:Provincial Reactions".]</ref> Quebec,<ref>[https://www.historymuseum.ca/cmc/exhibitions/hist/medicare/medic-5h20e.html Canadian Museum of History – Making Medicare: "Autonomy in ''La Belle Province''".]</ref> and Ontario<ref>[https://www.historymuseum.ca/cmc/exhibitions/hist/medicare/medic-5h21e.html Canadian Museum of History – Making Medicare: "Opposition from Ontario".]</ref> all opposed the initial federal proposals, suggesting that each province should develop its own plan. Following his initial consultations, Pearson and his government developed a new, more decentralised plan. Relying on the advice of [[Albert Wesley Johnson|Al Johnson]], the federal Deputy Minister of Finance and former Deputy Provincial Treasurer in Saskatchewan during the development of Medicare, the new plan set out four requirements. To be eligible for federal funding, a province would have to have (1) a publicly administered funding system, (2) providing universal coverage to residents, (3) for medically necessary services, (4) with portability when people moved.<ref name =FedProp>[https://www.historymuseum.ca/cmc/exhibitions/hist/medicare/medic-5h22e.html Canadian Museum of History – Making Medicare: "The Federal Proposal".]</ref> Although the provincial premiers were surprised that the proposal lacked central regulation of health care, continuing to leave the operation of the health systems to the provinces, some premiers such as Premier Manning of Alberta continued to oppose the federal proposal.<ref name=FedProp/> |
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[[File:Allan MacEachen.jpg|thumb|upright=0.5|Allan MacEachen, federal Minister of Health and Welfare, who introduced the bill in Parliament]] |
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In the [[1965 Canadian federal election|1965 federal election]], the Liberals campaigned on implementing their proposal. Although they were re-elected, it was with a minority, meaning that they would need at least some opposition support to have their proposed plan passed by Parliament. A split now developed in the Liberal Cabinet and caucus. The new Minister of Health and Welfare, [[Allan MacEachen]], pushed for the enactment of the proposals, introducing the ''Medical Care Act, 1966'' into Parliament. Although opposed by the MPs for [[Progressive Conservative Party of Canada|Progressive Conservative Party]] and Social Credit, the bill received support from the New Democratic Party, led by Tommy Douglas. It passed first reading in the House of Commons.<ref>[https://www.historymuseum.ca/cmc/exhibitions/hist/medicare/medic-5h23e.html Canadian Museum of History – Making Medicare: "The ''Medical Care Act'', 1966".]</ref> |
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However, when Prime Minister Pearson left the country to attend a Commonwealth conference, the Acting Prime Minister and Minister of Finance, [[Mitchell Sharp]], stated that the government might not be able to afford the new program, in light of the financial state of the country, and called to defer passage.<ref name=Next>[https://www.historymuseum.ca/cmc/exhibitions/hist/medicare/medic-5h24e.html Canadian Museum of History – Making Medicare: The Next Stage of the Battle".]</ref> The proposed policy shift almost triggered MacEachen's resignation, and generated internal debates in the Liberal party.<ref name= Next/> As word of the split within the Liberals became public, the PC and Social Credit MPs began to put greater pressure on the government to stop the bill in the Commons. The bill eventually passed second and third readings with NDP support, after contentious debates.<ref name="Forman2009">{{cite book|first=Lillian E.|last=Forman|title=Health Care Reform|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=igthi21RZVgC&pg=PA2002|access-date=June 6, 2011|date=January 2009|publisher=ABDO|isbn=978-1-60453-532-7|page=2002}}</ref><ref name = Next/> The government agreed to defer implementation of the Act for one year, coming in force on July 1, 1968. |
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In 1984, the ''Canada Health Act'' was passed, amalgamating the 1966 ''Medical Care Act'' and the 1957 ''Hospital Insurance and Diagnostic Services Act''. The ''Canada Health Act'' affirmed and clarified five founding principles: (a) ''public administration'' on a non-profit basis by a public authority; (b) ''comprehensiveness'' – provincial health plans must insure all services that are medically necessary; (c) ''universality'' – a guarantee that all residents in Canada must have access to public healthcare and insured services on uniform terms and conditions; (d) ''portability'' – residents must be covered while temporarily absent from their province of residence or from Canada; and (e) ''accessibility'' – insured persons must have reasonable and uniform access to insured health services, free of financial or other barriers. These five conditions prevent provinces from radical innovation, but many small differences do exist between the provinces.<ref>{{cite web|title=Benefits Canada|url=http://www.benefitscanada.com/benefits/health-wellness/the-canada-health-act-then-now-and-in-2014-26218|access-date=May 16, 2014}}</ref> |
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==Eligibility== |
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Each province and territory can establish residency requirements for eligibility for coverage. For example, to qualify for enrollment in Ontario, one must, among other requirements, "be physically present in Ontario for 153 days in any 12-month period; and be physically present in Ontario for at least 153 days of the first 183 days immediately after establishing residency in the province."<ref>{{cite web |author1=Ministry of Health |author2=Long-Term Care | date=November 28, 2011 | title=Ontario Health Insurance Plan (OHIP) – Eligibility | publisher=Queen's Printer for Ontario | url=http://health.gov.on.ca/en/public/programs/ohip/ | access-date=February 15, 2012 }}</ref> |
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==Funding== |
==Funding== |
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According to the [[Canadian Constitution]], the provinces have responsibility for health care, education and welfare. However, the federal ''Canada Health Act'' sets standards for all the provinces. The ''Canada Health Act'' requires coverage for all medically necessary care provided in hospitals or by physicians, which explicitly includes diagnostic, treatment and preventive services. Coverage is universal for qualifying Canadian residents, regardless of income level. |
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Funding for the insurance plans comes from the general revenues of the Canadian provinces/territories, assisted by transfer payments from the federal government through the [[Canada Health Transfer]]. Some provinces charge health care premiums, but these are in effect taxes (since they are not tied to service use, nor to provincial health expenditures). The system is accordingly classified by the OECD as a tax-supported system, as opposed to the social insurance approaches used in many European countries. |
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Funding for the health care is transferred from the general revenues of the Canadian federal government to the 10 provinces and the 3 territories through the [[Canada Health Transfer]]. Some provinces also charge annual health care premiums. These are, in effect, taxes (since they are not tied to service use, nor to provincial health expenditures). The system is accordingly classified by the [[OECD]] as a tax-supported system, as opposed to the social insurance approaches used in many European countries. Boards in each province or territory regulate the cost, which is then reimbursed by the provincial or territorial government. Patients do not pay out of pocket costs to visit their doctor. |
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==Delivery== |
==Delivery== |
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Canada uses a mix of public and private organizations to deliver health care in what is termed a publicly funded, privately delivered system. Hospitals and acute care facilities, including long term complex care, are typically directly funded. Health care organizations bill the provincial health authorities, with few exceptions.<ref>{{cite web | first=Raisa | last=Deber | date=August 2002 | title=Delivering Health Care Services: Public, Not-For-Profit or Private | url=http://teamgrant.ca/M-THAC%20Greatest%20Hits/Bonus%20Tracks/Delivering%20Health%20Care%20Services.pdf | access-date=August 7, 2008 | url-status=dead | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110706204324/http://www.teamgrant.ca/M-THAC%20Greatest%20Hits/Bonus%20Tracks/Delivering%20Health%20Care%20Services.pdf | archive-date=July 6, 2011 }}</ref> Hospitals are largely non-profit organizations, historically often linked to religious or charitable organizations. In some provinces, individual hospital boards have been eliminated and combined into quasi-private [[Health regions of Canada|regional health authorities]], subject to varying degrees of provincial control. |
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Private services are provided by diagnostic laboratories, occupational and physical therapy centres, and other allied professionals. Non-medically necessary services, such as optional plastic surgery, are also often delivered by for-profit investor-owned corporations. In some cases patients pay directly and are reimbursed by the health care system, and in other cases a hospital or physician may order services and seek reimbursement from the provincial government. |
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With rare exceptions, medical doctors are small for-profit independent businesses. Historically, they have practised in small solo or group practices and billed the government Canadian Health Care system on a [[fee for service]] basis. Unlike the practice in fully socialized countries, hospital-based physicians are not all hospital employees, and some directly bill the provincial insurance plans on a fee-for-service basis. Since 2000, physicians have been allowed to incorporate for tax reasons (dates of authorization vary province to province). |
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Efforts to achieve ''primary health care reform'' have increasingly encouraged physicians to work in multidisciplinary teams, and be paid through blended funding models, including elements of capitation and other 'alternative funding formulas'. Similarly, some hospitals (particularly [[teaching hospital]]s and rural/remote hospitals) have also experimented with alternatives to fee-for-service. |
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In summary, the system is known as a "public system" due to its public financing, but is not a nationalized system such as the UK's [[NHS]] |
In summary, the system is known as a "public system" due to its public financing, but is not a nationalized system such as the UK's [[National Health Service|NHS]]: most health care services are provided privately.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/healthcare/public_vs_private.html |title=CBC Health Care Private versus Public |publisher=Cbc.ca |date=December 1, 2006 |access-date=June 6, 2011}}</ref> |
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An additional complexity is that, because health care is |
An additional complexity is that, because health care is under provincial jurisdiction, there is not a "Canadian health care system". Most providers are private, and may or may not coordinate their care. Publicly funded insurance is organized at the level of the province/territory; each manages its own insurance system, including issuing its own healthcare identification cards (a list of the provincial medical care insurance programs is given at the end of this entry). Once care moves beyond the services required by the ''Canada Health Act''—for which universal comprehensive coverage applies—there is inconsistency from province to province in the extent of publicly funded coverage, particularly for such items as outpatient drug coverage and rehabilitation, as well as vision care, mental health, and long-term care, with a substantial portion of such services being paid for privately, either through private insurance, or out-of-pocket.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.pharmacists.ca/content/cpjpdfs/sept04/Commentary-Sept04.pdf |title=Neil MacKinnon. Commentary: Provincial drug plans. 2004 |access-date=June 6, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110706200303/http://www.pharmacists.ca/content/cpjpdfs/sept04/Commentary-Sept04.pdf |archive-date=July 6, 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.intl.pdx.edu/ISP/canadian/canadian_healthcare.pdf |title=Mark Kaplan. Myths and Realities of Canadian Medicare. Fall 2004 |publisher=Intl.pdx.edu |access-date=June 6, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080720012741/http://www.intl.pdx.edu/ISP/canadian/canadian_healthcare.pdf |archive-date=July 20, 2008 }}</ref> Eligibility for these additional programs may be based on various combinations of such factors as age (e.g., children, seniors), income, enrollment in a home care program, or diagnosis (e.g., HIV/AIDS, cancer, cystic fibrosis). |
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According to a 1958 study, Provincial governments have been responsible for providing necessary medical and hospital care "to indigent residents of municipally unorganized territory".<ref>[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015007712352&view=1up&seq=3 Health care series. : Memorandum. no.3 1958, P.19]</ref> |
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The [[Canada Health Act]] requires coverage for all medically necessary care provided in hospitals or by physicians; this explicitly includes diagnostic, treatment and preventive services. Coverage is universal for qualifying Canadian residents, regardless of income level. Services of non-physicians working within hospitals are covered; but provinces can, but are not forced to, cover services by non-physicians if provided outside hospitals. Changing the site of treatment may thus change coverage. For example, pharmaceuticals, nursing care, and physical therapy must be covered for inpatients, but there is considerable variation from province to province in the extent to which they are covered for patients discharged to the community (e.g., after day surgery). The need to modernize coverage was pointed out in 2002 by both the [[Royal Commission on the Future of Health Care in Canada | Romanow Commission]] and by the [[Michael J. L. Kirby | Kirby]] committee of the Canadian Senate (see External links below). Similarly, the extent to which non-physician providers of primary care are funded varies; [[Quebec]] offers primary health care teams through its [[CLSC]] system). |
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===Drug coverage=== |
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Each province may also provide its own prescription drug benefit plan, although the Canada Health Act requires only coverage for pharmaceuticals delivered to hospital inpatients.<ref>[http://www.drugcoverage.ca/default.asp Prescription Drug Coverage in Canada drugcoverage.ca] </ref> Provincial prescription drug benefit plans differ across provinces. Some provinces cover only those in particular age groups (usually, seniors) and/or those on social assistance. Others are more universal. Quebec achieves universal coverage through a combination of private and public plans. Co-payments also vary.<ref> [http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/21/40/37868186.pdf Valérie Paris and Elizabeth Docteur. Pharmaceutical Pricing and Reimbursement Policies in Canada. OECD Health Working Papers 24, 2006.] </ref> Provinces maintain their own provincial formularies, although efforts are underway to institute a Common Drug Review.<ref> [http://www.chspr.ubc.ca/node/78 McMahon M, Morgan S and Mitton C. The Common Drug Review: A NICE start for Canada? Health Policy. 2006 August;77(3):339-351. Summary] </ref> Note that there is ongoing controversy in Canada, as in other countries, about inclusion of expensive drugs and discrepancies in their availability, as well as in what if any provisions are made for allowing medications not yet approved to be administered under "exceptional drug" provisions.<ref>[http://www.drugcoverage.ca/p_rejected_claims.asp?language=1 Drugcoverage.ca on rejected claims]</ref> Drug costs are contentious. Their prices are controlled by the Patented Medicines Price Review Board. <ref> [http://www.pmprb-cepmb.gc.ca/english/home.asp?x=1 PMPRB Home page. Accessed Dec 26, 2007.] </ref> The PMPRB's pricing formula ensures that Canada pays prices based on the average of those charged to selected countries; they are neither the highest, nor the lowest. Older off-patent medicines tend to be somewhat more expensive than those in the U.S.<ref>http://[www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2004/08/23/gen_drugs040823.html CBC story]</ref> |
