| TORONTO, Monday, October 29, 2001
|
| The Standing Senate Committee on Social Affairs, Science and
Technology met this day at 9:05 a.m. to examine the state of the
health care system in Canada.
|
| Senator Michael Kirby (Chairman) in the Chair.
|
| [English]
|
| The Chairman: Senators, our first witness this morning is
Dr. Tom McGowan, President and Medical Director of Canadian
Radiation Oncology Services. Thank you for attending here,
Dr. McGowan.
|
| If you can begin with a brief opening statement, we would be
delighted to ask you some questions.
|
| Dr. Thomas McGowan, President and Medical Director,
Canadian Radiation Oncology Services: I am appearing before
you today to present my company, Canadian Radiation Oncology
Services, CROS, as a model of 21st century health care delivery.
As well, I should like to address the critical issues of access to
treatment and waiting lists. I shall provide you with background
about my company and our organizational structure, highlights of
our first six months of operation and my recommendations to
improve health care in Canada.
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| First, I want to emphasize why the existence of waiting lists for
treatments threatens universal access. When treatment waiting
lists become too long, those with connections to the medical
profession will try to exploit them and queue-jump. Canadians
with money will seek treatment in private clinics in other
countries. Patients who receive private treatment see no personal
benefit from the public system, and their support for the system
will likely wane. Others left to linger on waiting lists feel ignored
and ill-treated by the system. Therefore, the priority for
maintaining a fair, universally accessible public health care
system is to reduce waiting lists.
|
| Innovative solutions like CROS have been instrumental in
reducing out-of-country referrals and waiting lists for cancer
radiation therapy in Ontario. Although we are a privately run
company, CROS is contracted by Cancer Care Ontario, so patients
do not pay any fees. Our operational model fits within the
principle of public administration as defined by your committee, a
single, user-pay model administered by the province.
|
| Last summer, Cancer Care Ontario, CCO, felt the need to
increase radiation treatment capacity and to improve patient
access to radiation therapy. CCO issued a call for proposals in the
fall of 2000, and we were the successful bidder.
|
| We started our operation in February 2001 to treat breast cancer
patients who otherwise would have been referred to the United
States or Thunder Bay. Very soon after opening, we were able to
see up to 20 new patients per week. This is the same number of
patients who were previously referred to the United States. In
May, we expanded our services to prostate cancer patients.
|
| Let me just highlight some of the important points in the
remainder of my written presentation. Our working hours are
evenings and weekends. This is a more convenient time for
patients, and it allows them to continue to maintain their normal
daily activities. Often, patients who receive radiation treatment,
especially for breast and prostate cancer treatment, are otherwise
well and are able to continue their work.
|
| When patients from Toronto and the GTA were sent for
treatment down to the United States or up to Northern Ontario,
their lives were extremely disrupted. It is less disruptive for
patients to receive health care at a time that is convenient for them
and to receive that care closer to home. It also saves the
provincial government a significant amount of money.
|
| Patients are not referred to us directly. A patient who needs
radiation treatment will be referred to his or her designated cancer
centre. If the wait at the designated cancer centre is too long, the
patient's chart will be sent to Cancer Care Ontario, who will then
refer the patient to us.
|
| I would like to talk a little bit about our organizational
structure.
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| Operationally, CROS exemplifies a modern service
organization. I believe that the top-down doctor-led hierarchy of
current medical practice is an out-of-date model. At CROS, we
have reorganized and flattened the traditional approach to
radiation therapy for patients. Radiation therapists are the people
who actually deliver the radiation treatment and deal with the
patients on a daily basis. They are included in the executive
decision-making process affecting all aspects of our operations.
This direct control and responsibility of radiation therapists has
led to greater operational efficiencies in patient and staff
scheduling, thereby optimizing machine utilization.
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| I am particularly proud of CROS's operational model and
believe that, if more medical services were reorganized, greater
efficiencies for the health care system would be achieved.
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| The cost savings have been substantial. Previously, when
patients were being sent to the United States, the cost was
approximately $15,000 per patient per treatment and another
$5,000 for travel subsidies. To treat the 534 patients we treated in
our first six months of operations cost $1.9 million; this compares
to a total cost of $10.7 million for those patients that we referred
to the United States and Northern Ontario.
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| I should like to make some recommendations regarding
monitoring. It is particularly important for breast cancer patients
to receive radiation treatment as soon as possible, to reduce the
rates of recurrence. Early treatment through lumpectomy and
radiation greatly reduces a recurrence and the possibility of a
mastectomy. We see a key performance measure for breast cancer
treatment as the reduction of the rates of mastectomies across the
province. We recommend that these incidences of mastectomy be
monitored nationally to ensure that the current system is
achieving the objective of reducing mastectomies.
|
| Current thinking in the field of radiation therapy targets 50 per
cent of cancer patients for radiation. In Ontario, about 35 per cent
of cancer patients currently receive radiation therapy. We
recommend that the percentage of patients utilizing radiotherapy
be monitored, with the goal of meeting this international
benchmark of 50 per cent utilization. I should note that the
Radiation Oncology Research Unit at the Kingston Regional
Cancer Centre, led by Dr. Bill Mackillop, has been working on
this for many years now.
