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Health Care in Canada:
Who Does What?
Ryan Clarke
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
Overview
• About Advocacy Solutions®
• Overall Structure
• Role of the Federal Government
• Role of the Provincial/Territorial Governments
• Delivery vs. Financing
• Key Players
• Current Challenges
• Advocating to Politicians vs. Bureaucrats
Advocacy Solutions®
• Business committed to providing a voice to
  organizations and individuals through the
  development and implementation of impactful
  advocacy strategies
• Three core services:
   – Training and development
   – Creation of strategic plans
   – Implementation of strategies
Overall Structure
• In general, health care in Canada is publicly
  funded, but privately delivered
• This means that while the vast majority of health
  care services are “free” at the point of use, they are
  delivered by private providers i.e. physicians
• The provinces are constitutionally responsible for
  the administration and delivery of health care
  services under s. 92.7 of the Constitution Act, 1867:
   – The Establishment, Maintenance, and Management of
     Hospitals, Asylums, Charities, and Eleemosynary
     (charitable) Institutions in and for the Province, other than
     Marine Hospitals
Federal Role
• The role of the federal government is to:
   – Assist in financing provincial and territorial health
     care services through fiscal transfers
   – Set standards and principles upon which transfers
     are contingent
   – Deliver health care services to specific groups
   – Provide and fund other health-related functions
Canada Health Act, 1984
• The Canada Health Act (1984) is Canada’s
  federal health insurance legislation
• It establishes the criteria and conditions related
  to insured health care services – the national
  standards – which the provinces and territories
  must meet in order to receive the full federal
  cash transfer contribution
• Historically, insured services are largely
  restricted to care delivered in hospitals or by
  physicians
Canada Health Act, 1984
• The Act states that "the primary objective of
  Canadian health care policy is to protect, promote
  and restore the physical and mental well-being of
  residents of Canada and to facilitate reasonable
  access to health services without financial or other
  barriers”
• To do so, the Act lists a set of criteria and
  conditions that the provinces and territories must
  follow to receive their federal transfer payments:
  public administration, comprehensiveness,
  universality, portability, and accessibility
• There is also a requirement that the provinces
  ensure recognition of the federal payments and
  provide information to the federal government
Provincial/Territorial Role
• Administration of their health insurance plans
• Planning and funding of care in hospitals and
  other health facilities
• Services provided by physicians and other
  health professionals
• Planning and implementation of health
  promotion and public health initiatives
• Negotiation of fee schedules with health
  professionals
Delivery vs. Financing
• Health care delivery refers to the manner in which
  medical services are organized, managed and
  provided
• In large measure, health care is delivered through
  private providers
• The health care industry is the second largest
  employer in Canada (over two million people)
• They can be divided into three types of services:
   – Primary care
   – Secondary care
   – Additional care
Delivery vs. Financing
• Health care financing refers to how medical
  services are paid for
• In large measure, health care is financed through
  public funds, but that is evolving
• Total health care spending in Canada was
  expected to reach $207 billion in 2012, averaging
  $5,948 per person
• Financing comes from three primary sources:
   – Public
   – Private
   – Out-of-pocket
Key Players in Delivery
• Hospitals – representing almost 30% of total health
  care expenditures
• While independently operated, all hospitals in
  Canada are regulated by the provinces and
  territories (even the private ones)
• Drugs – representing almost 16% of total health
  care expenditures
• Includes brand and generic, those delivered inside
  hospitals (publicly funded) and outside hospitals
  (mixed funding)
• Physician services – representing almost 15% of
  total health care expenditures
Other Key Players
• Canadian Institute of Health Information
   – mandate is to lead the development and maintenance of
     comprehensive and integrated health information that
     enables sound policy and effective health system
     management that improve health and health care in
     Canada

• Canadian Institutes of Health Research
   – mission is to create new scientific knowledge and to enable
     its translation into improved health, more effective health
     services and products, and a strengthened Canadian
     health care system

• Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in
  Health
   – provides decision-makers with the evidence, analysis,
     advice, and recommendations they require to make
     informed decisions in health care
Other Key Players
• Mental Health Commission of Canada
   – a catalyst for improving the mental health system and
     changing the attitudes and behaviours of Canadians
     around mental health issues

• Canadian Partnership Against Cancer
   – an independent organization funded by the federal
     government to accelerate action on cancer control for all
     Canadians

• Canada Health Infoway
   – jointly invests with every province and territory to
     accelerate the development and adoption of health
     information and communications technology projects in
     Canada
Other Key Players
• Health Council of Canada
   – The Health Council of Canada's role is to let Canadians
     and their governments know how progress towards the
     vision laid out in the health accords is coming along, to
     better enable decision-making at all levels

• Canadian Patient Safety Institute
   – provides a coordinating and leadership role across health
     sectors and systems, promotes leading practices and
     raises awareness with stakeholders, patients and the
     general public about patient safety

