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Irene Jansen

The New Alberta Health Act: Risks and Opportunities. Parkland Institute. June 2010. - 0 views

  • The research on for-profit hospitals reveals three main areas where they fall short: i. Quality and safety of health services. ii. Costs of health services. iii. Quality of jobs.
  • A number of other jurisdictions have experimented with the patient bill of rights. These are very controversial.
Irene Jansen

The high costs of for-profit care. Woolhandler and Himmelstein in CMAJ 2004. - 0 views

  • In the United States, investor-owned firms have come to dominate renal dialysis, nursing home care, inpatient psychiatric and rehabilitation facilities and health maintenance organizations (HMOs).
  • inroads among acute care hospitals (now owning about 13% of such facilities), as well as outpatient surgical centres, home care agencies and even hospices
  • The excess payments for care in private for-profit institutions were substantial: 19%.
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  • higher acute care (and rehabilitation4) hospital payments are not the whole story on investor-owned care. For-profit hospitals and dialysis clinics have high death rates.5,6 Investor-owned nursing homes are more frequently cited for quality deficiencies and provide less nursing care,7and investor-owned hospices provide less care to the dying,8than non-for-profit facilities.
  • fraud, the payment of kickbacks to physicians and overbilling of Medicare
  • For-profit executives reap princely rewards, draining money from care.
  • Investor-owned hospitals spend much less on nursing care than not-for-profit hospitals, but their administrative costs are 6 percentage points higher14
  • High administrative costs and lower quality have also characterized for-profit HMOs,15 now the dominant private insurers in the United States. Such plans take 19% for overhead, versus 13% in non-profit plans, 3% in the US Medicare program and 1% in Canadian medicare.16,17
  • Why do for-profit firms that offer inferior products at inflated prices survive in the market? Several prerequisites for the competitive free market described in textbooks are absent in health care.19,20
  • Privatization creates vast opportunities for powerful firms, and also redistributes income among health workers. Pay scales are relatively flat in government and not-for-profit health institutions; pay differences between the CEO and a housekeeper are perhaps 20:1. In US corporations, a ratio of 180:1 is average.22 In effect, privatization takes money from the pockets of low-wage, mostly female health workers and gives it to investors and highly paid managers.
Irene Jansen

CCPNR-The Canadian Council for Practical Nurse Regulators - 0 views

  • The Canadian Council for Practical Nurse Regulators (CCPNR) / Conseil canadien de réglementation des soins infirmiers auxiliaires (CCRSIA) is a federation of provincial and territorial members identified in legislation responsible for the safety of the public through the regulation of Licensed/Registered Practical Nurses.
Irene Jansen

Private health services often costlier - 0 views

  • We need to be skeptical about the claims of governments that privatization is less expensive and more efficient.
  • in the rush to justify privatization, governments fail to include publicly funded support to the private sector contractors. For example, the use of public facilities or equipment, financial support for start up costs, etc. The failure to include public support leaves us with a false impression of the actual cost, when in reality the hidden publicly funded costs could be significant.
  • I have had the opportunity on several occasions to do analyses respecting public services being provided privately, but paid for by government.
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  • in most instances, it was considerably more expensive because of the private sector's built-in profit.
  • if it can be proven and accurately substantiated that the private sector delivering public services is less expensive, that it's more efficient and timely, and is of high quality, and it doesn't remove professionals or money from the public system and thus weaken public health care, then I think most Canadians, being practical people, would approve.
  • There are some cases where these principles can be met.
Irene Jansen

Call for Innovative Practice Stories - CPhA - 0 views

  • Pharmacy Practice Innovative Showcase – CPhA is looking to showcase creative professional services that contribute to the development and advancement of pharmacy practice and positive patient outcomes
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    innovative practice story: 1. Patient-care need addressed. 2. Innovative pharmacy service/initiative and how it was implemented. 3. How did the service/initiative affect patient outcomes and your pharmacy practice? 4. Was the service/intervention successful? Has it been reproduced in or expanded to other settings? 5. Barriers to implementation and lessons learned.
Irene Jansen

Nurse helps patients navigate care - Owen Sound Sun Times - Ontario, CA - 0 views

  • Banks, a registered nurse, heads up a new program for lung cancer patients that gives them emotional support but also helps them through the maze of tests, medical appointments, diagnoses and the start of treatment. She works out of the Owen Sound hospital and sometimes receives a faxed referral from a doctor’s office before the newly diagnosed patient even leaves the building.
  • Banks, a registered nurse, heads up a new program for lung cancer patients that gives them emotional support but also helps them through the maze of tests, medical appointments, diagnoses and the start of treatment. She works out of the Owen Sound hospital
  • The program is funded through Cancer Care Ontario
Irene Jansen

