Canada’s medicare system aging badly

mentalfloss

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Jun 28, 2010
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Canada’s medicare system aging badly

OTTAWA — Canada’s medicare system is aging badly, a federal panel said Friday.

The Advisory Panel on Health Care Innovation has released a new report saying there is “no doubt” a major renovation of the medicare system is overdue.

The panel was struck last June by Health Minister Rona Ambrose to help find ways to reduce health spending and improve accessibility to care.

The project was chaired by Dr. David Naylor, a physician, researcher and past president of the University of Toronto.

“We have a good health care system that is excellent and innovative in spots, but is not as good as it could or should be,” he said. “That’s in spite of the fact we have fabulous talent in the system.”

Naylor said the challenge is that Canada has a health care architecture that is decades old.

He said international assessments suggest the country is “losing ground.”

“The overall view conveyed to us by a panel of international experts with whom we met was that there was a sense of Canada having moved from the strong position to one that was more average,” Naylor said. “I don’t think Canadians should be satisfied with average.”

The panel also found the inability of federal, provincial and territorial governments to collaborate has slowed recommendations issued by previous panels and experts.

Naylor said his team is hopeful the panel’s work will provide a new model to facilitate teamwork that will improve health care.

The Health minister’s office issued a terse response saying it will review the report.

“To date, our government has increased health care transfers to the provinces to record levels,” the emailed statement said.

Dr. Hedy Fry, the federal Liberal health critic, said the government’s failure to participate in the Council of the Federation meetings in St. John’s, N.L., this week highlights the lack of co-operation.

“We have been asking the prime minister to meet with the premiers. He hasn’t,” Fry said.

Canada needs to tap into the health knowledge that is out there. “We have it all there and we don’t use it,” Fry said.

http://m.thestar.com/#/article/news/canada/2015/07/17/canadas-medicare-system-aging-badly.html
 

Walter

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Jan 28, 2007
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Anything run by gubmints turns to crap. In Canada health care is a provincial responsibility so I wonder why Analfloss is posting this.
 

CDNBear

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Sep 24, 2006
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Anything run by gubmints turns to crap. In Canada health care is a provincial matter so I wonder why Analfloss is posting this.
Did you read the whole article?

Right down at the bottom, Harper gubmint, bad.

Mean while here in Ontario, we have tashma-hospitals being built, that look more like f@cking architectural shrines than hospitals.

But hey, that must be Harper's fault too.
 

Machjo

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Oct 19, 2004
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When asked about learning from European two-tiered health care models, Socialiaticus Laborus, a student activist from Toronto, said:

"That scares the hell out of me! Those neocons will stoop to any new low, including turning to peer-reviewed research comparing Canada's lagging single tiered system with European two-tiered models, to impose their ideology on us. What Canada needs is not to be diluting our Canadian identity by learning from other jurisdictions. However horrible the single tiered system is, it's a part of Canada's traditions, plus it's more in tune with our ideological beliefs. We're not going to sacrifice that just to save a few lives and make people's lives more comfortable I hope. That would be like selling our souls to the devil!"
 

CDNBear

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Sep 24, 2006
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Health care is not only a provincial matter.
Your hate piece doesn't even mention federal obligations.

It's just another shot at the sitting govt. While you ignore the actual waste in our provincial healthcare system, under your Der Leader the HDIC.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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Harper’s own health panel tells him to end intransigence

The federal government should create a $1 billion dollar Health Innovation Fund and a Healthcare Innovation Agency of Canada to “effect sustainable and systemic changes in the delivery of health services to Canadians,” the Conservative-appointed federal Advisory Panel on Health Care Innovation has recommended.

The new arm’s-length body should absorb the operations of three existing agencies — Canada Health Infoway, the Canadian Foundation for Healthcare Improvement and the Canadian Patient Safety Institute — and should be capitalized to the tune of $1-billion per year within 4-5 years in hopes of ultimately turning the underperforming tide of Canadian health care.

