Managing the Cost of Healthcare for an Aging Population: Manitoba


Managing the Cost of Healthcare for an Aging Population: Provincial Perspectives


Long-Term Care for the Elderly: Challenges and Policy Options


How to Pay Family Doctors: Why ‘Pay per Patient’ is Better than Fee for Service


Health reform? Ottawa must provide clarity: Globe and Mail Op-Ed
Published in the Globe and Mail on April 26, 2012
By Gerard Boychuk
Having won the Alberta election, Premier Alison Redford is now setting her sights on providing leadership in establishing the national agenda on health-care reform. In doing so, she won’t be able to ignore the issue of patient wait times. Wildrose may have lost the election, but it did propose some ideas in this regard that are likely to remain front and centre on the political agenda.
An important one that will have life in Alberta and beyond is a Patient Wait Time Guarantee, which would have allowed Albertans on lengthy waiting lists to seek care from independent health providers in or out of province with provincial public insurance coverage.…
Grey Zones: Emerging Issues at the Boundaries of the Canada Health Act


Better Value for Money in Healthcare: European Lessons for Canada


Hard Choices are Coming on Health Care: Ottawa Citizen Op-Ed
Published in the Ottawa Citizen on April 22, 2011
By David Dodge and Richard Dion
As societies become richer, they tend to accommodate the rising demands and expectations of their citizens for more and better-quality health-care services. The value that citizens place on preserving and extending a good-quality life becomes more important as their consumption of other goods and services expands with their income.
Over the last 35 years or so, public and private health-care expenditures have risen substantially as a proportion of national income (GDP), doubling to 16 per cent in the United States and increasing from seven to 12 per cent in Canada. This is a trend that will not dissipate easily.
On the basis of…
A Social Insurance Model for Pharmacare: Ontario’s Options for a More Sustainable, Cost-Effective Drug Program
The cost of provincial pharmacare is set to rise precipitously, with spending on Ontario’s drug benefit plan for seniors projected to increase from about 1 percent of provincial income to a full 5 percent by 2061, according to a new C.D. Howe Institute report. To prepare for this rising spending on drugs as babyboomers age […]Chronic Healthcare Spending Disease: A Macro Diagnosis and Prognosis
The amount Canadians spend on healthcare is set to rise rapidly over the next two decades and Canadians need to face up to tough choices to deal with this “spending disease,” according to a new C.D. Howe Institute study by David A. Dodge, former Governor of the Bank of Canada and Deputy Minister of Health, […]La maladie chronique des dépenses en soins de santé : un diagnostic et un pronostic macroéconomiques
2011 – David A. Dodge, Richard Dion Toronto, le 6 avril – On prévoit une augmentation rapide des montants investis par les Canadiens en rapport avec les soins de santé au cours des deux prochaines décennies; les Canadiens devront ainsi prendre des décisions difficiles pour mettre un terme à cette « dépensite ». C’est ce […]Let Our Hospitals Compete: National Post Op-Ed
Published in the National Post on March 22, 2011
By Colin Busby
Do you have a sharp pain in your stomach that won’t go away? If yes, you may soon visit an emergency room for help. Your next decision is whether to go to Toronto General, Western, St. Michael’s, etc., for service. As an aid, the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care posts online monthly updates of average ER wait times for complex (strokes, chest pains, etc.) and non-complex (sprains, cuts, etc.) patients at each hospital.
For starters, we should applaud this initiative: transparency is the first step to bringing wait times down to provincial standards. Plus, a corresponding pay-for-results initiative encourages improved hospital performance…