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| In conclusion, cancer care is a challenging field. Timely, high
quality treatment is important for patients, both physically and
mentally. CROS delivers results for its patients, Cancer Care
Ontario and the province. I hope that your committee recognizes
that innovative solutions like CROS help maintain a publicly
administered health care system to benefit all Canadians.
|
| The Chairman: Is it fair to say that what you are effectively
doing is extending the hours of operation of equipment, which,
when you have invested in capital equipment, makes a lot of
sense?
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| Dr. McGowan: Yes.
|
| The Chairman: It is the same principle of people trying to run
computers 24 hours a day.
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| I was surprised to learn that you do not do any treatment on
Saturdays or Sundays.
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| Dr. McGowan: Right.
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| The Chairman: Why?
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| Dr. McGowan: There are two reasons. One is that the radiation
treatment schedules that are given to patients for curative
treatment have evolved over decades, and the way they have
evolved have been five days in a row with a two-day break. It
appears that the patients need this for recovery. There have been
studies that have tried to use continuous radiotherapy, and the
toxicity became unpredictably great.
|
| The second is the need to have the same treatment capacity
every single day. Hence, weekly capacity is defined by the lowest
capacity in a single day. We are not convinced that we could
attract sufficient radiation therapists to reproduce full staffing on
Saturdays and Sundays.
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| The Chairman: Are your therapists employed only by you, or
are they, effectively, people working overtime from other
institutions?
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| Dr. McGowan: Most of our therapists are people that are
working overtime from other institutions. However,
approximately one third of our treatment capacity comes from
people who are working only for us and otherwise would not be
working in the system. These are all people that are home with
their children during the daytime. In fact, we brought some people
back into the workforce who had had part-time jobs. One person
had been working as an aerobics instructor; others were working
as waiters and bartenders.
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| The Chairman: Effectively, you brought people back to use
their acquired skills.
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| Is the situation the same with your doctors? Are they people
who Monday to Friday during normal working hours would be
practising oncologists but who do extra work in the evening?
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| Dr. McGowan: Yes. We bring in a Windsor oncologist for
Friday and Saturday. Two people come up from Hamilton. One
person who is currently working part-time in Toronto works for
us; and we have another doctor that comes in from London.
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| The Chairman: Your model fits exactly the model we
described - I think it was in chapter 5 - where we talked about
extending the service, specialized organizations units and
improving patient service.
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| Dr. McGowan: Yes.
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| The Chairman: It seems like such an obviously attractive idea.
Why, then, have you not done it at the Ottawa Regional Cancer
Centre, just to pick another example?
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| Dr. McGowan: We just started in February. We have been
approached by Cancer Care Ontario to look at extending
operations.
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| Senator Robertson: You said that referring patients out
cost $10.7 million, against $1.9 million to treat patients under
your program; is that correct?
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| Dr. McGowan: Yes.
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| Senator Robertson: I assume those waiting lists are there
because hospitals cannot attract extra staff? If the hospitals could
attract extra staff, how would the costs of that compare with your
staffing costs?
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| Dr. McGowan: That is a question that is asked. Remember, we
are an after-hours clinic.
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| Senator Robertson: Yes, I understand that.
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| Dr. McGowan: We pay a 15 per cent premium to have people
work extended hours.
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| Senator Robertson: You charge the public health system,
however; correct?
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| Dr. McGowan: Yes.
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| Senator Robertson: Why cannot the hospitals attract people,
thereby savings the difference between your costs and theirs? I am
sure it is not just because they do not want to do it. This is
confusing.
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| Dr. McGowan: We are different in a couple of ways. First, the
organization is solely focussed on delivering patient care. That is
our number one and single-most important priority. We do not
have competing priorities; in other words, we do not have
trade-offs between treating patients and doing anything else.
|
| Second, when you are looking at a single department, the staff
come from that single department and your capacity is defined by
the lowest common denominator or the area with the lowest
capacity. We have been able to attract the key staff, which are
therapists and oncologists and physicists, from different
organizations. One third of our staff came from other
organizations, and we are able to have them work in the evening
because we can develop a staffing structure that allows us to
deliver full treatment capacity in the evening. For the daytime
departments to use these people that were not otherwise working
would have required them to extend by a full four hours a night to
make it attractive enough for them to come in in the evening.
|
| Third, we brought people from Sunnybrook and Princess
Margaret Hospital to deliver the radiation therapy. The
oncologists come from different cancer centres. There has to be a
match of the key staff. Hence, I think that there was an
operational barrier to the daytime operations using the staff in this
way.
|
| Senator Robertson: Operational barriers in the health system
seem to be costing a lot in all areas, not just oncology.
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| Dr. McGowan: Right. They were costing substantially more
when we were referring patients out. This is a way to directly deal
with the operational barrier.