“Its general goals would be: to support high-impact initiatives proposed by governments and stakeholders, to break down structural barriers to change, and to accelerate the spread and scale-up of promising innovations,” the report states. “All uses of the Fund, and the work of the Agency, should seek to advance the twin goals of removing structural barriers to innovation in Canadian healthcare, and supporting spread and scale-up of proven models and modalities of care. The Agency’s mission, exactly as for the Fund, would be to support on-the-ground efforts to enhance the quality and value of the healthcare provided to Canadians, while improving the overall performance of Canada’s healthcare systems as measured against their international peers.”

..more...

https://ipolitics.ca/2015/07/17/harpers-own-health-panel-tells-him-to-end-intransigence/
 

CDNBear

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Sep 24, 2006
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More broadly, the panel calls on the federal government to essentially end its intransigence...

PM Stephen Harper demanded revisions, which Naylor’s panel steadfastly refused to adopt, instead insisting on the report’s release, as written.

Irony is funny.

You know what else is Funny? Healthcare administration is still provincial, and neither of your articles mentions federal obligations.

Just more hate propaganda by the ideological hipster douchebag, while he ignores actual waste committed by his favoured Leader in Ontario.

tsk tsk
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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Statement from the Canadian Nurses Association regarding Unleashing Innovation report

OTTAWA, July 17, 2015 /CNW/ - The long-awaited final report from the advisory panel on health-care innovation, established by Minister of Health Rona Ambrose, is full of rich recommendations that give us much to consider. The Canadian Nurses Association (CNA) appreciates how heavily patients and their needs factor into the report and its recommendations. It is a solid roadmap for any federal government to follow in establishing a better health-care system and a healthier nation.

CNA sees the following three themes from the report as a turning point toward a primary health care approach for Canada's health-care system, one that emphasizes family-centred care, health promotion and disease prevention.

Integration: The report mentions the use of integrated health-care delivery to address social needs and determinants of health, protect and promote health, and prevent disease. This is a potentially positive development for Canada's health system, which has traditionally been acute-centric. Every day, registered nurses see first-hand how income, education, housing and employment are major factors in a person's overall health.

Interprofessional: The report promotes the adoption of interprofessional care models and examinations of provider activity and patient outcomes. CNA and other health-care provider groups have been longtime champions of interprofessional care, which the evidence indicates is a smarter use of health human resources and a more effective way of delivering the most appropriate care to patients.

Access: In its recommendations for enhanced information technology, mobile and digital health solutions and open data, the report underscores the need for better access to health information. From the provider perspective, it is vital to have a patient's health history travel with them so they can make well-informed recommendations. Better access also allows patients and their families to be meaningfully engaged in their own care, which leads to improved health outcomes.

It is encouraging as well to see the report include a focus on aboriginal health and involve First Nations, Inuit and Métis peoples with improving health infrastructure and resources in their communities. Lastly, the call for a new refundable health tax credit recognizes the very real costs many Canadians face without a national pharmacare plan.

Consultation and collaboration with providers like registered nurses and nurse practitioners will be key to the report's successful implementation. For the immediate future, CNA will convene with other health-care provider groups to closely examine the recommendations and discuss how we can support that implementation.

CNA is the national professional voice representing 135,000 registered nurses in Canada. CNA advances the practice and profession of nursing to improve health outcomes and strengthen Canada's publicly funded, not-for-profit health system.

Canadian Nurses Association | Statement from the Canadian Nurses Association regarding Unleashing Innovation report
 

CDNBear

Custom Troll
Sep 24, 2006
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More hate propaganda, while ignoring how your Der Leader, the HDIC is still in control of the waste in Ontario.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Did you read the whole article?

Right down at the bottom, Harper gubmint, bad.

Mean while here in Ontario, we have tashma-hospitals being built, that look more like f@cking architectural shrines than hospitals.

But hey, that must be Harper's fault too.

So why are RNs getting walking papers?
 

CDNBear

Custom Troll
Sep 24, 2006
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So why are RNs getting walking papers?
Because more money is being spent on architectural shrines than healthcare...



Yes, that is a hospital, not a mall.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Yeah, I saw the transfer of patients from old to new on the news.

With health care being a Provincial shtick why is it the Feds fault?