Showing posts with label Canada Health Act. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canada Health Act. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Canadian Healthcare System: Frequently Asked Questions!

I resume writing after a busy week of exams and other MBA related activities. Following are a few FAQs and answers, which I think are important to understand before we get into the debate:

1. What is "socialized medicine"? Is Healthcare in Canada socialized?

Definitions of socialized medicine vary, and are inconsistent. The term can refer to any system of medical care that is publicly financed, government administered, or both. Some say the literal meaning is confined to systems in which the government operates health care facilities and employs health care professionals. This narrower usage would apply to the British National Health Service hospital trusts and health systems that operate in other countries as diverse as Finland, Spain, Israel and Cuba. Some label Canada's system as "socialized medicine". To use this term to describe Canadian Healthcare system is inaccurate. The Canadian system provides public coverage for private delivery. Canadian hospitals are controlled by private boards and/or regional health authorities, rather than being part of government. The health care system in Canada is funded by a mix of public (70%) and private (30%) funding, with most services delivered by private (both for-profit and not-for-profit) providers.

2. What is the source of funding for healthcare system in Canada?

Canada's healthcare system is funded by both the federal government, and by the provincial and territorial governments. The main source of revenue is taxation, i.e., personal and corporate income taxes (in some provinces, sales tax is also used). Some provinces also charge a yearly healthcare premium based on annual income. In Ontario, for example, an individual with taxable income of C$48,500 (US$40,500) would pay a premium of C$575 (US$480) in the 2005 tax year.

3. What is the difference between single-tier and a two-tier healthcare system? Is Canadian healthcare system single-tier or two-tier?

Two-tier health care is a system in which a guaranteed public health care system exists, but where a private system operates in parallel competition. The private system provides the opportunity for patients to have more choice in choosing their doctors and benefit from generally shorter waiting times, but is known for being quite costly and reserved only for those who can afford it. Doctors in the private sector may also benefit financially as they can set their own prices. Some advanced countries in the world have two-tier primary health care to varying degrees. In Canada, publicly funded single tier system provides for medically necessary hospital and medical services. General practitioners run their clinics as private operations but are publicly funded from patients' perspective as patients are not billed for services. There is a new trend with opening of privately funded and privately delivered care for some specialist services like orthopedic services provided at Cambie surgery centre in Vancouver and with the opening of a few private cancer clinics in Ontario. Patients avail of the latter private services either due to long waiting lines for say a hip-replacement surgery or non-availability of chemotherapy services for a particular cancer medicine.

4. How does healthcare Insurance work in Canada?

Under the Canada Health Act, insured persons are eligible residents of a province or territory. A resident of a province is defined in the Act as "a person lawfully entitled to be or to remain in Canada who makes his home and is ordinarily present in the province, but does not include a tourist, a transient or a visitor to the province."
Healthcare care insurance pays for your visit to the doctor's office and your x-ray but might leave you to pay for the antibiotic drug that you are prescribed. This is the case in many provinces. It is a mixed system: you are either covered by your employer's private group insurance plan or the government plan. In all cases, there is a deductible, a user contribution and a maximum annual premium to pay. In the case of underprivileged citizens, the government pays the premium and fees.

5. How does drug reimbursement work in Canada?

Under the Canada Health Act, all necessary drug therapy administered within a Canadian hospital setting is insured and publicly funded. Outside of the hospital setting, provincial and territorial governments are responsible for the administration of their own publicly-funded prescription drug benefit programs. Most Canadians have access to insurance coverage for prescription medicines through public and/or private insurance plans. The federal, provincial and territorial governments offer varying levels of coverage, with different eligibility requirements, premiums and deductibles. The publicly-funded drug programs generally provide insurance coverage for those most in need, based on age, income, and medical condition.


Access to drugs is not uniform across various provinces. Provincial authorities make the final decisions regarding the reimbursement or denial for a new drug or new indication for an existing drug. This has led to situations where patients in a particular province had access to for example, a new cancer drug, but other provinces had not listed the drug on their formularies. Some people ironically have called it "postal-code lottery".

You can find more information on various drug coverage programs here:




Chander


Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Introduction: Is the current Canadian healthcare system sustainable?

Hi Friends,

We are both medical doctors by background and care deeply about all health care issues. We are currently pursuing the full time MBA program at Richard Ivey School of Business, London, Ontario and specializing in Health Care Sector.

Our Canadian Health care system is based on 5 criteria dictated by
The Canada Health Act (CHA) which received Royal Assent on 1 April 1984.
  1. Public administration: administered on a non-profit basis by a public authority, accountable to provincial government for its financial transactions.
  2. Comprehensiveness: must ensure all services that are "medically necessary"
  3. Universality: all residents in a province have access to public health care insurance and insured services on uniform terms and conditions.
  4. Portability: provinces to cover insured health services provided to their citizens while they are temporarily absent from their province of residence or from Canada.
  5. Accessibility: insured persons must have reasonable and uniform access to insured health services, free of financial or other barriers.
As Canadians, we are proud of our system despite its challenges especially when compared to our neighbours down South where half of personal bankruptcies are due to medical bills. Our system is no doubt expensive. The cost of health care in this country continues to rise at a rate far exceeding the rise in GDP. If these trends continue, it won't be long before we may have to borrow money to pay for health care costs.

The current health care system is thus unsustainable and there are many people who believe that a 6th principle of sustainability should be added. There is urgency for a public dialogue on this critical issue. Our first poll question is a very basic one. In coming weeks and months, we will bring interesting and factual stories and issues to you on Canadian health care system.

We are launching this blog as a platform to share issues and ideas related to Canadian Health care, based on your experience and knowledge. We hope that this blog will evolve as a community of people who want to share their voice and eventually make a difference to the health care. We will like to have inputs from everyone of you; your friends and families on the critical issue of health care which impacts us all. Please forward our blog to everyone who cares about health issues.

Here are a few links:

Expenditure on Healthcare in Canada-Health Canada
Health Canada's role in Canadian Healthcare system
Canada Health Act: overview and options

Chander Sehgal and Michael Tong