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Unlike every other country with universal health insurance systems, Canada lacks a universal pharmaceutical subsidy scheme, with co-payment, cost ceilings, and special subsidy groups varying by private insurer and by province.<ref>{{cite journal | pmc = 4401594 | pmid=25780047 | doi=10.1503/cmaj.141564 | volume=187 | issue=7 | title=Estimated cost of universal public coverage of prescription drugs in Canada | year=2015 | journal=CMAJ | pages=491–7 |vauthors=Morgan SG, Law M, Daw JR, Abraham L, Martin D }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|url=https://www.academia.edu/17685108|title=From the city to the bush: increases in patient co-payments for medicines have impacted on medicine use across Australia|journal=Australian Health Review|first1=Kemp|last1=Anna|first2=Glover|last2=John|first3=Preen, David|last3=B.|first4=Bulsara|last4=Max|first5=Semmens|last5=James|first6=Roughead, Elizabeth|last6=E.|volume=37|issue=1|pages=4–10|doi=10.1071/AH11129|pmid=23157851|year=2013}}</ref> Each province may provide its own prescription drug benefit plan, although the ''Canada Health Act'' requires only coverage for pharmaceuticals delivered to hospital inpatients.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.drugcoverage.ca/default.asp |title=Prescription Drug Coverage in Canada |publisher=Drugcoverage.ca |access-date=June 6, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110621032832/http://www.drugcoverage.ca/default.asp |archive-date=June 21, 2011 }}</ref> Provincial prescription drug benefit plans differ across provinces. Some provinces cover only those in particular age groups (usually, seniors) and/or those on social assistance. Others are more universal. Quebec achieves universal coverage through a combination of private and public plans. Co-payments also vary.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/21/40/37868186.pdf |title=Valérie Paris and Elizabeth Docteur. Pharmaceutical Pricing and Reimbursement Policies in Canada. OECD Health Working Papers 24, 2006. |access-date=June 6, 2011}}</ref> Provinces maintain their own provincial formularies, although the [[Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health|Common Drug Review]] provides evidence-based formulary listing recommendations to the provincial ministries. Note that there is ongoing controversy in Canada, as in other countries, about inclusion of expensive drugs and discrepancies in their availability, as well as in what if any provisions are made for allowing medications not yet approved to be administered under "exceptional drug" provisions.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.drugcoverage.ca/p_rejected_claims.asp?language=1 |title=on rejected claims |publisher=Drugcoverage.ca |access-date=June 6, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110514101531/http://www.drugcoverage.ca/p_rejected_claims.asp?language=1 |archive-date=May 14, 2011 }}</ref> Drug costs are contentious. Their prices are controlled by the [[Patented Medicine Prices Review Board]] (PMPRB).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pmprb-cepmb.gc.ca/english/home.asp?x=1 |title=PMPRB Home page. Accessed Dec 26, 2007 |publisher=Pmprb-cepmb.gc.ca |access-date=June 6, 2011}}</ref> The PMPRB's pricing formula ensures that Canada pays prices based on the average of those charged to selected countries; they are neither the highest, nor the lowest. |
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Since Medicare has been adopted, there have been regular pushes to add universal pharmacare to it. This came to a head in 2022, when the New Democratic Party and the governing Liberal Party negotiated a supply and confidence agreement, with pharmacare being one of the core concessions the Liberals made in exchange for the NDP's confidence. As a result of this coalition, Canada's pharmacare act received royal assent on October 10, 2024, with the first phase creating a single payer system for contraceptives and diabetic medications, as well as the creation of a government agency to identify which drugs will be added next. Since becoming law, the federal government has begun negotiating with the provinces on how it will be implemted, with British Columbia becoming the first province to sign on to the program.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Canada’s pharmacare bill is now law. What this means for you - National {{!}} Globalnews.ca |url=https://globalnews.ca/news/10807237/canada-pharmacare-plan-what-to-know/ |access-date=2024-11-13 |website=Global News |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Canada |first=Health |date=2024-10-10 |title=Government of Canada Passes Legislation for a First Phase of National Universal Pharmacare |url=https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/news/2024/10/government-of-canada-passes-legislation-for-a-first-phase-of-national-universal-pharmacare.html |access-date=2024-11-13 |website=www.canada.ca}}</ref> |
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===Dental care, eye care, and other services=== |
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[[Dentistry|Dental care]] is not required to be covered by the government insurance plans. Canadians rely on their employers, individual private insurance, pay cash themselves for dental treatments, or receive no care. In some jurisdictions, public health units have been involved in providing targeted programs to address the need of the young, the elderly or those who are on welfare. The Canadian Association of Public Health Dentistry tracks programs, and has been advocating for extending coverage to those currently unable to receive dental care. <ref>[http://www.caphd-acsdp.org/Welcome.htm Canadian Association of Public Health Dentistry home page]</ref> |
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[[Dentistry|Dental care]] is not required to be covered by the government insurance plans. In Quebec, children under the age of 10 receive almost full coverage, and many oral surgeries are covered for everyone.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ramq.gouv.qc.ca/en/citoyens/assurancemaladie/serv_couv_queb/serv_dent_sc.shtml#tous |title=RAMQ – Health Insurance – Dental Services – Services Covered |publisher=Ramq.gouv.qc.ca |date=April 14, 2011 |access-date=June 6, 2011}}</ref> Canadians rely on their employers or individual private insurance, pay cash themselves for dental treatments, or receive no care. In some jurisdictions, public health units have been involved in providing targeted programs to address the need of the young, the elderly or those who are on welfare. The Canadian Association of Public Health Dentistry tracks programs, and has been advocating for extending coverage to those currently unable to receive dental care.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.caphd-acsdp.org/Welcome.htm |title=Canadian Association of Public Health Dentistry home page |publisher=Caphd-acsdp.org |access-date=June 6, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100126045927/http://www.caphd-acsdp.org/Welcome.htm |archive-date=January 26, 2010 }}</ref> |
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The range of services for vision care coverage also varies widely among the provinces. Generally, "medically required" vision care is covered if provided by physicians (cataract surgery, diabetic vision care, some laser eye surgeries required as a result of disease, but not if the purpose is to replace the need for eyeglasses). |
The range of services for vision care coverage also varies widely among the provinces. Generally, "medically required" vision care is covered if provided by physicians (cataract surgery, diabetic vision care, some laser eye surgeries required as a result of disease, but not if the purpose is to replace the need for eyeglasses). Similarly, the standard vision test may or may not be covered. Some provinces allow a limited number of tests (e.g., no more than once within a two-year period). Others, including Ontario, Alberta, Saskatchewan, and British Columbia, do not, although different provisions may apply to particular sub-groups (e.g., diabetics, children). |
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Naturopathic services are covered in some cases, but homeopathic services are generally not covered. Chiropractic is partially covered in some provinces. Cosmetic procedures are not typically covered. Psychiatric services (provided by physicians) are covered, fee-for-service psychology services outside of hospitals or community based mental health clinics are usually not. Physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, nursing, and chiropractic services are often not covered unless within hospitals. Some provinces, including Ontario include some rehabilitation services for those in the home care program, those recently discharged from hospitals (e.g., after a hip replacement), or those in particular age categories. Again, considerable variation exists, and provinces can (and do) alter their coverage decisions. |
Naturopathic services are covered in some cases, but homeopathic services are generally not covered. Chiropractic is partially covered in some provinces. Cosmetic procedures are not typically covered. Psychiatric services (provided by physicians) are covered, fee-for-service psychology services outside of hospitals or community based mental health clinics are usually not. Physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, nursing, and chiropractic services are often not covered unless within hospitals. Some provinces, including Ontario include some rehabilitation services for those in the home care program, those recently discharged from hospitals (e.g., after a hip replacement), or those in particular age categories. Again, considerable variation exists, and provinces can (and do) alter their coverage decisions. |
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==Inter-provincial imbalances== |
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==Opinions on Medicare== |
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The fact that health insurance plans are administered by the provinces and territories in a country where large numbers of residents of certain provinces work in other provinces may lead to inequitable inter-provincial outcomes with respect to revenues and expenditures. For example, many residents of the Atlantic provinces work in the oil and gas industry in the western province of Alberta. For most of the year these workers may be contributing significant tax revenue to Alberta (e.g. through fuel, tobacco and alcohol taxes) while their health insurance costs are borne by their home province in Atlantic Canada. |
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{{refimprovesect|date=July 2007}} |
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Polling data in the last few years have consistently cited medicare as among the most important political issues in the minds of Canadian voters. Along with [[peacekeeping]], the [[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation|CBC]] ran a poll that found medicare to be one of the most defining characteristics of Canada. |
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Another considerable inter-provincial imbalance is a person who is insured by Quebec and obtains healthcare in another province or territory. Quebec does not have any physician payment agreements with any other provinces or territories of Canada. As a result, someone that sees a physician outside Quebec, even in another part of Canada, must either pay the cost themselves and submit a request to the [[Régie de l'Assurance Maladie du Québec]] (RAMQ Medicare) for reimbursement (even then, expenses are often denied), or take out a third party insurance plan. The same situation also applies to a resident of any other part of Canada visiting Quebec, only they submit any claims to their respective provincial healthplan. All provinces and territories of Canada, however, do have reciprocal hospital agreements, so hospital admissions, for example, are covered throughout Canada.<ref name="AHCIP">{{Cite web |
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It has increasingly become a source of controversy in Canadian politics. As a recent report from the Health Council of Canada has noted |
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| title = AHCIP coverage within Canada |
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"Herein lies one of the puzzles of Canadian health care: Canadians increasingly view the health care system as unsustainable and under threat, even as their own experiences with the system are mostly positive." <ref> [http://www.healthcouncilcanada.ca/docs/rpts/2007/ |
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| access-date = September 25, 2012 |
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Public%20Perceptions%20-%20English%20Final_Feb-07.pdf |
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| url = http://www.health.alberta.ca/AHCIP/coverage-in-Canada.html |
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Stuart N. Soroka. Canadian Perceptions of the Health Care System. 2007. ISBN 0-9739726-8-8] </ref> |
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}}</ref> |
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==Opinions and activism on Canadian health care== |
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As analysts have noted, the root of the concern may be traced to successful cost control efforts in the mid 1990s, where public health expenditure per capita, in inflation-adjusted dollars, actually fell.<ref> [http://secure.cihi.ca/cihiweb/dispPage.jsp?cw_page=PG_876_E&cw_topic=876&cw_rel=AR_31_E CIHI National Health Expenditures in Canada 1975-2007] </ref> These efforts arose from efforts by the federal government to deal with its deficit, which led to cuts in their transfers to the provinces, and in turn to squeezing hospital budgets and physician reimbursements. The number of physicians being trained was reduced. The result was seen in increased wait times, particularly for elective procedures. More recently, government has been reinvesting in health care, but public confidence has been slow to recover. |
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{{More citations needed section|date=July 2007}} |
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Polling data in the last few years have consistently cited Canadian Health Care as among the most important political issues in the minds of Canadian voters. Along with [[peacekeeping]], Canadian Health Care was found, based on a [[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation|CBC]] poll, to be among the foremost defining characteristics of Canada.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/maple-leaf-best-defines-canada-survey-finds-1.722322|title=Maple leaf best defines Canada, survey finds}}</ref> |
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It has increasingly become a source of controversy in Canadian politics. As a recent report from the Health Council of Canada has noted |
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A number of studies have compared Canada with other countries, and concluded that each system has its own strengths and weaknesses.<ref> [http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/publications_show.htm?doc_id=568237 Schoen et al, Toward Higher-Performance Health Systems: Adults' Health Care Experiences in Seven Countries, 2007] </ref> <ref> [http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/46/33/38979719.pdf OECD Health Data 2007. How Does Canada Compare?] </ref> One widely-cited statistic which has been used to argue that Canada was under-performing came from the World Health Organization, which ranked Canada as 30th in 2000. However, the basis for these rankings has been highly contentious. As Deber noted, "The measure of "overall healthsystem performance" derives from adjusting "goal attainment" for educational attainment. Although goal attainment is in theory based on five measures (level and distribution of health, level and distribution of "responsiveness" and "fairness of financial contribution"), the actual values assigned to most countries, including Canada, were never directly measured. The scores do not incorporate any information about the actual workings of the system, other than as reflected in life expectancy. The primary reason for Canada's relatively low standing rests on the relatively high educational level of its population, particularly as compared to France, rather than on any features of its health system."<ref> [http://longwoods.com/product.php?productid=17238&cat=367&page=1 R. Deber. Why Did the World Health Organization Rate Canada's Health System as 30th? Some Thoughts on League Tables. Longwoods Review 2(1) 2004.] </ref> Other countries had similar complaints, and the WHO has not repeated this ranking. |
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"Herein lies one of the puzzles of Canadian health care: Canadians increasingly view the health care system as unsustainable and under threat, even as their own experiences with the system are mostly positive."<ref>[http://www.healthcouncilcanada.ca/docs/rpts/2007/Public%20Perceptions%20-%20English%20Final_Feb-07.pdf Stuart N. Soroka. Canadian Perceptions of the Health Care System. 2007] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110706182550/http://www.healthcouncilcanada.ca/docs/rpts/2007/Public%20Perceptions%20-%20English%20Final_Feb-07.pdf |date=July 6, 2011 }}. {{ISBN|0-9739726-8-8}}</ref> |
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As analysts have noted, the root of the concern may be traced to successful cost control efforts in the mid-1990s, where public health expenditure per capita, in inflation-adjusted dollars, actually fell.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20080214090847/http://secure.cihi.ca/cihiweb/dispPage.jsp?cw_page=PG_876_E&cw_topic=876&cw_rel=AR_31_E CIHI National Health Expenditures in Canada 1975–2007]</ref> These efforts arose from efforts by the federal government to deal with its deficit through various austerity measures, which led to cuts in their transfers to the provinces, and in turn to squeezing hospital budgets and physician reimbursements. The number of physicians being trained was reduced. The result was seen in increased wait times, particularly for elective procedures. More recently, government has been reinvesting in health care, but public confidence has been slow to recover. |
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==The 2003 Accord== |
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In 2003, the prime minister and the provincial premiers agreed upon priority areas for reinvestment. The 2003 First Ministers’ Accord on Health Care Renewal <ref> [http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hcs-sss/delivery-prestation/fptcollab/2003accord/index_e.html Home page on the accord] </ref> reaffirmed their commitment to the principles of the Canada Health Act. They indicated the following principles: |
