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Honourable Carolyn Bennett M.D., M.P. November 9, 2010.

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Presentation on theme: "Honourable Carolyn Bennett M.D., M.P. November 9, 2010."— Presentation transcript:

1 Honourable Carolyn Bennett M.D., M.P. November 9, 2010

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3  Our cherished health care system will only be sustainable if we redouble our efforts to keep Canadians well  We must develop integrated systems for health that are accountable for results for patients Incentives for QUALITY not QUANTITY

4  Sharing risk  getting people the health care they need when they need it  Keeping people well not just patching them up once they get sick

5 “The worst thing for a physician is to help someone get well and then send them straight back into the situation that made them sick in the first place”

6  25% attributable to health care system  15% biology and genetics  10% physical environment  50% social and economic environments

7 7  1947: Saskatchewan’s The Saskatchewan Hospital Services Plan is passed in the Legislature – Hospital universal free coverage.  1957-58: Hospital Insurance and Diagnostic Services Act (HIDS), Provides a 50-50 cost sharing plan to the provinces for everything “hospital”.  1962: Saskatchewan pioneers again with The Saskatchewan Medical Care Insurance Plan Extension of universal, publicly funded insurance to physician services.  1967-68: Medical Care Act – federal legislation providing 50-50 of physician services costs to the provinces.  1976-77: The 50-50 cost-shared arrangements are replaced by a block fund byt the The Established Programs Financing Act (EPF ).  1984: To clarify conditions of federal contributions and keep health care free and universal, Parliament passes unanimously the Canada Health Act (CHA). Monique Bégin

8 8 The Canada Health Act (1984): 14 pages  Universality: all Canadians and permanent residents are covered  Accessibility: "free" at point of use (added in 1984)  Comprehensiveness: all medically necessary hospital and doctor services  Portability: between the 10 provincial and 3 territorial systems  Public Administration: each province has a public government agency as its single- payer Monique Bégin

9 Empowered Patient Effective Advocate Engaged Citizen

10  Patient as Partner  Doctor Multidisciplinary  Hospital Community  Social Determinants of Health

11  Patchwork quilt of non- systems  Focus on sickness…and the repair shops

12 As long as citizens think of the sickness care system whenever they hear the word ‘health’ we are not going to be able to reorient health systems.

13  More health …less health care  Service contract ??????  Or longer warranty ????

14 Social Determinants of Health vs Choose Health (modifiable risks)

15 Versus The Causes

16 2005 CAUSES of the CAUSES

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19 A) strong fence at the top of the cliff B) state of the art fleet of ambulances and paramedics waiting at the bottom ?

20 A) Clean air B) Enough puffers and respirators for all

21 A) a falls program to reduce preventable hip fractures B) private orthopaedic hospitals and more surgeons

22 A) how much they spent on the sickness care system B) the health of their citizens, leaving no-one behind

23 23  The U.S.A.  Life  Liberty  The pursuit of Happiness  Canada  Peace  Order  Good government Moniqe Bégin

24 24  Physicians per capita: 2.4/1000 pop.  Nurses: 10.6/1000  Acute care beds: 2.7/1000  MRIs: 19.5/1 million pop.  Life expectancy at birth: 78.1 years  Infant mortality rate: 6.7/1000 live births  Obesity in adults: 34.3%  Physicians per capita: 2.2/1000 pop.  Nurses per capita: 9/1000  Acute care beds: 2.7/1000  MRIs: 6.7/1 million pop.  Life expectancy at birth: 80.7 years  Infant mortality rate: 5/1000 live births  Obesity in adults: 15% Monique Bégin

25 25 U.S.A:  Health care = a market commodity  Medicare and Medicaid CANADA:  Health care = a universal common good for all citizens of all ages, all conditions  All universities are public and heavily subsidized by both levels of government Monique Bégin

26 26  Total Health Expenditure 2.4 Trillion $160 Billion Per capita $7,290. $3,895. % GDP 16.2 10.1 % publicly 45% 70% paid Srs, dis, poor, vets tax, no ext-billing % privately 55% 30% paid employer/pers insur $ drugs,dent.vis.home Uninsured/ 47+M universal coverage for Underinsured 25M doctors and hospitals U.S.Canada

27 1. INSURANCE COMPANIES:  30% of your costs – almost a third – go to insurance companies.  Your patients and taxpayers have to support massive organizations.  These insurers set premiums, design packages, assess risk, review claims and decide who to reimburse for how much.  But they don’t deliver health care.

28  2. ADMINISTRATION: Our single payer system is simpler, allowing us to run the administration of our offices and hospitals with much fewer staff – about 4%. We don’t have to deal with multiple payers, or chase bad debts. We don’t have to charge higher fees to compensate for unpaid for procedures

29 3. PHARMACEUTICAL PRICE CONTROLS: Although drug costs are rising in Canada as here, we’re able to exercise more control over the cost of drugs as a result of our Patented Medicine Prices Review Board.

30 4. MALPRACTICE INSURANCE:  The not-for-profit Canadian Medical Protective Association covers medical malpractice for all Canadian physicians with comparatively low premiums.  Doctors’ remuneration does not have to reflect those extra costs and our justice system has successfully kept the awards in a reasonable range.

31 5. EVIDENCE-BASED CARE:  From vaginal births after C-sections to, lumpectomy, to x-rays for sprained ankles, applying evidence to determine the appropriateness of tests and procedures translates into fewer unnecessary tests and procedures and less defensive medicine.  We are committed to moving from the error of pure cost-containment approach of the early 90s into true evidence-based cost effective care.

32 6. PREVENTION:  Diseases are cheaper to treat if they’re caught early, and since all Canadians are insured, they’re more likely to have pap smears, mammograms and other early detection visits and tests, than US patients who are not covered.

33 7. FAMILY MEDICINE:  A long-standing speciality in Canada,  family doctors are trained to help patients navigate their care;  we interpret the difference between what patients think they `want`, and what they actually `need`.  A point of first contact, a trusted coach to explain the evidence and the choices.

34 34  Wait times: the one big complaint. Now addressed with a national plan/special budget.  Adequate supply of physicians and nurses: at long last increasing since 2000.  Capital investment for CTs and MRIs: still lacking. Need for PET scans  Most appropriate care, most appropriate provider (paid & unpaid), most appropriate place.

35 R.O.M.P. Collingwood April 24, 2008 Dr. Carolyn Bennett M.P. The Grey Tsunami ?

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37 37  OECD study of 10 countries …  US least satisfied with the care they receive  Canadians 5X more likely to be satisfied with their care  The Nanos Research poll, 12 August 2009: …on the eve of the national convention of the Canadian Medical Association (CMA):  shows an overwhelming 86% level of public support for "public solutions" to improve Canada's national health care system.  The Harris-Decima poll, early June 2009:  found 70% of Canadians say the system is working very or fairly well. Monique Bégin

38 As a nation, we aspire to a Canada in which every person is as healthy as they can be – physically, mentally, emotionally and spiritually.

39  Use the system wisely  Keeping our families well  Clinical guidelines  Self Care Manuals  Fight for more HEALTH so we`ll need less health care  Democracy between elections

40  Most appropriate care  In the most appropriate place  By the most appropriate person – paid and unpaid

41 5 th biggest provider of health care  Aboriginals  Military  Veterans  Corrections  RCMP  Public Service

42 “We are not tinkers, who patch and mend what is broken. We must be watchmen, guardians of the life and health of our generation, so that stronger and more able generations may come after.” Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell first woman physician North America


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