Canadian Health Coalition

Canadian Health Coalition

The Canadian Health Coalition is a lobby group dedicated to preserving Canada's current Medicare system and to promoting the overall goal and policy of universal public health care. In 2002 and 2003 it was the leading national organization advocating that the Canadian federal government adopt the recommendations of the Romanow Report. Currently the Canadian Health Coalition and its provincial affiliate, the Ontario Health Coalition, have been spearheading a series of public plebiscites in Ontario, Canada over the provincial government's controversial plans to provide hospital services through public-private partnership (P3) rather than traditional public funding.

Goals

The Canadian Health Coalition puts forth the following ten goals for good health:

# Create Good Health. We must create conditions for good health. That means we need public policies that make for healthy people: safe food, a clean environment, full employment at decent wages, housing, a strong social safety net, education, peace, and a safe workplace. Public policies that allow the gap between rich and poor to widen will lead to higher health costs.
# Preserve and strengthen the Canada Health Act, the foundation of Medicare. The five principles of medicare must be maintained: universal coverage, accessibility, portability between provinces and territories, comprehensive coverage, and public non-profit administration. The federal government should maintain sufficient cash transfers to the provinces to guarantee equal access to health services as a right for all Canadians. The federal government should withhold cash transfers to provinces that violate the Canada Health Act.
# Make the health care system democratic, accountable and representative. Let all Canadians participate in health decision-making, not just private corporations and un-elected boards. Bring everyone - including patients, members of the public and health care workers - into the reform and evaluation of the health care system. There should be elections for hospital and health care boards. Health care workers should be fully involved in workplace decision-making, not just harnessed in "quality management" schemes to cut costs at the expense of appropriate care.
# Provide a continuum of care from large institutions to the home. This means providing good quality care with appropriate treatment and supports while providing choice of location to the patient. Governments have used the rhetoric of moving to community care to downsize institutional care without actually expanding non-profit, accountable services in the community. Health care reforms should improve and increase services to seniors and the community.
# Protect our investment in the skills and abilities of our health care workers. Cutting front line workers means cutting quality of care. We have built up a tremendous resource in the skills and abilities of health care workers. Negotiating employment security agreements enables displaced workers to access comparable jobs in the health care system. Allow health care workers to retain their existing rights by encouraging unionization in emerging health care organizations. With secure employment workers can participate more freely in the restructuring of the health care system.
# Ensure fair wages for all health care providers. The burden of providing health care is being shifted onto poorly paid workers in the community and unpaid family care-givers in the home, most of whom are women. Health care reform should not rob communities of "good jobs" and contribute to the development of a low-wage economy. Wage parity with existing institutional jobs recognizes that fair wages and decent working conditions contributes to quality of care.
# Eliminate profit-making from illness. Public administration of medicare has saved Canadians billions of dollars. The practice of "deinsuring" health services by eliminating them from Medicare coverage, the move to user fees, the creation of profit-making clinics - all these changes create a two-tier health care system where private insurance companies profit. There is no room for profit and inequity in health care.
# Reduce over-prescribing and make drugs affordable. Drug companies are adding millions to health care costs by driving up prices. We need to repeal the drug patent protection legislation which prevents competition and enact law reform that promotes lower drug prices. Controlling over-prescribing and drug costs would free up millions for health care services.
# Stop fee-for-service payments. We should pay health workers on the salaried basis, not the fee-for-service system used by physicians, some health care providers, and private labs. Fee-for-service (payment for the number and type of services provided) encourages over-booking, over-prescribing, over-treating and the concentration of physicians in urban areas at the expense of rural areas.
# Expand methods of health care and the role of non-physician health providers. We must develop holistic approaches to health care that expand the role of non-physician health care providers. Nurses, midwives and others can handle many procedures within the full scope of their profession including areas neglected by the medical profession, such as services for women or cultural communities. More information should be made available to the public so they can make informed decisions and are aware of choices in treatment.

ee also

*Medical Reform Group

External links

* [http://www.healthcoalition.ca/ Canadian Health Coalition]
* [http://www.ontariohealthcoalition.ca/ Ontario Health Coalition]
* [http://www.p3watch.ca/ P-3 Watch] (website critical of public-private partnerships)
* [http://www.hwcn.org/link/mrg/ Medical Reform Group] (Organization of physicians, medical students and others "committed to ensuring access to high quality health care for all Canadians.")


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Ontario Health Coalition — The Ontario Health Coalition is a network of grassroots community organizations representing the province of Ontario, Canada. The Ontario Health Coalition is a non partisan organisation committed to maintaining and enhancing Canada s publicly… …   Wikipedia

  • Health care in Canada — Under Lester Pearson s government, Canada s health care was expanded through the Medical Care Act, or Medicare to provide near universal coverage to all Canadians according to their need for such services and irrespective of their ability to pay …   Wikipedia

  • Health care politics — Health care often accounts for one of the largest areas of spending for both governments and individuals all over the world, and as such it is surrounded by controversy. Though there are many topics involved in health care politics, most can be… …   Wikipedia

  • Canadian and American health care systems compared — basis ($2724 and $2121 on a non adjusted basis); total U.S. spending was US$6096 vs. US$3137 (PPP) ($6096 and $3038 on a non adjusted basis).] Studies have come to different conclusions about the result of this disparity in spending. A 2007… …   Wikipedia

  • Canadian federal election, 2011 — 2008 ← members May 2, 2011 (2011 05 02) …   Wikipedia

  • Canadian Labour Congress — (CLC) Full name Canadian Labour Congress Congrès du travail du Canada Founded 1956 Members 3 million Country Canada …   Wikipedia

  • Canadian Federation of Students — Fédération canadienne des étudiantes et étudiants Founded 1981 Members 500,000 (est.) Country Canada …   Wikipedia

  • Canadian federal election, 2008 — 2006 ← members October 14, 2008 (2008 10 14) …   Wikipedia

  • Health Care in Canada Survey — Health Care in Canada SurveyThe Health Care in Canada (HCIC) survey is the most comprehensive annual survey of Canadian public and health care providers’ opinions on health care issues. 2007 marks the tenth anniversary of the Survey. It has been… …   Wikipedia

  • Health insurance — is insurance against the risk of incurring medical expenses among individuals. By estimating the overall risk of health care expenses among a targeted group, an insurer can develop a routine finance structure, such as a monthly premium or payroll …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”