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A number of studies have compared Canada with other countries, and concluded that each system has its own strengths and weaknesses.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/publications_show.htm?doc_id=568237 |title=Schoen et al., Toward Higher-Performance Health Systems: Adults' Health Care Experiences in Seven Countries, 2007 |publisher=Commonwealthfund.org |date=November 1, 2007 |access-date=June 6, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081211172710/http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/publications_show.htm?doc_id=568237 |archive-date=December 11, 2008 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/46/33/38979719.pdf |title=OECD Health Data 2007. How Does Canada Compare? |access-date=June 6, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120616225257/http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/46/33/38979719.pdf |archive-date=June 16, 2012 }}</ref> The World Health Organization, ranked Canada in 2000 as 30th worldwide in performance. However, the basis for these rankings has been highly contentious. As Deber noted, "The measure of "overall health system performance" derives from adjusting "goal attainment" for educational attainment. Although goal attainment is in theory based on five measures (level and distribution of health, level and distribution of "responsiveness" and "fairness of financial contribution"), the actual values assigned to most countries, including Canada, were never directly measured. The scores do not incorporate any information about the actual workings of the system, other than as reflected in life expectancy. The primary reason for Canada's relatively low standing rests on the relatively high educational level of its population, particularly as compared to France, rather than on any features of its health system."<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://longwoods.com/product.php?productid=17238&cat=367&page=1 |title=R. Deber. Why Did the World Health Organization Rate Canada's Health System as 30th? Some Thoughts on League Tables. Longwoods Review 2(1) 2004 |journal=Healthcare Quarterly |publisher=Longwoods.com |date=June 20, 2003 |volume=7 |issue=2 |access-date=June 6, 2011|last1=Deber |first1=Raisa }}</ref> Other countries had similar complaints, and the WHO has not repeated this ranking. |
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There has been considerable opposition to ongoing changes to the Canadian health system. This opposition has been largely spearheaded by the New Democratic Party. There is also activism by a volunteer community, particularly the Canadian Health Coalition (*[www.healthcoalition.ca]) and its provincial affiliates, as well as other organizations such as the Council for Canadians ([https://canadians.org]). |
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==2003 Accord== |
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In 2003, the prime minister and the provincial premiers agreed upon priority areas for reinvestment. The 2003 First Ministers' Accord on Health Care Renewal<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hcs-sss/delivery-prestation/fptcollab/2003accord/index_e.html |title=Home page on the accord |publisher=Hc-sc.gc.ca |access-date=June 6, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080602045037/http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hcs-sss/delivery-prestation/fptcollab/2003accord/index_e.html |archive-date=June 2, 2008 }}</ref> reaffirmed their commitment to the principles of the ''Canada Health Act''. They indicated the following principles: |
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"Drawing from this foundation, First Ministers view this Accord as a covenant which will help to ensure that: |
"Drawing from this foundation, First Ministers view this Accord as a covenant which will help to ensure that: |
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Line 50: | Line 101: | ||
* our health care system is sustainable and affordable and will be here for Canadians and their children in the future." |
* our health care system is sustainable and affordable and will be here for Canadians and their children in the future." |
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The accord set the following priority areas: primary health care, home care, catastrophic drug coverage, access to diagnostic/medical equipment and information technology and an electronic health record. The extent of progress in meeting reform goals has varied across these areas. |
The accord set the following priority areas: primary health care, home care, catastrophic drug coverage, access to diagnostic/medical equipment and information technology and an [[electronic health record]]. The extent of progress in meeting reform goals has varied across these areas. |
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==Evaluating |
==Evaluating claims about the system== |
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Evaluating the accuracy of claims about the system is hampered by several factors. The highly decentralized nature of health care delivery means that good data is not always available. It is often difficult to distinguish compelling but atypical anecdotes from systemic problems. Considerable effort is being made to develop and implement comparable indicators to allow better assessment of progress. However, the Health Council of |
Evaluating the accuracy of claims about the system is hampered by several factors. The highly decentralized nature of health care delivery means that good data is not always available. It is often difficult to distinguish compelling but atypical anecdotes from systemic problems. Considerable effort is being made to develop and implement comparable indicators to allow better assessment of progress. However, the Health Council of Canada—with a mandate to monitor and report on health reform—complained in 2007 that progress has stalled.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.healthcouncilcanada.ca/en/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=136&Itemid=115 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070216143147/http://www.healthcouncilcanada.ca/en/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=136&Itemid=115 |url-status=dead |archive-date=February 16, 2007 |title=Health Council of Canada. Health Care Renewal in Canada: Measuring UP? 2007 |publisher=Healthcouncilcanada.ca |access-date=June 6, 2011 }}</ref> |
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The debate about health care has also become heavily ideological. The Fraser Institute, a think tank supporting "competitive market solutions for public policy problems" is a frequent critic of |
The debate about health care has also become heavily ideological. The [[Fraser Institute]], a right leaning think tank supporting "competitive market solutions for public policy problems" is a frequent critic of publicly funded Canadian Health Care. It publishes yearly reports about wait times which are then used to argue that the system is both failing and unsustainable.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.fraserinstitute.org/commerce.web/newsrelease.aspx?nID=4967 |title=Fraser Institute press release, October 2007 |publisher=Fraserinstitute.org |access-date=June 6, 2011}}</ref> Others criticize their methodology, which is based on physician perceptions rather than actual waits.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.chsrf.ca/mythbusters/pdf/myth17_e.pdf |title=CHSRF Mythbusters: A parallel private system would relieve waiting times in the public system. 2005 |publisher=Chsrf.ca |date=December 13, 2010 |access-date=June 6, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060626223027/http://www.chsrf.ca/mythbusters/pdf/myth17_e.pdf |archive-date=June 26, 2006 |url-status=dead}}</ref> Other complaints come from the political left, who object to 'privatization' (by which they usually mean a heavier involvement of for-profit providers). (See, for example, the Canadian Health Coalition web page.)<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.healthcoalition.ca/ |title=Canadian Health Coalition. Home Page. Accessed Dec 26, 2007 |publisher=Healthcoalition.ca |date=May 24, 2011 |access-date=June 6, 2011}}</ref> |
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===Wait Times and Access=== |
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Common complaints relate to access, usually to elective surgery (especially hip and knee replacement and cataract surgery) and diagnostic imaging. These have been the primary targets of health care reinvestment, and it appears that considerable progress has been made for certain services, although the implications for procedures not on the target list are unclear. <ref> [http://healthcouncilcanada.ca/en/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=202&Itemid=10 Health Council of Canada. Wading through wait times. 2007] </ref> <ref> [http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hcs-sss/qual/acces/wait-attente/index_e.html Health Canada home page on wait times, with links to major studies. 2007] </ref> <ref> [http://www.cihi.ca/cihiweb/dispPage.jsp?cw_page=PG_549_E&cw_topic=549&cw_rel=AR_1385_E CIHI Waiting for Health Care in Canada: What We Know and What we Don't Know. 2006.] </ref> Canadian physicians have been heavily involved, particularly in developing appropriateness criteria to ensure timely access for necessary care.<ref> [http://www.waittimealliance.ca/index.htm Home page of Wait Time Alliance accessed December 26, 2007] </ref> It cost [[economy of Canada|Canada's economy]] [[Canadian dollar|$]]14.8 billion in [[2007]] to have patients waiting longer than needed for medical procedures.<ref>http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20080115/wait_times_080115/20080115?hub=Canada</ref> |
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=== |
===Wait times and access=== |
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Common complaints relate to access, usually to accessing family physicians (with wait times beyond 365 days in Montreal), to elective surgery (especially hip and knee replacement and cataract surgery) and diagnostic imaging. These have been the primary targets of health care reinvestment, and it appears that considerable progress has been made for certain services, although the implications for procedures not on the target list are unclear.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://healthcouncilcanada.ca/en/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=202&Itemid=10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070727021417/http://healthcouncilcanada.ca/en/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=202&Itemid=10 |url-status=dead |archive-date=July 27, 2007 |title=Health Council of Canada. Wading through wait times. 2007 |publisher=Healthcouncilcanada.ca |access-date=June 6, 2011 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hcs-sss/qual/acces/wait-attente/index_e.html |title=Health Canada home page on wait times, with links to major studies. 2007 |publisher=Hc-sc.gc.ca |date=May 25, 2007 |access-date=June 6, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080516203316/http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hcs-sss/qual/acces/wait-attente/index_e.html |archive-date=May 16, 2008 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cihi.ca/cihiweb/dispPage.jsp?cw_page=PG_549_E&cw_topic=549&cw_rel=AR_1385_E|title=CIHI Waiting for Health Care in Canada: What We Know and What we Don't Know. 2006.|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070516013044/http://www.cihi.ca/cihiweb/dispPage.jsp?cw_page=PG_549_E&cw_topic=549&cw_rel=AR_1385_E|archive-date=May 16, 2007}}</ref> Canadian physicians have been heavily involved, particularly in developing appropriateness criteria to ensure timely access for necessary care.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.waittimealliance.ca/index.htm |title=Home page of Wait Time Alliance accessed December 26, 2007 |publisher=Waittimealliance.ca |access-date=June 6, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110706212443/http://www.waittimealliance.ca/index.htm |archive-date=July 6, 2011 }}</ref> It is estimated to have cost [[economy of Canada|Canada's economy]] [[Canadian dollar|$]]14.8 billion in 2007 to have patients waiting longer than needed for medical procedures, assuming all patients normally work, and cannot work while waiting.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ctvnews.ca/patient-wait-times-costing-economy-14-8b-1.271318 |title=Patient wait times costing economy $14.8B |publisher=CTV.ca |date=January 15, 2008 |access-date=January 28, 2020}}</ref> |
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A related issue is the volume, and distribution, of health human resources.<ref> [http://www.cihi.ca/cihiweb/dispPage.jsp?cw_page=AR_35_E CIHI Canada's Health Care Providers accessed Dec 26, 2007] </ref> There are ongoing issues about the distribution of physicians, with the pendulum swinging from arguing that there were too many, to arguing that there were too few. As Ben Chan found, the major factor driving the drop in physician numbers was changes in training programs. <ref> [http://www.cihi.ca/cihiweb/dispPage.jsp?cw_page=media_05jun2002_e CIHI report, From Perceived Surplus to Perceived Shortage: What Happened to Canada’s Physician Workforce in the 1990s? 2002] </ref> Combined with such factors as changes in the hours worked by each physician , and a decrease in the proportion of doctors choosing to go into family practice, there were shortages in some areas, particularly for general practitioners (GP) / family doctors. One response has been to encourage 'primary care reform', including greater use of multidisciplinary health care teams.<ref> [http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hcs-sss/prim/index_e.html Health Canada Primary Health Care home page, accessed Dec 26, 2007] </ref> There are also ongoing issues regarding nurses. (See Nursing Health Services Research Unit, which links to some reports. <ref> [http://www.nhsru.com/ NHRSU home page. Accessed Dec 26, 2007.] </ref> CIHI also gives data about nursing.) |
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The Fraser Institute completed a study in October 2013, ''Waiting Your Turn: Wait Times for Health Care in Canada''. The authors surveyed both private and publicly funded outpatient health care offices and estimated the amount of wait time between general practitioner and specialists for elective treatments such as [[mammoplasty|getting breast implants]]. The Fraser Institute estimates that the wait times for elective treatments have increased 95 percent from 1993 to 2013.<ref>Barua, B., & Esmail, N. (October 2013). Waiting Times Wait Times for Health Care in Canada. Fraser Institute . Retrieved January 28, 2020, from https://www.fraserinstitute.org/sites/default/files/waiting-your-turn-2013.pdf</ref> |
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===Health human resources=== |
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==The Parallel Private Debate== |
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A related issue is the volume, and distribution, of health human resources.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cihi.ca/cihiweb/dispPage.jsp?cw_page=AR_35_E|title=CIHI Canada's Health Care Providers accessed Dec 26, 2007|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070822183918/http://www.cihi.ca/cihiweb/dispPage.jsp?cw_page=AR_35_E|archive-date=August 22, 2007}}</ref> There are ongoing issues about the distribution of physicians, with the pendulum swinging from arguing that there were too many, to arguing that there were too few. As Ben Chan found, the major factor driving the drop in physician numbers was changes in training programs.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cihi.ca/cihiweb/dispPage.jsp?cw_page=media_05jun2002_e|title=CIHI report, From Perceived Surplus to Perceived Shortage: What Happened to Canada's Physician Workforce in the 1990s? 2002|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20021116091216/http://www.cihi.ca/cihiweb/dispPage.jsp?cw_page=media_05jun2002_e|archive-date=November 16, 2002}}</ref> Combined with such factors as changes in the hours worked by each physician, and a decrease in the proportion of doctors choosing to go into family practice, there were shortages in some areas, particularly for general practitioners (GP) / family doctors. One response has been to encourage 'primary care reform', including greater use of multidisciplinary health care teams.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hcs-sss/prim/index_e.html |title=Health Canada Primary Health Care home page, accessed Dec 26, 2007 |publisher=Hc-sc.gc.ca |date=October 1, 2004 |access-date=June 6, 2011}}</ref> There are also ongoing issues regarding nurses. (See Nursing Health Services Research Unit, which links to some reports.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nhsru.com/ |title=NHRSU home page. Accessed Dec 26, 2007 |publisher=Nhsru.com |access-date=June 6, 2011}}</ref> CIHI also gives data about nursing.) |
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Some politicians and [[think tank]]s have proposed removing barriers to the existence of a parallel private healthcare system. Others note that such systems act to erode cost control and impede equity.<ref> [http://www.longwoods.com/product.php?productid=19340&cat=515&page=1 I. Dhalla. Private Health Insurance: An International Overview and Considerations for Canada. Longwoods Review vol 5(3) 2007.] </ref> |
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Though polling suggests support for such reforms has been increasing, it has yet to be adopted as official policy by any of the main federal political parties. |