Le privé en santé coûtera plus cher, soutient Yves Bolduc | Pierre Pelchat | ... - 0 views

  • Permettre aux médecins d'avoir une pratique mixte dans le privé et le public, comme le propose François Legault et la Coalition avenir Québec (CAQ), coûtera plus cher et, en plus, les listes d'attente seront plus longues dans les hôpitaux.
  • Un des problèmes que l'on a au Québec lorsque des médecins pratiquent dans le privé et le public, c'est qu'il se crée des listes d'attente qu'on n'est pas capable de régler.
  • On l'a vu à Montréal en radiologie. Les médecins créent une pénurie dans le public pour pouvoir charger plus cher dans le privé», a-t-il affirmé.
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  • cette pratique mixte, qui n'est permise qu'aux radiologistes
  • le ministre veut que l'assurance maladie couvre les frais des échographies et des endoscopies réalisées dans le privé à l'avenir
Irene Jansen

The Politics of the 2014 Health Accord in Victoria - 0 views

  • The reason an aging population costs provinces is because of the way we have structured health care. What the studies suggest is that we should be building more public long-term care homes and investing in home care professionals. We know that by keeping people out of the hospital- those who don’t need to be there and can have all of their needs met at home- is not only better and more preferable for the patient, but it is much more cost-efficient for health care.
Irene Jansen

National Nursing Week - May 9 to 15 < Health care, Nursing | CUPE - 0 views

  • In a letter sent to health care sector locals, CUPE National President Paul Moist and CUPE National Secretary-Treasurer Claude Généreux wish a happy Nursing Week to all of CUPE’s nursing team.
Irene Jansen

Government will not merge health and social care budgets for the present, minister says... - 0 views

  • The government is not planning to merge health and social care
  • The minister was questioned by MPs on 17 January about integration, funding, and system reform in the final hearing of the committee’s inquiry into social care.
  • he said the government was doing many things to improve integration, such as setting new incentives for organisations to work differently, and a range of “nudges, pressures, and obligations” in the system. “The nearest thing to a game changer is personal budgets,” he said.
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  • MPs repeatedly challenged the minister to accept there was a funding crisis in social care, warning that this could undermine integration and possible reforms such as those recommended by the Dilnot Commission on Funding of Care and Support, published last year.
  • some experts estimated that 900 000 people in the UK were left without basic care.
  • The health committee is due to report its findings on social care before the government publishes a white paper on care and support in the spring.
Irene Jansen

Edinburgh deals blow to outsourcing - FT.com - 0 views

  • Edinburgh city council has overturned plans to privatise 2,000 jobs
  • decision came just weeks after Mitie, the Bristol-based outsourcer, had been appointed preferred bidder on the £30m to £50m a year contract, which included school dinners, administrative work and the local authority’s help desk.
  • with Labour and Scottish National party councillors uniting against the agreement, the local authority has decided to keep the work in-house
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  • Although outsourcing has grown steadily since the 1990s, expectations of an austerity-induced boom have so far disappointed, with some local authorities even deciding to insource services to address concerns that privatisation was not proving the best value for taxpayers’ money.
  • Cumbria council has recently agreed to repatriate 300 staff outsourced to Amey after its seven-year contract to provide highways maintenance comes to an end in April, while Rotherham and Ealing councils both insourced highways services last year.
  • Last year, Edinburgh council also decided against privatising the city’s bin collection and street cleaning services.
  • The SNP government has ruled out any privatisation of the National Health Service, but local authorities are free to consider outsourcing if they believed that would improve delivery of services, added the SNP government
  • According to the Open Public Services white paper published last year, at least 40 per cent of local authority spending goes on contracts to the private and voluntary sectors; almost half of all councils have outsourced refuse collection while 55 per cent of social housing is provided by housing associations.
Irene Jansen

CHSRF - Value-Based Pricing of Pharmaceuticals in Canada: Opportunities to Expand the R... - 0 views

  • Husereau, Don; Cameron, Chris G. 16/12/2011
  • CHSRF Series of Reports on Cost Drivers and Health System Eficiency: Paper 5
  • Don Husereau, BSc Pharm, MScAdjunct Professor, Department of Epidemiology and Community MedicineFaculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa Chris G. Cameron, MScHealth Economist, Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health
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  • The rate of spending on health in Canada is rising faster than the rate of economic growth, creating concerns about the sustainability of Canada’s publicly funded healthcare systems. Expenditures on drugs is one of the fastest-growing areas.
Irene Jansen