• Provincial Health Quality Councils
   – report directly to on the quality, safety and performance of
     health services and the health system in given provinces
Other Key Players
• Regional/Local Health Authorities
   – provide the delivery of operational public health care
     services by geographic region

• Patient/Advocacy Groups
• Patients/Caregivers
• The Public
Current Challenges
•   On September 16, 2004, the Canadian government
    announced $41 billion over the next 10 years of new
    federal funding in support of the action plan on health
•   That Health Accord expires in 2014 and the current
    federal government has indicated they will not negotiate
    funding leading up to next year, just measurement,
    accountability and best practices
•   The funding is set – an increase of six percent in the first
    three years, and a minimum of three percent in the
    remaining seven years
•   In 2011, health care accounted for about 38% of
    provincial/territorial government spending: PQ 30.1%,
    SK 35.8%, MB 44.3%, ON 46.0%, NS 47.8%
Federal/Provincial
        Government Structure
Minister:                     Deputy Minister:
    – Political staffers         – Hierarchical structure
                                   below
    – Serve at the pleasure
      of the Crown               – People under DM do
                                   not serve at the
    – Sole purpose is to
                                   pleasure of the
      serve their Minister         Crown
      and their political
      interests                  – Sole purpose is to
                                   serve the public in an
    – Transitory positions
                                   impartial manner
                                 – Permanent positions
Advocating to Politicians
•   Ensure that your key messages are clear, compelling concise
    and consistent – with one ‘ask’
•   Assume they know nothing about your issue
•   Find out everything you can about that person and their
    potential link to your issue
•   Where possible, link your issue to their stated political
    objectives or public policies i.e. Families First
•   Bring your issue down to the riding/personal level
•   Position your issue within the context of the election cycle
•   Position your issue as a political ‘win’
•   Selectively engage the opposition to leverage the gov’t
•   Keep them informed of your engagement with the bureaucrats
•   Be prepared to be assertive/aggressive if necessary
Advocating to Bureaucrats
•   Ensure that your key messages are clear, compelling concise
    and consistent – with one ‘ask’
•   Find out everything you can about that person, including past
    roles, career track, etc.
•   Where possible, link your issue to gov’t programs and
    initiatives i.e. disease strategy
•   Have people who can speak to the technical or clinical aspects
    of your issue
•   Know where you are in the election cycle
•   Keep them informed of your engagement with the politicians
•   NEVER blindside a bureaucrat
Advocacy Solutions®
Contact Information:


            Ryan Clarke, LL.B.
               t. 905.891.0311
               f. 905.891.0366
          ryan@advocacysolutions.ca
           www.advocacysolutions.ca

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Who Does What in Canadian Health Care