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===Delisting=== |
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There are no barriers under the Canada Health Act to private clinics, although provincial governments may or may not permit them. Individual physicians can and do operate private clinics, but there are disputes as to whether surgical procedures can be performed. Two related issues have obstructed the growth of such clinics. One is regulatory - hospital-based quality assurance often failed to encompass them. This gap has been filled in most provinces, but sometimes only after celebrated incidents in which patients died in unregulated clinics, including one physician who performed cosmetic surgery in an Ontario hotel room. The second is economic - there may be no way for physicians to recoup the additional costs of running a surgical facility from their fees. Here, provinces can choose to offer 'facility fees' to these clinics, but doing so has often been contentious, particularly if hospitals felt that these costs would be better devoted to allowing them to increase their operating room time. |
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Delisting is the term used in [[Canada]] when a province decides that a medical procedure will no longer be covered by the health care system in that [[province]]. |
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While health care coverage is country wide, and is required to be portable and to have equal access, there are a few differences between what provinces will cover. In some cases, this has resulted in lost [[Grant (money)|grants]] to the provinces; in other cases it has not.{{citation needed|date=October 2011}} |
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Note that uninsured persons can pay for care (including medical tourism), and that insured persons can still pay for uninsured services. These are both niche markets. |
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An example of a delisted service is [[circumcision]] in [[Ontario]]. It is still possible to have a boy circumcised in Ontario by a [[physician|doctor]] but the parents must pay the cost.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/health-and-fitness/ask-a-health-expert/circumcision-5-facts-and-3-misconceptions-to-consider-before-you-do-it/article9461671/|title=Circumcision: 5 facts and 3 misconceptions to consider before you do it|work=The Globe and Mail|access-date=May 6, 2017}}</ref> |
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American opinion on Canadian medicare tends to be non-neutral, either supportive as in the preceding paragraph and therefore desirable within the USA, or negative and not desirable. Opinions not supportive of medicare put forth issues such as wait times and budget cuts having severely impaired the Canadian healthcare system, to the point where Canadian mothers have to go to the U.S. to deliver because of lack of room and nurses in Canadian hospitals. <ref>http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,300939,00.html</ref> |
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The issue of delisting services is becoming increasingly a political battleground in Canadian health care. In an effort to cut their health care budgets, some provincial governments will opt to delist specific services under the guise that they lack essential medical necessity; however, the question of what qualifies as medical necessity is in these instances typically debated. For example, except for seniors, children, and diabetics eye exams to check vision are no longer covered in Ontario.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.health.gov.on.ca/english/public/pub/ohip/services.html|title= Ontario Ministry of Health and Long Term Care – Public Information – Ontario Health Insurance Plan – Health Services|access-date=July 28, 2012}}</ref> |
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Governments in Canada spend a smaller amount per capita on healthcare than governments in the United States, while almost every Canadian citizen is fully covered.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} In the United States a high percentage of the population is uncovered or only marginally covered, despite higher proportional spending along with large private investment. Even more people are just a job loss away from not having coverage (although in most cases the employer must maintain health care with [[copayment]] of the patient for a period of time after employment in the United States has gone down not up). <!--this sentence makes no sense; what has gone down not up? The time? The number of patients?--> |
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==Parallel private debate== |
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The lack of competition has given healthcare unions a monopoly on essential services, thus ensuring a very strong bargaining position. Nova Scotia is currently debating healthcare legislation aimed at removing the threat of striking healthcare workers and replacing it with binding arbitration.<ref>http://thechronicleherald.ca/Front/966897.html</ref> |
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Some politicians and [[think tank]]s have proposed removing barriers to the existence of a parallel private healthcare system. Others note that such systems act to erode cost control and impede equity.<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://www.longwoods.com/product.php?productid=19340&cat=515&page=1 |title=I. Dhalla. Private Health Insurance: An International Overview and Considerations for Canada. Longwoods Review vol 5(3) 2007 |journal=Healthcare Quarterly |publisher=Longwoods.com |date= September 15, 2007|volume=10 |issue=4 |access-date=June 6, 2011|last1=Dhalla |first1=Irfan }}</ref> |
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Though polling suggests support for such reforms has been increasing,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Majority of Canadians support private options for health care, poll shows – National {{!}} Globalnews.ca |url=https://globalnews.ca/news/9458260/health-care-private-options-majority-canadians-support-poll/ |access-date=2023-05-22 |website=Global News}}</ref> it has yet to be adopted as official policy by any of the main federal political parties. |
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Under federal law, private clinics are not legally allowed to charge patients directly for services covered by the ''Canada Health Act', if they qualify for public insurance. Regardless of this legal issue, many do offer such services. There are disputes as to whether surgical procedures can be performed. Two related issues have obstructed the growth of such clinics. One is regulatory – hospital-based quality assurance often failed to encompass them. This gap has been filled in most provinces, but sometimes only after celebrated incidents in which patients died in unregulated clinics, including one physician who performed cosmetic surgery in an Ontario hotel room. The second is economic — there may be no way for physicians to recoup the additional costs of running a surgical facility from their fees. Here, provinces can choose to offer 'facility fees' to these clinics, but doing so has often been contentious, particularly if hospitals felt that these costs would be better devoted to allowing them to increase their operating room time. |
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Note that uninsured persons can pay for care (including [[medical tourism]]), and that insured persons can still pay for uninsured services. These are both niche markets. |
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Opponents of Canadian health care often raise issues such as long wait times, a '[[brain-drain]]' drawing qualified professionals away from Canada to other jurisdictions where working in the health care field is more profitable, and impairment of the Canadian health care system due to budget cuts. Fox News ran a story in 2007 reporting that during a period of above average numbers of births, at least 40 Canadian mothers of premature babies had to travel to the U.S. for treatment due to insufficient capacity for premature babies in British Columbia neonatal units. Nonetheless, Canada's health care system covered the health care costs of those mothers affected.<ref>{{cite news| url=http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,300939,00.html | publisher=Fox News| title=Canada's Expectant Moms Heading to U.S. to Deliver | date=October 10, 2007}}</ref> |
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In 2003, the Government in Canada spent US$2,998 per capita on healthcare as compared to US$5,711 per capita in the United States, while almost every Canadian citizen is fully covered.<ref>Health Care Spending in the United States and OECD Countries, January 2007 {{cite web |url=http://www.kff.org/insurance/snapshot/chcm010307oth.cfm |title=Snapshots: Health Care Spending in the United States and OECD Countries – Kaiser Family Foundation |access-date=October 19, 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081103090227/http://www.kff.org/insurance/snapshot/chcm010307oth.cfm |archive-date=November 3, 2008 }} Retrieved October 19, 2008.</ref> In the United States, 11.9 percent of adults lack public or private health coverage,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://money.cnn.com/2015/04/13/news/economy/obamacare-uninsured-gallup/ |title=Nearly 90% of Americans now have health insurance – Apr. 13, 2015 |date=March 15, 2016 |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160315000410/http://money.cnn.com/2015/04/13/news/economy/obamacare-uninsured-gallup/ |archive-date=March 15, 2016 }}</ref> despite higher proportional spending along with large private investment. |
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The lack of competition has given healthcare unions a monopoly on essential services, thus ensuring a very strong bargaining position. Nova Scotia is currently debating healthcare legislation aimed at removing the threat of striking healthcare workers and replacing it with binding arbitration.<ref>{{Cite web| last = Province of Nova Scotia| title = Dispute Resolution in Healthcare and Community Services Collective Bargaining| access-date = July 11, 2011| date = March 21, 2011| url = http://www.gov.ns.ca/lae/unionworkplaces/disputeresolution.asp#07}}</ref> |
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==Proposed reforms== |
==Proposed reforms== |
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{{unreferenced section|date=July 2017}} |
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One proposed solution for improving the Canadian healthcare system is to increase funding. Proponents of this approach point to{{Fact|date=February 2007}} the rise of [[Neoconservatism|neo-conservative]] economic policies in Canada and the associated reduction in [[welfare state]] expenditure (particularly in the provinces) from the 1980s onwards as the cause of degradation in the system. In fact, there is evidence{{Fact|date=February 2007}} that the percentage of total government expenditures spent on healthcare has been increasing, in part due to a higher percentage of [[population aging|older Canadians]]. |
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One proposed solution for improving the Canadian healthcare system is to increase funding. Proponents of this approach point to{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} the rise of [[Neoconservatism|neo-conservative]] economic policies in Canada and the associated reduction in [[welfare state]] expenditure (particularly in the provinces) from the 1980s onwards as the cause of degradation in the system. While some say evidence clearly indicate an overall percentage increase on healthcare spending, the net spending has been drastically decreasing on top of inflation. |
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Other critics of healthcare state{{ |
Other critics of healthcare state{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} that increased funding will not solve systemic problems in the healthcare system including a rising cost of medical technology, infrastructure, and wages. These critics say{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} that Canada's proximity to the United States causes a "[[brain drain]]" or migration of Canadian-trained doctors and nurses (as well as other professionals) to the United States, where private hospitals can pay much higher wages and income tax rates are lower (partially because health care is not covered through taxation). Some of these critics{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} argue that increased privatization of healthcare would improve Canada's health infrastructure. Others<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1503/cmaj.081177|pmid=18838441|pmc=2565716|title=Privatizing health care is not the answer: Lessons from the United States|journal=CMAJ|volume=179|issue=9|pages=916–9|year=2008|last1=Angell|first1=M}}</ref> argue vehemently against it. For example, large resources are required to train and educate doctors. Since the number of available doctors is therefore limited, doctors working for a private system would not be working under the public system creating little to no net increase in available services. |
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Critics of |
Critics of greater privatization state{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} that funding for healthcare should be kept public (most services are provided by the private sector including doctors, who, in most cases, are private), in part because it separates Canadians from Americans by mandating equality and fairness in health care. That is in contrast to other countries,{{Citation needed|date=March 2010}} whose doctors are on a salary per capita. In that sense, Canadian healthcare is publicly funded, and services are provided by a mixture of public and private entities, which most Canadians support.{{Citation needed|date=May 2008}} Changing the system to eliminate the balance between public and private service providers to a completely public system is one such alternative. |
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==Ontario's reform experiments== |
==Ontario's reform experiments== |
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===User premiums=== |
===User premiums=== |
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Currently in Ontario, people |
Currently in Ontario, people with an annual taxable income above $20,000 must pay an annual health care premium ranging from $60–$900.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rev.gov.on.ca/en/tax/healthpremium/rates.html |title=Ontario Health Premium Rate Chart |publisher=Ontario Ministry of Finance }}</ref> Funding for health care in Ontario also comes in part from a dedicated Employer Health Tax (EHT) that ranges from 0.98 percent to 1.95 percent of employer payroll.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rev.gov.on.ca/en/tax/eht/ |title=Employer Health Tax |publisher=Ontario Ministry of Finance }}</ref> Eligible employers are exempted from EHT on the first $400,000 of payroll.{{citation needed|date=October 2011}} British Columbia and Quebec charge similar premiums. |
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===Medical clinics=== |
===Medical clinics=== |
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Ontario has increased the number of 24-hour drop-in medical clinic networks{{ |
Ontario has increased the number of 24-hour drop-in medical clinic networks{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} to reduce costs associated with treating off-hours emergencies in hospital emergency rooms. |
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Many |
Many family doctor practices have created their own clinics, offering 24-hour service for their patients if needed. Each doctor in the practice takes a turn at being "on call" on a rotating basis. Patients who have family doctors belonging to these practices are able to have a doctor come to their home in extreme situations. There is no additional charge for these services as they are billed to the Province, the same as an office visit. |
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Hospitals in some major Canadian cities, such as London, Ontario, have restructured their |
Hospitals in some major Canadian cities, such as London, Ontario, have restructured their emergency services to share emergency treatment among several hospitals.{{citation needed|date=October 2011}} One hospital may provide full emergency room care, while another sees patients who have broken limbs, minor injuries and yet another sees patients suffering cold, flu, etc. |
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In 2007, the first nurse practitioner-led office to relieve waiting times caused by a shortage of primary practitioners was opened in [[Greater Sudbury|Sudbury, Ontario]].<ref>{{cite news | title=First Nurse Practitioner-Led Clinic Opens Doors in Sudbury | date=August 31, 2007 | publisher=CNW Group | url =http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/August2007/30/c3886.html | work =REGISTERED NURSES' ASSOCIATION OF ONTARIO | access-date = September 2, 2007 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | title=1st nurse practitioner-governed clinic opens in Sudbury | date=August 31, 2007 | publisher=CBC | url =https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/1st-nurse-practitioner-governed-clinic-opens-in-sudbury-1.686287 | work =CBC News | access-date = September 2, 2007 }}</ref> |
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===Alternatives to fee-for-service=== |
===Alternatives to fee-for-visit or service=== |
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Ontario has also attempted to move the system away from bill for service and toward preventive and community-based approaches to healthcare. The Ontario government in the early |
