Reading Time: 3 minutes

Krystle WittevrongelHospital staffing in Ontario is in crisis – as it is in Alberta, British Columbia, and the rest of Canada. Provinces are responding with what they perceive as solutions: Ontario is fast-tracking foreign-trained nurses, and Alberta has made the interprovincial movement of professionals easier. But while these moves will help reduce the red tape surrounding the practice of health professionals, there are also other solutions to consider.

For starters, capacity issues in Canadian healthcare aren’t new nor entirely attributable to COVID-19. Canada has had a deficiency for years compared to other OECD countries. For instance, in 2019, the number of doctors in Canada was 2.8 per 1,000 inhabitants, compared to 4.3 in Sweden. With below-OECD average numbers and increasing proportions of Canadians scrambling to find a family doctor, ending medical school quotas is a must.

Next, we should make more efficient use of other existing healthcare resources, like permitting the participation of private facilities in the provision of care, and also allowing other medical professionals to exercise their full scope of practice.

Delegating certain procedures to nurse practitioners or pharmacists will free doctors to treat more complex cases and take on new patients. While this doesn’t necessarily help when provinces are experiencing a simultaneous nursing shortage, there is an ample supply of pharmacists who can take on tasks like prescribing certain medications, ordering and interpreting lab tests, and administering vaccinations. Canada actually has more licensed pharmacists per capita than most OECD countries.

hospital-beds
Related Stories
Why our health system treats Canadians poorly


Canadian healthcare at a crossroads


The consequences of the doctor shortage in Canada are grim


More broadly, additional structural changes are needed to increase the healthcare system’s capacity. Sweden and the U.K. both underwent liberalization to mixed systems that embrace the value of parallel resources, notably private ones, while also maintaining universality. While not perfect, these two systems experienced improved access and quality of care for patients, and both outperformed Canada’s system with a similar price tag.

Take, for instance, the management of hospitals. Does this really need to be a responsibility of the public sector? The expansion of the bureaucratic and administrative components of healthcare has undoubtedly led to a deterioration in outcomes.

Sweden, on the other hand, allows private entrepreneurs to run hospitals financed by the public healthcare system that cost the public system less and are more efficient. In addition, a 2021 IPSOS poll showed that 59 percent of Canadians would be in favour of following this model.

And contrary to popular belief, this isn’t outlawed by the Canada Health Act, so provincial governments have the latitude to act.

Canadian hospitals should also transition away from global budgets. Most high-performing universal healthcare systems utilize some sort of activity-based funding model to remunerate hospitals. Countries that make widespread use of activity-based financing tend to see an increased number of services performed and reduced wait times. In the U.K., transitioning to activity-based funding resulted in competition between institutions as the money now follows the patient. This increased efficiency and performance and led to cost savings for hospitals.

We are now at a point where dumping more money into the system is like bailing out a yacht with a bucket with a hole in the bottom. More money won’t solve the systemic, pervasive, and structural issues that plague Canadian healthcare.

For instance, Ontario has increased health spending by nearly 23 percent since 2018, and Alberta in 2018 spent more per capita than Sweden or the U.K on healthcare. In 2021, a majority of Canadians agreed that the rate of increase in healthcare spending is unsustainable.

While hospital closures and staffing crises are alarming, they are not new and are not entirely COVID-related. If our decision-makers don’t start to think bigger and bolder when it comes to reform, we will still be having this same conversation years down the road.

Krystle Wittevrongel is a Senior Policy Analyst and Alberta Project Lead at the Montreal Economic Institute.

For interview requests, click here.


The opinions expressed by our columnists and contributors are theirs alone and do not inherently or expressly reflect the views of our publication.

© Troy Media
Troy Media is an editorial content provider to media outlets and its own hosted community news outlets across Canada.