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February 2008

Castonguay health care report a step in the right direction

Published in the Winnipeg Free Press, February 24, 2008

Rebecca WalbergA generation ago, universal single-payer healthcare was on the cutting edge of policy. Today, it has become clear that this way lies disaster, and significant changes are needed if Canada’s health system is to keep functioning. It’s fitting, then, that Claude Castonguay, a former Quebec health minister known as a “father of medicare” is leading the charge toward health policy reform today.

The Castonguay report, released this week, does a remarkably good job of identifying the best practices of foreign healthcare systems that might be brought to Quebec, and by extension to the rest of the provincial medicare systems. He recommends a hike in sales tax to fund healthcare, which is a dead end in health policy debates, since Canada already outspends most of the world, and resource reform is not the key issue here. That aside, the policy recommendations are spot-on, and include some of the best aspects of healthcare in other jurisdictions.

On the subject of funding, the report notes with concern the growing gap between the economic growth and rising health spending. We can’t go on effectively paying ourselves more than we earn, and the health sector consumes an ever greater share of our GDP. An expanding economy can defer the point at which our healthcare system is bankrupt, but to avert this situation entirely requires something more, and the report’s recommendation to tie increases in health spending to economic growth is an excellent first step.

Another crucial component of the report is the emphasis placed on the citizen within the healthcare system. The healthcare consumer, the report states, “must also contribute to the system’s funding according to his means, and in accordance with his consumption of care.” While this sounds revolutionary to some Canadians, trained to perceive healthcare as free because they pay nothing for it at the point of consumption, it is in fact consistent both with the best performing healthcare systems elsewhere, and with the principle of individual responsibility.

With respect to improving healthcare access, outcomes and costs, the Castonguay report comes down strongly in favour of a very powerful tool for reform: getting government out of the business of providing healthcare. There is ample work to be done in regulating healthcare, setting health policy and standards, and allocating budgets for capital investments and ongoing costs, and provincial governments are in an excellent position to provide that oversight. If Canadian health ministries restricted themselves to these functions, and permitted healthcare providers to concern themselves with the production of healthcare, we would bring our system into line with the most successful European healthcare regimes.

The report also stresses the centrality of prevention and health maintenance. Connecting in the minds of consumers the relationship between their overall health and their demands on the healthcare system is certainly one aspect of this. Taking concrete steps to maintain health, rather than waiting until illness develops and then treating disease, is a key to lowering healthcare costs and improving outcomes. The goals Castonguay sets of a personal primary care physician or clinic for each Quebecer, as well as universal electronic patient records, are the foundation of preventive medicine. Having all one’s medical records in the hands of one physician, and in an easily accessible electronic format, enables the detection of problems before they before serious.

Also encouraging are the discussion of effective use of pharmaceuticals, and of home care for the elderly. The massive demographic shift on the horizon, in which an elderly population will live longer, and be supported by a lower ratio of workers, than ever before, means that any plan to make healthcare accessible and affordable must address the medical needs of an aging population. It has been proven that optimal use of drugs, especially for chronic conditions such as hypertension and diabetes, can drastically lower both the incidence of further illness and the overall costs of treatment. For seniors suffering from a loss of autonomy and mobility, home care is both sought after by the patients themselves and less expensive than institutional care.

The Chaoulli judgment opened the door for meaningful healthcare reform in Quebec. This paper defines some concrete steps the Quebec government can take to rise to the challenge. All Canadians interested in the future of our healthcare system should watch carefully to see what components are implemented, and how they fare. The Castonguay report liberates the debate from the orthodoxy of the Canada Health Act and suggests evidence-based changes that have been proven elsewhere. If health ministers elsewhere pay attention, Claude Castonguay may be remembered not only as a father of but also as one of its rescuers.

Rebecca Walberg is the co-author of the recent Euro Canadian Health Consumer Index published by the Frontier Centre for Public Policy,

Keywords: Health care in Canada, single-payer system, home care for the elderly, Chaoulli judgment

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