Ontario has also attempted to move the system away from bill for service or visit and toward preventive and community-based approaches to healthcare. The Ontario government in the early 1990s helped develop many community health care centres, often in low-income areas, which provide both medical and social support which combines health care with programs such as collective kitchens, Internet access, anti-poverty groups and groups to help people quit smoking. |
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While funding has decreased for these centres, and they have had to cut back{{ |
While funding has decreased for these centres, and they have had to cut back,{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} they have had a lower cost than the traditional fee-for-service approach.{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} Many of these centres are filled to capacity in terms of general doctors, and there are often fairly long waiting lists and the centres also utilize [[nurse practitioner]]s, who reduce the workload on the doctors and increase efficiency. |
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===Midwives and hospital birthing reforms=== |
===Midwives and hospital birthing reforms=== |
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Ontario and Quebec have recently licensed [[midwives]], providing another option for childbirth which can reduce costs for uncomplicated births. Midwives remain close to hospital facilities in case the need for emergency care emerges. These births often cost much less than the traditional hospital delivery{{ |
Ontario and Quebec have recently licensed [[midwives]], providing another option for childbirth which can reduce costs for uncomplicated births. Midwives remain close to hospital facilities in case the need for emergency care emerges. These births often cost much less than the traditional hospital delivery.{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} Hospitals have also reformed their approach to birthing by adding private birthing areas, often with a hot tub (which is good for relieving pain without medication). |
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===Privatization=== |
===Privatization=== |
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Currently, privately owned and operated hospitals that allow patients to pay [[Out-of-pocket expenses|out-of-pocket]] for services cannot obtain public funding in Canada, as they contravene the "equal accessibility" tenets of the |
Currently, privately owned and operated hospitals that allow patients to pay [[Out-of-pocket expenses|out-of-pocket]] for services cannot obtain public funding in Canada, as they contravene the "equal accessibility" tenets of the ''Canada Health Act''. Some politicians and medical professionals have proposed{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} allowing public funding for these hospitals. Workers' Compensation Boards, the [[Canadian Forces]], the RCMP, federally incarcerated prisoners, and medical care for which an insurance company has liability (e.g., motor vehicle accidents) all pay for health care outside of the public systems in all provinces.<ref name="Canada Health Act Overview"/><ref>[http://www.taxpayer.com/main/news.php?news_id=1833 B.C. Canadian Taxpayers Federation] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071108232550/http://www.taxpayer.com/main/news.php?news_id=1833 |date=November 8, 2007 }}</ref> |
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In Quebec, a recent legal change has allowed this reform to occur. In June 2005, the Supreme Court of Canada overturned a Quebec law preventing people from buying private health insurance to pay for medical services available through the publicly funded system and this ruling does not apply outside the province. See: [[Chaoulli v. Quebec (Attorney General)] |
In Quebec, a recent legal change has allowed this reform to occur. In June 2005, the Supreme Court of Canada overturned a Quebec law preventing people from buying private health insurance to pay for medical services available through the publicly funded system and this ruling does not apply outside the province. See: [[Chaoulli v. Quebec (Attorney General)]].<ref>{{Citation |
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| title = Chaoulli v. Quebec (Attorney General), 2005 SCC 35 |
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| access-date = July 11, 2011 |
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| date = June 9, 2005 |
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| url = http://www.canlii.org/en/ca/scc/doc/2005/2005scc35/2005scc35.html |
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}}</ref> |
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In November 2005, the Quebec government announced that it would allow residents to purchase private medical insurance to comply with this ruling. |
In November 2005, the Quebec government announced that it would allow residents to purchase private medical insurance to comply with this ruling. |
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Private insurance from companies such as [[Blue Cross]], [[Green Shield]] and [[Manulife]] have been available for many years to cover services not covered by |
Private insurance from companies such as [[Blue Cross Blue Shield Association|Blue Cross]], [[Green Shield Canada|Green Shield]] and [[Manulife]] have been available for many years to cover services not covered by the Canadian health care system, such as dental care and some eye care. Private insurance is provided by many employers as a benefit. |
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The Canadian Medical Association (CMA) released a report<ref> http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/story.html?id=fe42e2be-077a-4193-a7c0-d6fc2e242269&k=12821</ref> in July 2007 endorsing private healthcare as a means to improve an ailing healthcare system. |
The Canadian Medical Association (CMA) released a report<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/story.html?id=fe42e2be-077a-4193-a7c0-d6fc2e242269&k=12821 |title=Doctors' group prescribes private health care |publisher=Canada.com |date=July 30, 2007 |access-date=June 6, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121026020309/http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/story.html?id=fe42e2be-077a-4193-a7c0-d6fc2e242269&k=12821 |archive-date=October 26, 2012 }}</ref> in July 2007 endorsing private healthcare as a means to improve an ailing healthcare system. [[Brian Day|Dr. Brian Day]], who acted as President of the CMA in 2007/2008, is the owner of the largest private healthcare hospital in Canada and a proponent of mixed public and private healthcare in Canada. |
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===Canadian Health Practitioner standards=== |
===Canadian Health Practitioner standards=== |
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It is generally accepted that physicians arriving in Canada from other countries must meet Canadian Health Practitioner standards. So there is concern that doctors from other countries are not trained or educated to meet Canadian standards. Consequently, doctors who want to practise in Canada must meet the same educational and medical qualifications as Canadian-trained practitioners. Others suggest that the [[Canadian Medical Association]], the [[Ontario Medical Association]], and the regulatory bodies (the provincial [[Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada|Colleges of Physicians and Surgeons]]) have created too much red tape to allow qualified doctors to practise in Canada.<ref>{{cite journal |pmid=10763392|pmc=1232340|year=2000|last1=Mahim|first1=A|title=Red tape is strangling foreign-trained physicians|journal=CMAJ |volume=162|issue=7|pages=972}}</ref> Canada's health system is ranked 30th in the world, suggesting the logic of the doctor shortage defies the statistics.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://cthealth.server101.com/Old%20Universal%20Health%20Care/united_states_spends_most_on_health,_but_france_no__1_in_treatment.htm |title=Universal Health Care – Canada ranks 30th |publisher=Cthealth.server101.com |date=June 20, 2000 |access-date=June 6, 2011}}</ref> In fact according to a report by Keith Leslie of the Canadian Press in the Chronicle Journal, November 21, 2005, over 10,000 trained doctors are working in the United States, a country ranked 37th in the world. It would suggest money or the perception of better working conditions, or both, are resulting in an exodus of Canadian doctors (and nurses) to the USA.<ref name="ReferenceA">Ont. Medi Scare – Chronicle Journal, Thunder Bay, November 21, 2005 – Physician shortage puts stability of health-care system at risk. OMA</ref> |
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It is important to recognize that many consider the doctor shortage in Canada to be a very severe problem affecting all sectors of health care. It may relate in part to the details of how doctors are paid; a detail often misunderstood. In Canada, almost all doctors receive a fee per-visit, not per-service. It has been suggested that this type of "fee-for-visit" payment system can encourage complexity, volume visits, repeat visits, referrals, and testing.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://epe.lac-bac.gc.ca/100/200/300/fraser/health_reform/improving.html |title=Improving health care for Canadians |publisher=Epe.lac-bac.gc.ca |access-date=June 6, 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.benefitnews.com/feedback/views34.cfm |title=Health Care Costs Nobody Talks About |date=April 8, 2007 |access-date=June 6, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070408035710/http://www.benefitnews.com/feedback/views34.cfm |archive-date=April 8, 2007}}</ref> |
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It is generally accepted that physicians arriving in Canada from other countries must meet Canadian Health Practitioner standards. So there is concern that doctors from other countries are not trained or educated to meet Canadian standards. Consequently, doctors who want to practice in Canada must meet the same educational and medical qualifications as Canadian-trained practitioners, others suggest that the current regulatory bodies, the [[Canadian Medical Association]], the [[Ontario Medical Association|Doctors Union]], and the [[College of Physicians and Surgeons]] has created too much red tape to allow qualified doctors to practise in Canada.<ref>[http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/content/full/162/7/972-a Red tape is strangling foreign-trained physicians CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION JOURNAL]</ref> It should be noted that Canada's Health system is ranked 30th in the world, suggesting the logic of the doctor shortage defies the statistics.<ref>[http://cthealth.server101.com/Old%20Universal%20Health%20Care/united_states_spends_most_on_health,_but_france_no__1_in_treatment.htm Universal Health Care - Canada ranks 30th]</ref> In fact according to a report by Keith Leslie of the Canadian Press in the Chronicle Journal, Nov 21, 2005, over 10,000 trained doctors are working in the United States, a country ranked 37th in the world. It would suggest money or the perception of better working conditions, or both, are resulting in an exodus of Canadian doctors (and nurses) to the USA.<ref>Ont. Medi Scare - Chronicle Journal, Thunder Bay, November 21, 2005 - Physician shortage puts stability of health-care system at risk. OMA </ref> |
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One consequence of the shortage in Canada is that a great many patients are left without family doctors, and trained specialists, making early intervention very difficult. As the article in the Toronto Star specially isolates, it is not so much a problem of a doctor shortage but of a shortage of 'licensed doctors'. [[Michael Urbanski]] states that Canada already has a hidden reserve of foreign-trained MDs eager to begin medical practice. "However, what's crucial to understanding the issue of doctor shortage in Ontario is that while the Liberal government is planning to go "poaching" for other countries' doctors, there are an estimated 4,000 internationally trained doctors right here in Ontario working at low-wage jobs."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://triec.ca/index.asp?pageid=41&int=newsite/news-media/inthenews/MediaClippings/StarAug1904.htm |title=What doctor shortage? – Toronto Star, August 19, 2004 |publisher=Triec.ca |access-date=June 6, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070929211116/http://triec.ca/index.asp?pageid=41&int=newsite%2Fnews-media%2Finthenews%2FMediaClippings%2FStarAug1904.htm |archive-date=September 29, 2007 }}</ref> |
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It is important to recognize that many consider the doctor shortage in Canada to be a very severe problem impacting all sectors of health care. It may relate in part to the details of how doctors are paid; a detail often misunderstood. In Canada, almost all doctors receive a fee per-visit, not per-service. It has been suggested that this type of "[[fee-for-visit]]" payment system can encourage complexity, volume visits, repeat visits, referrals, and testing.<ref>[http://epe.lac-bac.gc.ca/100/200/300/fraser/health_reform/improving.html Improving health care for Canadians.]</ref><ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20070408035710/http://www.benefitnews.com/feedback/views34.cfm Health Care Costs Nobody Talks About]</ref> |
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One consequence of the shortage in Canada is that a great many patients are left without family doctors, and trained specialists, making early intervention very difficult. As the article in the Toronto Star specially isolates, it is not so much a problem of a doctor shortage but of a shortage of 'licensed doctors'. [[Michael Urbanski]] states that Canada already has a hidden reserve of foreign-trained MDs eager to begin medical practice. "However, what's crucial to understanding the issue of doctor shortage in Ontario is that while the Liberal government is planning to go "poaching" for other countries' doctors, there are an estimated 4,000 internationally trained doctors right here in Ontario working at low-wage jobs." <ref>[http://triec.ca/index.asp?pageid=41&int=newsite/news-media/inthenews/MediaClippings/StarAug1904.htm What doctor shortage? - Toronto Star, August 19, 2004]</ref> |
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A CBC report [6](August 21, 2006) on the health care system reports the following: |
A CBC report [6](August 21, 2006) on the health care system reports the following: |
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<blockquote>Dr. Albert Schumacher,<ref> |
<blockquote>Dr. Albert Schumacher,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/healthcare/public_vs_private.html |title=Private verses Public – Dr. Albert Schumacher |publisher=Cbc.ca |date=2006-12-01 |access-date=2011-06-06}}</ref> former president of the Canadian Medical Association estimates that 75 percent of health-care services are delivered privately, but funded publicly. "Frontline practitioners whether they're GPs or specialists by and large are not salaried. They're small hardware stores. Same thing with labs and radiology clinics …The situation we are seeing now are more services around not being funded publicly but people having to pay for them, or their insurance companies. We have sort of a passive privatization.</blockquote> |
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In a report by Keith Leslie of the Canadian Press in the Chronicle Journal, |
In a report by Keith Leslie of the Canadian Press in the Chronicle Journal, November 21, 2005, commenting on an Ontario Medical Association Report, prepared by the human resources committee states "The year 2005 finds the province in the midst of a deepening physician resources crisis". The report continues to report, "the government should make it easier for doctors from other provinces to work in Ontario and .... ". Here we have signs of inter-provincial competition affecting the doctor shortage in one province over another.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> Essentially, privatized healthcare is not a choice of interest for lower income Canadians, it is most likely to be unaffordable and unfair to those who suffer on a social standard. |
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==Provincial insurance plans== |
==Provincial insurance plans== |
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Although the ''Canada Health Act'' provides national guidelines for healthcare, the provinces have exclusive jurisdiction over health under the [[Constitution of Canada|constitution]] and are free to ignore these guidelines, although if they ignore the guidelines, the [[Government of Canada|federal government]] may deny federal funding for healthcare. All provinces currently abide by the ''Canada Health Act'' in order to receive this funding; however the [[Alberta]] legislature has considered proposals{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} to ignore the Act to allow them to implement reforms not allowed under the Act. |
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The federal government has no direct role in the delivery of medicine in the provinces and territories so each province and territory has its own independent public health insurance program. Under the ''Canada Health Act'', each province and territory must provide services to members of plans in other provinces and territories. |