The Money Traps in U.S. Health Care - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Why does an appendectomy in Germany cost roughly a quarter what it costs in the United States? Or an M.R.I. scan cost less than a third as much, on average, in Canada?
  • Why does
  • A recent report from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, a 34-member group that includes the most advanced industrial nations, concluded that spending is high here partly because the prices charged by American doctors and hospitals are higher than they are anywhere else.
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  • The International Federation of Health Plans, in its 2010 comparative price report, documented just how large the price differential can be for a wide range of services.
  • Americans can see a specialist or get elective surgery a lot faster than patients in other countries, according to surveys by the Commonwealth Fund.
  • The surveys also show that Americans are more likely than people in other advanced nations to experience medical errors or problems with uncoordinated care, and to forgo care because it’s too expensive.
  • we have alarmingly high rates of hospital admissions for asthma and uncontrolled diabetes — an indicator that many patients don’t have good primary care
Irene Jansen

Chefs, Butlers and Marble Baths - Not Your Average Hospital Room - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • elite wing on the new penthouse floor of NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell hospital. Pampering and décor to rival a grand hotel, if not a Downton Abbey, have long been the hallmark of such “amenities units,” often hidden behind closed doors at New York’s premier hospitals. But the phenomenon is escalating here and around the country, health care design specialists say, part of an international competition for wealthy patients willing to pay extra, even as the federal government cuts back hospital reimbursement in pursuit of a more universal and affordable American medical system.
  • $1,000 to $1,500 a day
  • Many American hospitals offer a V.I.P. amenities floor with a dedicated chef and lavish services,
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  • The rise of medical tourism to glittering hospitals in places like Singapore and Thailand has turned coddling and elegance into marketing necessities
  • The spotlight on luxury accommodations comes at an awkward time for many urban hospitals, now lobbying against cuts in Washington and highlighting their role as nonprofit teaching institutions that serve the poor.
  • In space-starved New York, many regular hospital rooms are still double-occupancy
  • “We pride ourselves on getting anything the patient wants. If they have a craving for lobster tails and we don’t have them on the menu, we’ll go out and get them.”
  • 30 percent of its clientele comes from abroad
  • “I’m perfectly at home here — totally private, totally catered,” she added. “I have a primary-care physician who also acts as ringmaster for all my other doctors. And I see no people in training — only the best of the best.”
  • Increasingly, hospitals serving the merely well-off are joining the amenities race.
  • The conflicts echo those of a century ago, in another era of growing income inequality and financial crisis, said David Rosner, a professor of public health and history at Columbia University. Hospitals, founded as free, charitable institutions to rehabilitate the poor, began seeking paying patients for the first time in the 1890s, he said, restyling themselves in part as “hotels for rich invalids.”
  • “Every generation of hospitals reflects our attitude about health and disease and wealth and poverty,” Professor Rosner said. “Today, they pride themselves on attracting private patients, and on the other hand ask for our tax dollars based upon their older charitable mission. There’s a conflict there at times.”
Irene Jansen

CHSRF on Call > Reforming generic drug pricing in Canada Feb 13 2012 - 0 views

  • February 13th, 12:00noon ET
  • Because generics offer the same quality advantages as their branded counterparts, generic drug manufacturers compete for market share by offering low prices. The Ontario Drug Benefit (ODB) program currently has a fixed rate which does not necessarily align with the cost of producing the drugs.&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; This session of CHSRF on Call focuses on two options for generic drug pricing: the implementation of sliding scale, and using tendering systems
Irene Jansen

CHSRF - The Use of Health Technology Assessment to Inform the Value of Provider Fees: ... - 0 views

  • CHSRF Series of reports on cost drivers and health system efficiency: Paper 6
  • Currently, provider fees are largely based on the costs to deliver the service, not the relative value-for-money of the new service. This approach means providers may have little to no incentive to perform high-value services compared to low-value services.
  • Health technology assessment (HTA) examines the medical, economic, social and ethical implications of the use of medical technologies, services and procedures. Because it has the capacity to capture value, HTA is considered an effective tool in making policy decisions to develop professional fees in response to the availability of new health technologies. In theory, using HTA to inform the price of a provider fee can lead to reductions in net expenditures while increasing payments to providers.
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  • Canada would benefit from a coordinated approach to price determination.
Irene Jansen

2012 CHSPR Conference Feb 28 and 29 2012 Vancouver - 0 views

  • Will paying the piper change the tune?&nbsp; Promises and pitfalls of health care funding reform
  • Sheraton Wall CentreVancouver, British Columbia
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