  • 1. Health Care in Canada: Who Does What? Ryan Clarke Wednesday, March 27, 2013
  • 2. Overview • About Advocacy Solutions® • Overall Structure • Role of the Federal Government • Role of the Provincial/Territorial Governments • Delivery vs. Financing • Key Players • Current Challenges • Advocating to Politicians vs. Bureaucrats
  • 3. Advocacy Solutions® • Business committed to providing a voice to organizations and individuals through the development and implementation of impactful advocacy strategies • Three core services: – Training and development – Creation of strategic plans – Implementation of strategies
  • 4. Overall Structure • In general, health care in Canada is publicly funded, but privately delivered • This means that while the vast majority of health care services are “free” at the point of use, they are delivered by private providers i.e. physicians • The provinces are constitutionally responsible for the administration and delivery of health care services under s. 92.7 of the Constitution Act, 1867: – The Establishment, Maintenance, and Management of Hospitals, Asylums, Charities, and Eleemosynary (charitable) Institutions in and for the Province, other than Marine Hospitals
  • 5. Federal Role • The role of the federal government is to: – Assist in financing provincial and territorial health care services through fiscal transfers – Set standards and principles upon which transfers are contingent – Deliver health care services to specific groups – Provide and fund other health-related functions
  • 6. Canada Health Act, 1984 • The Canada Health Act (1984) is Canada’s federal health insurance legislation • It establishes the criteria and conditions related to insured health care services – the national standards – which the provinces and territories must meet in order to receive the full federal cash transfer contribution • Historically, insured services are largely restricted to care delivered in hospitals or by physicians
  • 7. Canada Health Act, 1984 • The Act states that "the primary objective of Canadian health care policy is to protect, promote and restore the physical and mental well-being of residents of Canada and to facilitate reasonable access to health services without financial or other barriers” • To do so, the Act lists a set of criteria and conditions that the provinces and territories must follow to receive their federal transfer payments: public administration, comprehensiveness, universality, portability, and accessibility • There is also a requirement that the provinces ensure recognition of the federal payments and provide information to the federal government
  • 8. Provincial/Territorial Role • Administration of their health insurance plans • Planning and funding of care in hospitals and other health facilities • Services provided by physicians and other health professionals • Planning and implementation of health promotion and public health initiatives • Negotiation of fee schedules with health professionals
  • 9. Delivery vs. Financing • Health care delivery refers to the manner in which medical services are organized, managed and provided • In large measure, health care is delivered through private providers • The health care industry is the second largest employer in Canada (over two million people) • They can be divided into three types of services: – Primary care – Secondary care – Additional care
  • 10. Delivery vs. Financing • Health care financing refers to how medical services are paid for • In large measure, health care is financed through public funds, but that is evolving • Total health care spending in Canada was expected to reach $207 billion in 2012, averaging $5,948 per person • Financing comes from three primary sources: – Public – Private – Out-of-pocket
  • 11. Key Players in Delivery • Hospitals – representing almost 30% of total health care expenditures • While independently operated, all hospitals in Canada are regulated by the provinces and territories (even the private ones) • Drugs – representing almost 16% of total health care expenditures • Includes brand and generic, those delivered inside hospitals (publicly funded) and outside hospitals (mixed funding) • Physician services – representing almost 15% of total health care expenditures
  • 12. Other Key Players • Canadian Institute of Health Information – mandate is to lead the development and maintenance of comprehensive and integrated health information that enables sound policy and effective health system management that improve health and health care in Canada • Canadian Institutes of Health Research – mission is to create new scientific knowledge and to enable its translation into improved health, more effective health services and products, and a strengthened Canadian health care system • Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health – provides decision-makers with the evidence, analysis, advice, and recommendations they require to make informed decisions in health care
  • 13. Other Key Players • Mental Health Commission of Canada – a catalyst for improving the mental health system and changing the attitudes and behaviours of Canadians around mental health issues • Canadian Partnership Against Cancer – an independent organization funded by the federal government to accelerate action on cancer control for all Canadians • Canada Health Infoway – jointly invests with every province and territory to accelerate the development and adoption of health information and communications technology projects in Canada
  • 14. Other Key Players • Health Council of Canada – The Health Council of Canada's role is to let Canadians and their governments know how progress towards the vision laid out in the health accords is coming along, to better enable decision-making at all levels • Canadian Patient Safety Institute – provides a coordinating and leadership role across health sectors and systems, promotes leading practices and raises awareness with stakeholders, patients and the general public about patient safety • Provincial Health Quality Councils – report directly to on the quality, safety and performance of health services and the health system in given provinces
  • 15. Other Key Players • Regional/Local Health Authorities – provide the delivery of operational public health care services by geographic region • Patient/Advocacy Groups • Patients/Caregivers • The Public
  • 16. Current Challenges • On September 16, 2004, the Canadian government announced $41 billion over the next 10 years of new federal funding in support of the action plan on health • That Health Accord expires in 2014 and the current federal government has indicated they will not negotiate funding leading up to next year, just measurement, accountability and best practices • The funding is set – an increase of six percent in the first three years, and a minimum of three percent in the remaining seven years • In 2011, health care accounted for about 38% of provincial/territorial government spending: PQ 30.1%, SK 35.8%, MB 44.3%, ON 46.0%, NS 47.8%
  • 17. Federal/Provincial Government Structure Minister: Deputy Minister: – Political staffers – Hierarchical structure below – Serve at the pleasure of the Crown – People under DM do not serve at the – Sole purpose is to pleasure of the serve their Minister Crown and their political interests – Sole purpose is to serve the public in an – Transitory positions impartial manner – Permanent positions
  • 18. Advocating to Politicians • Ensure that your key messages are clear, compelling concise and consistent – with one ‘ask’ • Assume they know nothing about your issue • Find out everything you can about that person and their potential link to your issue • Where possible, link your issue to their stated political objectives or public policies i.e. Families First • Bring your issue down to the riding/personal level • Position your issue within the context of the election cycle • Position your issue as a political ‘win’ • Selectively engage the opposition to leverage the gov’t • Keep them informed of your engagement with the bureaucrats • Be prepared to be assertive/aggressive if necessary
  • 19. Advocating to Bureaucrats • Ensure that your key messages are clear, compelling concise and consistent – with one ‘ask’ • Find out everything you can about that person, including past roles, career track, etc. • Where possible, link your issue to gov’t programs and initiatives i.e. disease strategy • Have people who can speak to the technical or clinical aspects of your issue • Know where you are in the election cycle • Keep them informed of your engagement with the politicians • NEVER blindside a bureaucrat
  • 20. Advocacy Solutions® Contact Information: Ryan Clarke, LL.B. t. 905.891.0311 f. 905.891.0366 ryan@advocacysolutions.ca www.advocacysolutions.ca