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Though the [[Canada Health Act]] provides national guidelines for healthcare, the provinces have exclusive jurisdiction over health under the [[Constitution of Canada|constitution]] and are free to ignore these guidelines, although if they ignore the guidelines, the [[Government of Canada|federal government]] may deny federal funding for healthcare. All provinces currently abide by the Canada Health Act in order to receive this funding; however the [[Alberta]] legislature has considered proposals{{Fact|date=February 2007}} to ignore the Act to allow them to implement reforms not allowed under the Act. |
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The federal government has no direct role in the delivery of medicine in the provinces and territories so each province and territory has its own independent public health insurance program. Under the Canada Health Act, each province and territory must provide services to members of plans in other provinces and territories. |
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===List of provincial programs=== |
===List of provincial programs=== |
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{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable" |
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!Province |
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|[[British Columbia]] |
|[[British Columbia]] |
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|[[Medical Services Plan]] |
|[[Medical Services Plan of British Columbia]] |
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|[[Manitoba]] |
|[[Manitoba]] |
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|[[Manitoba Health]] |
|[[Manitoba Health Services Insurance Plan]] |
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|[[New Brunswick]] |
|[[New Brunswick]] |
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|[[ |
|[[New Brunswick Health Care]] |
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|[[Newfoundland and Labrador]] |
|[[Newfoundland and Labrador]] |
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|[[Prince Edward Island]] |
|[[Prince Edward Island]] |
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|[[ |
|[[Prince Edward Island Hospital and Medical Services Plan]] |
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|[[Quebec]] |
|[[Quebec]] |
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|[[Régie de l' |
|[[Régie de l'assurance maladie du Québec]] |
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|[[Saskatchewan]] |
|[[Saskatchewan]] |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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* |
*[[Father of medicare]] |
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*[[Ontario Health Insurance Plan]] |
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* [[Father of medicare]] |
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*[[Medicare (Australia)]] |
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* [[Ontario Health Insurance Plan]] |
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*[[Medicare (United States)]] |
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* [[Matthew effect#Social policy|Matthew effect]] |
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*[[National Health Service]] (UK) |
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* [[Medicare (Australia)]] |
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* |
*[[Canada Health Transfer]] |
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* |
*[[Canada Health and Social Transfer]] |
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* |
*[[Indian Health Transfer Policy]] |
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* |
*[[Healthcare in Canada]] |
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* [[First Nations Health Authority]] |
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*[[Canadian Institute for Health Information]] |
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*[[Canadian and American health care systems compared]] |
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*[[Royal Commission on the Future of Health Care in Canada]] |
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*[[Saskatchewan doctors' strike]] of 1962 |
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*[[Health Evidence Network of Canada]] |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{Reflist}} |
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<references/> |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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*[http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hcs-sss/medi-assur/index_e.html Canada Health Act] |
*[http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hcs-sss/medi-assur/index_e.html Canada Health Act] |
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*[http://www.healthcoalition.ca/ Canadian Health Coalition] (Canadian lobby group supporting public medicare) |
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*[http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/english/care/romanow/index1.html Commission on the Future of Health Care in Canada - the Romanow Report] |
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*[http://www.pnrec.org/2001papers/DaigneaultLajoie.pdf 2001 report comparing Canadian health care to that of other nations] |
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*[http://www.fraserinstitute.ca/shared/readmore.asp?sNav=pb&id=746 2005 The conservative Fraser Institute's view of health care compared to other nations] |
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* [http://www.healthcoalition.ca/ Canadian Health Coalition] (Canadian lobby group supporting public medicare) |
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*[http://scaa.usask.ca/gallery/medicare/ Medicare: A People's Issue] |
*[http://scaa.usask.ca/gallery/medicare/ Medicare: A People's Issue] |
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*[http://www.mapleleafweb.com/features/charter-health-care-canada Maple Leaf Web: The Charter & Public Health Care in Canada] |
*[http://www.mapleleafweb.com/features/charter-health-care-canada Maple Leaf Web: The Charter & Public Health Care in Canada] |
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*[http://archives.cbc.ca/ |
*[http://archives.cbc.ca/health/health_care_system/topics/90/ CBC Digital Archives – The Birth of Medicare] |
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*[https://web.archive.org/web/20031117224248/http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/english/pdf/romanow/pdfs/HCC_Final_Report.pdf Building on Values: The Future of Health Care in Canada] (''The Romanow Report'', PDF) archived at [[Collections Canada]] |
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*[http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hcs-sss/com/fed/index_e.html Health Canada page linking to key Federal reports and commissions and their background material, including Romanow Report and Kirby Commission] |
*[http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hcs-sss/com/fed/index_e.html Health Canada page linking to key Federal reports and commissions and their background material, including Romanow Report and Kirby Commission] |
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*[http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/21/40/37868186.pdf Pharmaceutical Pricing and Reimbursement Policies in Canada. OECD Health Working Papers 24, 2006] |
*[http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/21/40/37868186.pdf Pharmaceutical Pricing and Reimbursement Policies in Canada. OECD Health Working Papers 24, 2006] |
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*[http://www.euro.who.int/ |
*[http://www.euro.who.int/__data/assets/pdf_file/0009/80568/E87954.pdf Marchildon's backgrounder on Canadian healthcare for WHO 2005] |
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*[https://web.archive.org/web/20110706183821/http://www.isitt.ca/research/journal-articles/the-hospital-employees-union-strike-and-the-privatization-of-medicare/ Benjamin Isitt and Melissa Moroz, "The Hospital Employees' Union Strike and the Privatization of Medicare in British Columbia, Canada," International Labor and Working-Class History, 71 (Spring 2007): 91–111] |
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*[www.canadacareplan.com] |
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[[Category:Healthcare in Canada]] |
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{{Tommy Douglas}} |
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[[Category:Medical and health organizations based in Canada]] |
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[[Category:Health law in Canada]] |
[[Category:Health law in Canada]] |
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[[Category:Publicly funded health care]] |
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[[Category:Canadian political phrases]] |
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[[Category:Tommy Douglas]] |
Latest revision as of 10:16, 20 December 2024
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Medicare (French: assurance-maladie) is an unofficial designation used to refer to the publicly funded single-payer healthcare system of Canada. Canada's health care system consists of 13 provincial and territorial health insurance plans, which provide universal healthcare coverage to Canadian citizens, permanent residents, and depending on the province or territory, certain temporary residents. The systems are individually administered on a provincial or territorial basis, within guidelines set by the federal government.[1] The formal terminology for the insurance system is provided by the Canada Health Act and the health insurance legislation of the individual provinces and territories.
The name is a contraction of medical and care and has been used in the United States for health care programs since at least 1953,[2] with Medicare becoming that nation's official national health insurance program in 1965.
Under the terms of the Canada Health Act, all "insured persons" are entitled to receive "insured services" without copayment. Such services are defined as medically necessary services if provided in hospital or by practitioners (usually physicians).[3] Approximately 70 percent of expenditures for healthcare in Canada come from public sources, with the rest paid privately (through both private insurance and out-of-pocket payments). The extent of public financing varies considerably across services. For example, approximately 99 percent of physician services and 90 percent of hospital care are paid by publicly funded sources, but almost all dental care is paid for privately.[4] Most physicians are self-employed private entities that enjoy coverage under each province's respective healthcare plans.
Services of non-physicians working within hospitals are covered; conversely, provinces have the option to cover services by non-physicians if they are provided outside hospitals. Changing the site of treatment may thus change coverage. For example, pharmaceuticals, nursing care, and physical therapy must be covered for inpatients, but there is considerable variation from province to province in the extent to which they are covered for patients discharged to the community such as after day surgery. The need to modernize coverage was pointed out in 2002 by both the Romanow Commission and the Kirby committee of the Canadian Senate (see External links below). Similarly, the extent to which non-physician providers of primary care are funded varies. For example, Quebec offers primary health care teams through its CLSC system.
History
[edit]Prior to World War II, health care in Canada was privately funded and delivered, with the exception of services provided to the sick poor that were financed by local governments. The traumatic experience of the 1930s left many Canadians in challenging financial situations. As personal financial situations deteriorated, the municipal governments were overwhelmed. Though the provinces provided relief payments for food, clothing, and shelter, additional medical costs were beyond the capacity of most of the provincial budgets. Many Canadians were not receiving adequate medical care, and those that did were overwhelmed with the associated costs. As such, preventable diseases and deaths were still common occurrences.[5]
Ten years of economic depression, followed by six years of worldwide war, formed the social context of ambitious federal Green Book proposals. In a bid for unprecedented cooperation between the federal and provincial governments, these initiatives formed the foundations of a national program for social security, including provisions for health insurance. However, the failure to come to a consensus on the required allocation of tax resources at the Dominion-Provincial Conference in August 1945 precluded adoption and delayed subsequent action.[5] Although the Green Book proposals were not adopted, they effectively created an appetite for government-funded health services.[6]
Following the Green Book proposals, Saskatchewan in 1947 and Alberta in 1950, under provincial governments led by the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) and the Social Credit party respectively, led initiatives to implement publicly funded health care at the provincial level.[7] The first implementation of public health care at the federal level came about with the Hospital Insurance and Diagnostic Services Act (HIDS), which was passed by the Liberal majority government of Louis St. Laurent in 1957,[8] and was adopted by all provinces by 1961. The HIDS implemented a high degree of federal regulation of the provincial health systems.[9]
The fight for a broad publicly funded system began at the provincial level, and was originally led by Saskatchewan Premier Tommy Douglas and the CCF,[10] who won the 1960 Saskatchewan general election on a campaign promise of publicly funded health care, over the opposition of the medical profession.[11] When Douglas resigned to become the leader of the new federal New Democratic Party in 1961, the task of implementing Medicare fell to Woodrow Stanley Lloyd, who succeeded Douglas as premier.[12] Lloyd overcame considerable public opposition to the plan, including a strike by the province's doctors, who withdrew their services from the public in opposition to the proposed medicare plan.[13] The resolution of the dispute was assisted by mediation by a British Labour peer, Lord Taylor, who had been involved in the development of the National Health Service in Britain.[14]
The next stage in the development of Medicare was the Royal Commission on Health Services, 1961 to 1964,[15] often cited as the Hall Commission, after its chair, Supreme Court Justice Emmett Hall. The commission was created by another Saskatchewanian, Prime Minister John G. Diefenbaker, who appointed Hall, also from Saskatchewan, to chair the commission. Both Diefenbaker and Hall were Progressive Conservatives, unlike the CCF government of Saskatchewan.[16] In 1964, after intensive study and public consultations, the Hall Commission released the first volume of its report, calling for federal funding for a national medicare plan.[17]
By the time the Hall Commission made its report, the Diefenbaker government had been defeated in the 1963 federal election. The new prime minister, Lester Pearson, had campaigned on establishing a national health care system. He began to work towards implementing a plan. His first Minister of Health, Judy LaMarsh, continued internal reviews and consultations with her provincial counterparts to implement the proposals. Pearson also consulted with the provincial premiers, and encountered provincial opposition.[18] Alberta,[19] Quebec,[20] and Ontario[21] all opposed the initial federal proposals, suggesting that each province should develop its own plan. Following his initial consultations, Pearson and his government developed a new, more decentralised plan. Relying on the advice of Al Johnson, the federal Deputy Minister of Finance and former Deputy Provincial Treasurer in Saskatchewan during the development of Medicare, the new plan set out four requirements. To be eligible for federal funding, a province would have to have (1) a publicly administered funding system, (2) providing universal coverage to residents, (3) for medically necessary services, (4) with portability when people moved.[22] Although the provincial premiers were surprised that the proposal lacked central regulation of health care, continuing to leave the operation of the health systems to the provinces, some premiers such as Premier Manning of Alberta continued to oppose the federal proposal.[22]
In the 1965 federal election, the Liberals campaigned on implementing their proposal. Although they were re-elected, it was with a minority, meaning that they would need at least some opposition support to have their proposed plan passed by Parliament. A split now developed in the Liberal Cabinet and caucus. The new Minister of Health and Welfare, Allan MacEachen, pushed for the enactment of the proposals, introducing the Medical Care Act, 1966 into Parliament. Although opposed by the MPs for Progressive Conservative Party and Social Credit, the bill received support from the New Democratic Party, led by Tommy Douglas. It passed first reading in the House of Commons.[23]
However, when Prime Minister Pearson left the country to attend a Commonwealth conference, the Acting Prime Minister and Minister of Finance, Mitchell Sharp, stated that the government might not be able to afford the new program, in light of the financial state of the country, and called to defer passage.[24] The proposed policy shift almost triggered MacEachen's resignation, and generated internal debates in the Liberal party.[24] As word of the split within the Liberals became public, the PC and Social Credit MPs began to put greater pressure on the government to stop the bill in the Commons. The bill eventually passed second and third readings with NDP support, after contentious debates.[25][24] The government agreed to defer implementation of the Act for one year, coming in force on July 1, 1968.
