Health care in Canada: incrementalism under fiscal duress.
Open Access
- 1 May 1999
- journal article
- Published by Health Affairs (Project Hope) in Health Affairs
- Vol. 18 (3), 9-26
- https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.18.3.9
Abstract
Driven by fiscal pressures in the 1990s, Canada's provincial Medicare systems cut inpatient care, expanded community services, and consolidated hospitals under regional authorities in nine of ten provinces. Public confidence has been badly shaken by the transition. No province has successfully integrated services across the continuum of care. Home care and prescription drug coverage vary from province to province. Efforts to reform physician payment have stalled, and capacity to measure and manage the quality of care is generally underdeveloped. Thus, for the next few years, policymakers must stabilize the acute care sector, while cautiously pursuing an agenda of piece-meal reforms.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Health Spending, Access, And Outcomes: Trends In Industrialized CountriesHealth Affairs, 1999
- What is Appropriate Care?New England Journal of Medicine, 1998
- Analysis of deaths while waiting for cardiac surgery among 29 293 consecutive patients in Ontario, CanadaHeart, 1998
- Use of Cardiac Procedures and Outcomes in Elderly Patients with Myocardial Infarction in the United States and CanadaNew England Journal of Medicine, 1997
- The burden of waiting for hip and knee replacements in Ontario*Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 1997
- Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgery in Ontario and New York State: Which Rate Is Right?Annals of Internal Medicine, 1997
- Coronary Artery Bypass Mortality Rates in OntarioCirculation, 1996
- Waiting for coronary artery bypass surgery: population-based study of 8517 consecutive patients in Ontario, CanadaThe Lancet, 1995
- Use of Medical Resources and Quality of Life after Acute Myocardial Infarction in Canada and the United StatesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1994
- The New World of Managed Care: Creating Organized Delivery SystemsHealth Affairs, 1994