The Costs Of Constraint And Prospects For Health Care Reform In Canada
- 1 May 2002
- journal article
- Published by Health Affairs (Project Hope) in Health Affairs
- Vol. 21 (3) , 32-46
- https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.21.3.32
Abstract
The sharp decline and equally sharp recovery in public health care spending in the 1990s in Canada set the stage for a broad consideration of reform options but also established hurdles to be overcome in taking action. By moving health care to the center of the federal-provincial agenda, reconfiguring the internal politics of medical and hospital groups, and heightening a public sense of the need for improvement, the legacy of the 1990s prepared the ground for reforms that would "modernize" the Canadian model. But it also yielded a degree of federal-provincial rancor and provider demands for "catch-up," which complicated the process of achieving major change.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
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- Primary Care In Canada: So Much Innovation, So Little ChangeHealth Affairs, 2001
- The Oregon Health Plan and the Political Paradox of Rationing: What Advocates and Critics Have Claimed and What Oregon DidJournal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, 1999