In 1984, the Canada Health Act was passed, amalgamating the 1966 Medical Care Act and the 1957 Hospital Insurance and Diagnostic Services Act. The Canada Health Act affirmed and clarified five founding principles: (a) public administration on a non-profit basis by a public authority; (b) comprehensiveness – provincial health plans must insure all services that are medically necessary; (c) universality – a guarantee that all residents in Canada must have access to public healthcare and insured services on uniform terms and conditions; (d) portability – residents must be covered while temporarily absent from their province of residence or from Canada; and (e) accessibility – insured persons must have reasonable and uniform access to insured health services, free of financial or other barriers. These five conditions prevent provinces from radical innovation, but many small differences do exist between the provinces.[26]
Eligibility
[edit]Each province and territory can establish residency requirements for eligibility for coverage. For example, to qualify for enrollment in Ontario, one must, among other requirements, "be physically present in Ontario for 153 days in any 12-month period; and be physically present in Ontario for at least 153 days of the first 183 days immediately after establishing residency in the province."[27]
Funding
[edit]According to the Canadian Constitution, the provinces have responsibility for health care, education and welfare. However, the federal Canada Health Act sets standards for all the provinces. The Canada Health Act requires coverage for all medically necessary care provided in hospitals or by physicians, which explicitly includes diagnostic, treatment and preventive services. Coverage is universal for qualifying Canadian residents, regardless of income level.
Funding for the health care is transferred from the general revenues of the Canadian federal government to the 10 provinces and the 3 territories through the Canada Health Transfer. Some provinces also charge annual health care premiums. These are, in effect, taxes (since they are not tied to service use, nor to provincial health expenditures). The system is accordingly classified by the OECD as a tax-supported system, as opposed to the social insurance approaches used in many European countries. Boards in each province or territory regulate the cost, which is then reimbursed by the provincial or territorial government. Patients do not pay out of pocket costs to visit their doctor.
Delivery
[edit]Canada uses a mix of public and private organizations to deliver health care in what is termed a publicly funded, privately delivered system. Hospitals and acute care facilities, including long term complex care, are typically directly funded. Health care organizations bill the provincial health authorities, with few exceptions.[28] Hospitals are largely non-profit organizations, historically often linked to religious or charitable organizations. In some provinces, individual hospital boards have been eliminated and combined into quasi-private regional health authorities, subject to varying degrees of provincial control.
Private services are provided by diagnostic laboratories, occupational and physical therapy centres, and other allied professionals. Non-medically necessary services, such as optional plastic surgery, are also often delivered by for-profit investor-owned corporations. In some cases patients pay directly and are reimbursed by the health care system, and in other cases a hospital or physician may order services and seek reimbursement from the provincial government.
With rare exceptions, medical doctors are small for-profit independent businesses. Historically, they have practised in small solo or group practices and billed the government Canadian Health Care system on a fee for service basis. Unlike the practice in fully socialized countries, hospital-based physicians are not all hospital employees, and some directly bill the provincial insurance plans on a fee-for-service basis. Since 2000, physicians have been allowed to incorporate for tax reasons (dates of authorization vary province to province).
Efforts to achieve primary health care reform have increasingly encouraged physicians to work in multidisciplinary teams, and be paid through blended funding models, including elements of capitation and other 'alternative funding formulas'. Similarly, some hospitals (particularly teaching hospitals and rural/remote hospitals) have also experimented with alternatives to fee-for-service.
In summary, the system is known as a "public system" due to its public financing, but is not a nationalized system such as the UK's NHS: most health care services are provided privately.[29]
An additional complexity is that, because health care is under provincial jurisdiction, there is not a "Canadian health care system". Most providers are private, and may or may not coordinate their care. Publicly funded insurance is organized at the level of the province/territory; each manages its own insurance system, including issuing its own healthcare identification cards (a list of the provincial medical care insurance programs is given at the end of this entry). Once care moves beyond the services required by the Canada Health Act—for which universal comprehensive coverage applies—there is inconsistency from province to province in the extent of publicly funded coverage, particularly for such items as outpatient drug coverage and rehabilitation, as well as vision care, mental health, and long-term care, with a substantial portion of such services being paid for privately, either through private insurance, or out-of-pocket.[30][31] Eligibility for these additional programs may be based on various combinations of such factors as age (e.g., children, seniors), income, enrollment in a home care program, or diagnosis (e.g., HIV/AIDS, cancer, cystic fibrosis).
According to a 1958 study, Provincial governments have been responsible for providing necessary medical and hospital care "to indigent residents of municipally unorganized territory".[32]
Drug coverage
[edit]Unlike every other country with universal health insurance systems, Canada lacks a universal pharmaceutical subsidy scheme, with co-payment, cost ceilings, and special subsidy groups varying by private insurer and by province.[33][34] Each province may provide its own prescription drug benefit plan, although the Canada Health Act requires only coverage for pharmaceuticals delivered to hospital inpatients.[35] Provincial prescription drug benefit plans differ across provinces. Some provinces cover only those in particular age groups (usually, seniors) and/or those on social assistance. Others are more universal. Quebec achieves universal coverage through a combination of private and public plans. Co-payments also vary.[36] Provinces maintain their own provincial formularies, although the Common Drug Review provides evidence-based formulary listing recommendations to the provincial ministries. Note that there is ongoing controversy in Canada, as in other countries, about inclusion of expensive drugs and discrepancies in their availability, as well as in what if any provisions are made for allowing medications not yet approved to be administered under "exceptional drug" provisions.[37] Drug costs are contentious. Their prices are controlled by the Patented Medicine Prices Review Board (PMPRB).[38] The PMPRB's pricing formula ensures that Canada pays prices based on the average of those charged to selected countries; they are neither the highest, nor the lowest.
Since Medicare has been adopted, there have been regular pushes to add universal pharmacare to it. This came to a head in 2022, when the New Democratic Party and the governing Liberal Party negotiated a supply and confidence agreement, with pharmacare being one of the core concessions the Liberals made in exchange for the NDP's confidence. As a result of this coalition, Canada's pharmacare act received royal assent on October 10, 2024, with the first phase creating a single payer system for contraceptives and diabetic medications, as well as the creation of a government agency to identify which drugs will be added next. Since becoming law, the federal government has begun negotiating with the provinces on how it will be implemted, with British Columbia becoming the first province to sign on to the program.[39][40]
Dental care, eye care, and other services
[edit]Dental care is not required to be covered by the government insurance plans. In Quebec, children under the age of 10 receive almost full coverage, and many oral surgeries are covered for everyone.[41] Canadians rely on their employers or individual private insurance, pay cash themselves for dental treatments, or receive no care. In some jurisdictions, public health units have been involved in providing targeted programs to address the need of the young, the elderly or those who are on welfare. The Canadian Association of Public Health Dentistry tracks programs, and has been advocating for extending coverage to those currently unable to receive dental care.[42]
The range of services for vision care coverage also varies widely among the provinces. Generally, "medically required" vision care is covered if provided by physicians (cataract surgery, diabetic vision care, some laser eye surgeries required as a result of disease, but not if the purpose is to replace the need for eyeglasses). Similarly, the standard vision test may or may not be covered. Some provinces allow a limited number of tests (e.g., no more than once within a two-year period). Others, including Ontario, Alberta, Saskatchewan, and British Columbia, do not, although different provisions may apply to particular sub-groups (e.g., diabetics, children).
Naturopathic services are covered in some cases, but homeopathic services are generally not covered. Chiropractic is partially covered in some provinces. Cosmetic procedures are not typically covered. Psychiatric services (provided by physicians) are covered, fee-for-service psychology services outside of hospitals or community based mental health clinics are usually not. Physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, nursing, and chiropractic services are often not covered unless within hospitals. Some provinces, including Ontario include some rehabilitation services for those in the home care program, those recently discharged from hospitals (e.g., after a hip replacement), or those in particular age categories. Again, considerable variation exists, and provinces can (and do) alter their coverage decisions.
Inter-provincial imbalances
[edit]The fact that health insurance plans are administered by the provinces and territories in a country where large numbers of residents of certain provinces work in other provinces may lead to inequitable inter-provincial outcomes with respect to revenues and expenditures. For example, many residents of the Atlantic provinces work in the oil and gas industry in the western province of Alberta. For most of the year these workers may be contributing significant tax revenue to Alberta (e.g. through fuel, tobacco and alcohol taxes) while their health insurance costs are borne by their home province in Atlantic Canada.
Another considerable inter-provincial imbalance is a person who is insured by Quebec and obtains healthcare in another province or territory. Quebec does not have any physician payment agreements with any other provinces or territories of Canada. As a result, someone that sees a physician outside Quebec, even in another part of Canada, must either pay the cost themselves and submit a request to the Régie de l'Assurance Maladie du Québec (RAMQ Medicare) for reimbursement (even then, expenses are often denied), or take out a third party insurance plan. The same situation also applies to a resident of any other part of Canada visiting Quebec, only they submit any claims to their respective provincial healthplan. All provinces and territories of Canada, however, do have reciprocal hospital agreements, so hospital admissions, for example, are covered throughout Canada.[43]
Opinions and activism on Canadian health care
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (July 2007) |
Polling data in the last few years have consistently cited Canadian Health Care as among the most important political issues in the minds of Canadian voters. Along with peacekeeping, Canadian Health Care was found, based on a CBC poll, to be among the foremost defining characteristics of Canada.[44]
It has increasingly become a source of controversy in Canadian politics. As a recent report from the Health Council of Canada has noted "Herein lies one of the puzzles of Canadian health care: Canadians increasingly view the health care system as unsustainable and under threat, even as their own experiences with the system are mostly positive."[45]
As analysts have noted, the root of the concern may be traced to successful cost control efforts in the mid-1990s, where public health expenditure per capita, in inflation-adjusted dollars, actually fell.[46] These efforts arose from efforts by the federal government to deal with its deficit through various austerity measures, which led to cuts in their transfers to the provinces, and in turn to squeezing hospital budgets and physician reimbursements. The number of physicians being trained was reduced. The result was seen in increased wait times, particularly for elective procedures. More recently, government has been reinvesting in health care, but public confidence has been slow to recover.
A number of studies have compared Canada with other countries, and concluded that each system has its own strengths and weaknesses.[47][48] The World Health Organization, ranked Canada in 2000 as 30th worldwide in performance. However, the basis for these rankings has been highly contentious. As Deber noted, "The measure of "overall health system performance" derives from adjusting "goal attainment" for educational attainment. Although goal attainment is in theory based on five measures (level and distribution of health, level and distribution of "responsiveness" and "fairness of financial contribution"), the actual values assigned to most countries, including Canada, were never directly measured. The scores do not incorporate any information about the actual workings of the system, other than as reflected in life expectancy. The primary reason for Canada's relatively low standing rests on the relatively high educational level of its population, particularly as compared to France, rather than on any features of its health system."[49] Other countries had similar complaints, and the WHO has not repeated this ranking.
There has been considerable opposition to ongoing changes to the Canadian health system. This opposition has been largely spearheaded by the New Democratic Party. There is also activism by a volunteer community, particularly the Canadian Health Coalition (*[www.healthcoalition.ca]) and its provincial affiliates, as well as other organizations such as the Council for Canadians ([1]).
2003 Accord
[edit]In 2003, the prime minister and the provincial premiers agreed upon priority areas for reinvestment. The 2003 First Ministers' Accord on Health Care Renewal[50] reaffirmed their commitment to the principles of the Canada Health Act. They indicated the following principles:
"Drawing from this foundation, First Ministers view this Accord as a covenant which will help to ensure that:
- all Canadians have timely access to health services on the basis of need, not ability to pay, regardless of where they live or move in Canada;
- the health care services available to Canadians are of high quality, effective, patient-centred and safe; and
- our health care system is sustainable and affordable and will be here for Canadians and their children in the future."
The accord set the following priority areas: primary health care, home care, catastrophic drug coverage, access to diagnostic/medical equipment and information technology and an electronic health record. The extent of progress in meeting reform goals has varied across these areas.
Evaluating claims about the system
[edit]Evaluating the accuracy of claims about the system is hampered by several factors. The highly decentralized nature of health care delivery means that good data is not always available. It is often difficult to distinguish compelling but atypical anecdotes from systemic problems. Considerable effort is being made to develop and implement comparable indicators to allow better assessment of progress. However, the Health Council of Canada—with a mandate to monitor and report on health reform—complained in 2007 that progress has stalled.[51]
The debate about health care has also become heavily ideological. The Fraser Institute, a right leaning think tank supporting "competitive market solutions for public policy problems" is a frequent critic of publicly funded Canadian Health Care. It publishes yearly reports about wait times which are then used to argue that the system is both failing and unsustainable.[52] Others criticize their methodology, which is based on physician perceptions rather than actual waits.[53] Other complaints come from the political left, who object to 'privatization' (by which they usually mean a heavier involvement of for-profit providers). (See, for example, the Canadian Health Coalition web page.)[54]
Wait times and access
[edit]Common complaints relate to access, usually to accessing family physicians (with wait times beyond 365 days in Montreal), to elective surgery (especially hip and knee replacement and cataract surgery) and diagnostic imaging. These have been the primary targets of health care reinvestment, and it appears that considerable progress has been made for certain services, although the implications for procedures not on the target list are unclear.[55][56][57] Canadian physicians have been heavily involved, particularly in developing appropriateness criteria to ensure timely access for necessary care.[58] It is estimated to have cost Canada's economy $14.8 billion in 2007 to have patients waiting longer than needed for medical procedures, assuming all patients normally work, and cannot work while waiting.[59] The Fraser Institute completed a study in October 2013, Waiting Your Turn: Wait Times for Health Care in Canada. The authors surveyed both private and publicly funded outpatient health care offices and estimated the amount of wait time between general practitioner and specialists for elective treatments such as getting breast implants. The Fraser Institute estimates that the wait times for elective treatments have increased 95 percent from 1993 to 2013.[60]
Health human resources
[edit]A related issue is the volume, and distribution, of health human resources.[61] There are ongoing issues about the distribution of physicians, with the pendulum swinging from arguing that there were too many, to arguing that there were too few. As Ben Chan found, the major factor driving the drop in physician numbers was changes in training programs.[62] Combined with such factors as changes in the hours worked by each physician, and a decrease in the proportion of doctors choosing to go into family practice, there were shortages in some areas, particularly for general practitioners (GP) / family doctors. One response has been to encourage 'primary care reform', including greater use of multidisciplinary health care teams.[63] There are also ongoing issues regarding nurses. (See Nursing Health Services Research Unit, which links to some reports.[64] CIHI also gives data about nursing.)
