Canada: Health system review.

Q1 Medicine
Health systems in transition Pub Date : 2013-01-01
Gregory Marchildon
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Abstract

Canada is a high-income country with a population of 33 million people. Its economic performance has been solid despite the recession that began in 2008. Life expectancy in Canada continues to rise and is high compared with most OECD countries; however, infant and maternal mortality rates tend to be worse than in countries such as Australia, France and Sweden. About 70% of total health expenditure comes from the general tax revenues of the federal, provincial and territorial governments. Most public revenues for health are used to provide universal medicare (medically necessary hospital and physician services that are free at the point of service for residents) and to subsidise the costs of outpatient prescription drugs and long-term care. Health care costs continue to grow at a faster rate than the economy and government revenue, largely driven by spending on prescription drugs. In the last five years, however, growth rates in pharmaceutical spending have been matched by hospital spending and overtaken by physician spending, mainly due to increased provider remuneration. The governance, organization and delivery of health services is highly decentralized, with the provinces and territories responsible for administering medicare and planning health services. In the last ten years there have been no major pan-Canadian health reform initiatives but individual provinces and territories have focused on reorganizing or fine tuning their regional health systems and improving the quality, timeliness and patient experience of primary, acute and chronic care. The medicare system has been effective in providing Canadians with financial protection against hospital and physician costs. However, the narrow scope of services covered under medicare has produced important gaps in coverage and equitable access may be a challenge in these areas.

加拿大:卫生系统审查。
加拿大是一个拥有3300万人口的高收入国家。尽管2008年开始的经济衰退,它的经济表现一直稳定。加拿大人的预期寿命持续上升,与大多数经合组织国家相比,加拿大人的预期寿命较高;然而,婴儿和产妇死亡率往往比澳大利亚、法国和瑞典等国更糟。卫生总支出的约70%来自联邦、省和地区政府的一般税收收入。大部分公共卫生收入用于提供全民医疗保险(医疗上必要的住院和医生服务,在服务点对居民免费)和补贴门诊处方药和长期护理的费用。医疗保健费用的增长速度继续快于经济和政府收入的增长速度,这在很大程度上是由处方药支出推动的。然而,在过去五年中,药品支出的增长率与医院支出相匹配,并被医生支出超过,这主要是由于提供者报酬的增加。保健服务的管理、组织和提供高度分散,各省和地区负责管理医疗保险和规划保健服务。在过去十年中,没有重大的泛加拿大卫生改革倡议,但个别省份和地区已将重点放在重组或微调其区域卫生系统上,并改善初级、急性和慢性护理的质量、及时性和患者体验。医疗保险制度有效地为加拿大人提供了医疗和医生费用方面的经济保障。然而,医疗保险覆盖的服务范围狭窄,在覆盖范围方面产生了重大差距,公平获取可能是这些领域的一项挑战。
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来源期刊
Health systems in transition
Health systems in transition Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
16.00
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0.00%
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