Delisting
[edit]Delisting is the term used in Canada when a province decides that a medical procedure will no longer be covered by the health care system in that province.
While health care coverage is country wide, and is required to be portable and to have equal access, there are a few differences between what provinces will cover. In some cases, this has resulted in lost grants to the provinces; in other cases it has not.[citation needed]
An example of a delisted service is circumcision in Ontario. It is still possible to have a boy circumcised in Ontario by a doctor but the parents must pay the cost.[65]
The issue of delisting services is becoming increasingly a political battleground in Canadian health care. In an effort to cut their health care budgets, some provincial governments will opt to delist specific services under the guise that they lack essential medical necessity; however, the question of what qualifies as medical necessity is in these instances typically debated. For example, except for seniors, children, and diabetics eye exams to check vision are no longer covered in Ontario.[66]
Parallel private debate
[edit]Some politicians and think tanks have proposed removing barriers to the existence of a parallel private healthcare system. Others note that such systems act to erode cost control and impede equity.[67] Though polling suggests support for such reforms has been increasing,[68] it has yet to be adopted as official policy by any of the main federal political parties.
Under federal law, private clinics are not legally allowed to charge patients directly for services covered by the Canada Health Act', if they qualify for public insurance. Regardless of this legal issue, many do offer such services. There are disputes as to whether surgical procedures can be performed. Two related issues have obstructed the growth of such clinics. One is regulatory – hospital-based quality assurance often failed to encompass them. This gap has been filled in most provinces, but sometimes only after celebrated incidents in which patients died in unregulated clinics, including one physician who performed cosmetic surgery in an Ontario hotel room. The second is economic — there may be no way for physicians to recoup the additional costs of running a surgical facility from their fees. Here, provinces can choose to offer 'facility fees' to these clinics, but doing so has often been contentious, particularly if hospitals felt that these costs would be better devoted to allowing them to increase their operating room time.
Note that uninsured persons can pay for care (including medical tourism), and that insured persons can still pay for uninsured services. These are both niche markets.
Opponents of Canadian health care often raise issues such as long wait times, a 'brain-drain' drawing qualified professionals away from Canada to other jurisdictions where working in the health care field is more profitable, and impairment of the Canadian health care system due to budget cuts. Fox News ran a story in 2007 reporting that during a period of above average numbers of births, at least 40 Canadian mothers of premature babies had to travel to the U.S. for treatment due to insufficient capacity for premature babies in British Columbia neonatal units. Nonetheless, Canada's health care system covered the health care costs of those mothers affected.[69]
In 2003, the Government in Canada spent US$2,998 per capita on healthcare as compared to US$5,711 per capita in the United States, while almost every Canadian citizen is fully covered.[70] In the United States, 11.9 percent of adults lack public or private health coverage,[71] despite higher proportional spending along with large private investment.
The lack of competition has given healthcare unions a monopoly on essential services, thus ensuring a very strong bargaining position. Nova Scotia is currently debating healthcare legislation aimed at removing the threat of striking healthcare workers and replacing it with binding arbitration.[72]
Proposed reforms
[edit]One proposed solution for improving the Canadian healthcare system is to increase funding. Proponents of this approach point to[citation needed] the rise of neo-conservative economic policies in Canada and the associated reduction in welfare state expenditure (particularly in the provinces) from the 1980s onwards as the cause of degradation in the system. While some say evidence clearly indicate an overall percentage increase on healthcare spending, the net spending has been drastically decreasing on top of inflation.
Other critics of healthcare state[citation needed] that increased funding will not solve systemic problems in the healthcare system including a rising cost of medical technology, infrastructure, and wages. These critics say[citation needed] that Canada's proximity to the United States causes a "brain drain" or migration of Canadian-trained doctors and nurses (as well as other professionals) to the United States, where private hospitals can pay much higher wages and income tax rates are lower (partially because health care is not covered through taxation). Some of these critics[citation needed] argue that increased privatization of healthcare would improve Canada's health infrastructure. Others[73] argue vehemently against it. For example, large resources are required to train and educate doctors. Since the number of available doctors is therefore limited, doctors working for a private system would not be working under the public system creating little to no net increase in available services.
Critics of greater privatization state[citation needed] that funding for healthcare should be kept public (most services are provided by the private sector including doctors, who, in most cases, are private), in part because it separates Canadians from Americans by mandating equality and fairness in health care. That is in contrast to other countries,[citation needed] whose doctors are on a salary per capita. In that sense, Canadian healthcare is publicly funded, and services are provided by a mixture of public and private entities, which most Canadians support.[citation needed] Changing the system to eliminate the balance between public and private service providers to a completely public system is one such alternative.
Ontario's reform experiments
[edit]Since the early 1990s, Ontario has implemented several systematic reforms to reduce health care costs. Similar reforms have been implemented in other provinces.
User premiums
[edit]Currently in Ontario, people with an annual taxable income above $20,000 must pay an annual health care premium ranging from $60–$900.[74] Funding for health care in Ontario also comes in part from a dedicated Employer Health Tax (EHT) that ranges from 0.98 percent to 1.95 percent of employer payroll.[75] Eligible employers are exempted from EHT on the first $400,000 of payroll.[citation needed] British Columbia and Quebec charge similar premiums.
Medical clinics
[edit]Ontario has increased the number of 24-hour drop-in medical clinic networks[citation needed] to reduce costs associated with treating off-hours emergencies in hospital emergency rooms.
Many family doctor practices have created their own clinics, offering 24-hour service for their patients if needed. Each doctor in the practice takes a turn at being "on call" on a rotating basis. Patients who have family doctors belonging to these practices are able to have a doctor come to their home in extreme situations. There is no additional charge for these services as they are billed to the Province, the same as an office visit.
Hospitals in some major Canadian cities, such as London, Ontario, have restructured their emergency services to share emergency treatment among several hospitals.[citation needed] One hospital may provide full emergency room care, while another sees patients who have broken limbs, minor injuries and yet another sees patients suffering cold, flu, etc.
In 2007, the first nurse practitioner-led office to relieve waiting times caused by a shortage of primary practitioners was opened in Sudbury, Ontario.[76][77]
Alternatives to fee-for-visit or service
[edit]Ontario has also attempted to move the system away from bill for service or visit and toward preventive and community-based approaches to healthcare. The Ontario government in the early 1990s helped develop many community health care centres, often in low-income areas, which provide both medical and social support which combines health care with programs such as collective kitchens, Internet access, anti-poverty groups and groups to help people quit smoking.
While funding has decreased for these centres, and they have had to cut back,[citation needed] they have had a lower cost than the traditional fee-for-service approach.[citation needed] Many of these centres are filled to capacity in terms of general doctors, and there are often fairly long waiting lists and the centres also utilize nurse practitioners, who reduce the workload on the doctors and increase efficiency.
Midwives and hospital birthing reforms
[edit]Ontario and Quebec have recently licensed midwives, providing another option for childbirth which can reduce costs for uncomplicated births. Midwives remain close to hospital facilities in case the need for emergency care emerges. These births often cost much less than the traditional hospital delivery.[citation needed] Hospitals have also reformed their approach to birthing by adding private birthing areas, often with a hot tub (which is good for relieving pain without medication).
Privatization
[edit]Currently, privately owned and operated hospitals that allow patients to pay out-of-pocket for services cannot obtain public funding in Canada, as they contravene the "equal accessibility" tenets of the Canada Health Act. Some politicians and medical professionals have proposed[citation needed] allowing public funding for these hospitals. Workers' Compensation Boards, the Canadian Forces, the RCMP, federally incarcerated prisoners, and medical care for which an insurance company has liability (e.g., motor vehicle accidents) all pay for health care outside of the public systems in all provinces.[3][78]
In Quebec, a recent legal change has allowed this reform to occur. In June 2005, the Supreme Court of Canada overturned a Quebec law preventing people from buying private health insurance to pay for medical services available through the publicly funded system and this ruling does not apply outside the province. See: Chaoulli v. Quebec (Attorney General).[79]
In November 2005, the Quebec government announced that it would allow residents to purchase private medical insurance to comply with this ruling.
Private insurance from companies such as Blue Cross, Green Shield and Manulife have been available for many years to cover services not covered by the Canadian health care system, such as dental care and some eye care. Private insurance is provided by many employers as a benefit.
The Canadian Medical Association (CMA) released a report[80] in July 2007 endorsing private healthcare as a means to improve an ailing healthcare system. Dr. Brian Day, who acted as President of the CMA in 2007/2008, is the owner of the largest private healthcare hospital in Canada and a proponent of mixed public and private healthcare in Canada.
Canadian Health Practitioner standards
[edit]It is generally accepted that physicians arriving in Canada from other countries must meet Canadian Health Practitioner standards. So there is concern that doctors from other countries are not trained or educated to meet Canadian standards. Consequently, doctors who want to practise in Canada must meet the same educational and medical qualifications as Canadian-trained practitioners. Others suggest that the Canadian Medical Association, the Ontario Medical Association, and the regulatory bodies (the provincial Colleges of Physicians and Surgeons) have created too much red tape to allow qualified doctors to practise in Canada.[81] Canada's health system is ranked 30th in the world, suggesting the logic of the doctor shortage defies the statistics.[82] In fact according to a report by Keith Leslie of the Canadian Press in the Chronicle Journal, November 21, 2005, over 10,000 trained doctors are working in the United States, a country ranked 37th in the world. It would suggest money or the perception of better working conditions, or both, are resulting in an exodus of Canadian doctors (and nurses) to the USA.[83]
It is important to recognize that many consider the doctor shortage in Canada to be a very severe problem affecting all sectors of health care. It may relate in part to the details of how doctors are paid; a detail often misunderstood. In Canada, almost all doctors receive a fee per-visit, not per-service. It has been suggested that this type of "fee-for-visit" payment system can encourage complexity, volume visits, repeat visits, referrals, and testing.[84][85]
One consequence of the shortage in Canada is that a great many patients are left without family doctors, and trained specialists, making early intervention very difficult. As the article in the Toronto Star specially isolates, it is not so much a problem of a doctor shortage but of a shortage of 'licensed doctors'. Michael Urbanski states that Canada already has a hidden reserve of foreign-trained MDs eager to begin medical practice. "However, what's crucial to understanding the issue of doctor shortage in Ontario is that while the Liberal government is planning to go "poaching" for other countries' doctors, there are an estimated 4,000 internationally trained doctors right here in Ontario working at low-wage jobs."[86]
A CBC report [6](August 21, 2006) on the health care system reports the following:
Dr. Albert Schumacher,[87] former president of the Canadian Medical Association estimates that 75 percent of health-care services are delivered privately, but funded publicly. "Frontline practitioners whether they're GPs or specialists by and large are not salaried. They're small hardware stores. Same thing with labs and radiology clinics …The situation we are seeing now are more services around not being funded publicly but people having to pay for them, or their insurance companies. We have sort of a passive privatization.
In a report by Keith Leslie of the Canadian Press in the Chronicle Journal, November 21, 2005, commenting on an Ontario Medical Association Report, prepared by the human resources committee states "The year 2005 finds the province in the midst of a deepening physician resources crisis". The report continues to report, "the government should make it easier for doctors from other provinces to work in Ontario and .... ". Here we have signs of inter-provincial competition affecting the doctor shortage in one province over another.[83] Essentially, privatized healthcare is not a choice of interest for lower income Canadians, it is most likely to be unaffordable and unfair to those who suffer on a social standard.
Provincial insurance plans
[edit]Although the Canada Health Act provides national guidelines for healthcare, the provinces have exclusive jurisdiction over health under the constitution and are free to ignore these guidelines, although if they ignore the guidelines, the federal government may deny federal funding for healthcare. All provinces currently abide by the Canada Health Act in order to receive this funding; however the Alberta legislature has considered proposals[citation needed] to ignore the Act to allow them to implement reforms not allowed under the Act.
The federal government has no direct role in the delivery of medicine in the provinces and territories so each province and territory has its own independent public health insurance program. Under the Canada Health Act, each province and territory must provide services to members of plans in other provinces and territories.
List of provincial programs
[edit]See also
[edit]- Father of medicare
- Ontario Health Insurance Plan
- Medicare (Australia)
- Medicare (United States)
- National Health Service (UK)
- Canada Health Transfer
- Canada Health and Social Transfer
- Indian Health Transfer Policy
- Healthcare in Canada
- First Nations Health Authority
- Canadian Institute for Health Information
- Canadian and American health care systems compared
- Royal Commission on the Future of Health Care in Canada
- Saskatchewan doctors' strike of 1962
- Health Evidence Network of Canada
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External links
[edit]- Canada Health Act
- Canadian Health Coalition (Canadian lobby group supporting public medicare)
- Medicare: A People's Issue
- Maple Leaf Web: The Charter & Public Health Care in Canada
- CBC Digital Archives – The Birth of Medicare
- Building on Values: The Future of Health Care in Canada (The Romanow Report, PDF) archived at Collections Canada
- Health Canada page linking to key Federal reports and commissions and their background material, including Romanow Report and Kirby Commission
- Pharmaceutical Pricing and Reimbursement Policies in Canada. OECD Health Working Papers 24, 2006
- Marchildon's backgrounder on Canadian healthcare for WHO 2005
- Benjamin Isitt and Melissa Moroz, "The Hospital Employees' Union Strike and the Privatization of Medicare in British Columbia, Canada," International Labor and Working-Class History, 71 (Spring 2007): 91–111