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| Senator Robertson: As opposed to insisting that the hospitals
take the barriers down.
|
| I am not complaining. I think your aggressiveness is good, but
it points out, I believe, a failing, Mr. Chairman, where the
traditional hospitals and other health care deliverers put these
walls around themselves. There seems not to be the type of
cooperation there should be.
|
| On the last page of your document here, you say, in part:
|
Current thinking targets 50 per cent of cancer patients for
radiation. In Ontario, about 35 per cent of cancer patients
receive radiation therapy.
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| Dr. McGowan: Yes.
|
| Senator Robertson: Do you have any statistical evidence of
what is happening with those percentages in other provinces?
|
| Dr. McGowan: No, I do not. It is a very difficult figure to get
at. The Radiation Oncology Research Unit at Queen's in Kingston
has looked at this. They have focussed on getting this research
and these figures out of Ontario. It is a very difficult figure to get
at.
|
| Senator Robertson: With the exception of a couple of
provinces, I would imagine, I do not think they would be reaching
that 35 per cent.
|
| There will be a witness here tomorrow who will present some
statistical evidence. We will wait to see whether we get this
information.
|
| Senator Keon: I hear quite a lot of discussion about the
devolution of authority and services from Cancer Care Ontario
into the hospitals.
|
| First of all, how much of this is real? How would that affect
your ability to do the kind of innovative thing you have been
doing? I have been aware of your program for the last number of
months and have had an opportunity to talk about it to
Dr. Hollenberg on occasion.
|
| If Cancer Care Ontario were devolved into the hospital sector,
would you have the capacity to continue what you are doing, to
broaden your services to try and avoid people going out of
country, for example?
|
| Dr. McGowan: I am not sure that I would. I am also not sure
that I would not.
|
| I understand the environment that we are working in, and
Cancer Care Ontario is the agency that I have a contract with.
Cancer Care Ontario has the mandate to ensure that all patients
get radiation treatment as required. With Cancer Care Ontario's
backing and support, I am able to do this, and it is an easy
extension.
|
| If we had to deal with a variety of hospitals, we would then
have to sign a contract agreement with each institution. It would
certainly change the nature of the relationship in a way that I am
not entirely sure I can predict.
|
| Senator Keon: I take it that in your long- and short-range
planning you rely fairly heavily on population health data that
arises out of Health Canada, out of CIHI with the so called
"cancer maps." Again, how would it affect your ability to do
long- and short-term planning if cancer care were shifted to the
broad institutional sector, if cancer care were shifted from Cancer
Care Ontario to the broad institutional sector?
|
| Dr. McGowan: One of the things I have seen in long-term
cancer planning is that one of the only truisms in cancer planning
is that the incidence of cancer always increases. There are always
more cancer patients than there were the year before, and there
are always more patients that need radiation therapy. On a
long-term basis, we can be sure that this number will increase by
somewhere around 3 per cent to 5 per cent in a predictable way.
Where we have a problem is in the year-to-year fluctuation, the
random variation around the mean.
|
| Our model of care is to provide the protective capacity or
short-term capacity. We can increase our capacity through our
model, our staffing model, quickly by three or five patients a
week, or we can decrease it in the same way. We have a lot of
flexibility.
|
| Cancer Care Ontario's long-term planning involves where to
put cancer centres and where to expand capacity in a significant
way, when to put in new machines, et cetera.
|
| Our capacity is really dependent upon exploiting the unused
machine capacity that is available in the evening or perhaps some
slight unused capacity that occurs from year to year. If the
planning capability is gone and the capacity planning is very poor
and we are off by 10 per cent or 15 per cent, then no amount of
innovative staffing strategies is going to get around the fact that
there is insufficient capital equipment. We really rely on there
being sufficient and proper long-term capital planning to allow us
to utilize short-term staffing strategies.
|
| I am not sure if that answers your question, but that is my
perspective on the planning issue and how it relates to us and
long-term planning.
|
| Senator Keon: I would like to bring you back to a comment
you made about the innovation of your personnel.
|
| I get the distinct impression, from my own years of experience
and from the testimony I hear at this committee, that one of the
big defects in the health care system is the improper use of
personnel. There are highly skilled personnel doing things that
they do not have to do at all, things that could be done by less
skilled personnel.
|
| First of all, I want to ask you what flexibility you have vis-Ã -vis
the integration of your personnel, in cross-training and in the shift
of responsibilities from one group position description to another
group position description? How successful have you been in
doing that?
|
| Dr. McGowan: I think we have been surprisingly very
successful in shifting responsibilities between professional groups.
The limitations we have are on the licensing issues. There are
certain tasks that only a person who has a medical licence is
qualified to do; it is similar with respect to a therapist licence.
|
| Beyond that, all of the operational tasks, we have complete
flexibility in how we operate. We operate as a true group medical
practice, with the physicians covering each other for all of their
patients. We have developed true commonality in treatment
protocols and treatment approach.
|
| By bringing the radiation therapists into the organization at an
executive decision-making level, we are able to - I do not
pretend to know how to operate a radiation therapy department -
allow them to best decide how to organize their own work life;
they are highly skilled professionals.
|
| Thirty years ago, when the educational difference between
physicians and allied health professionals was great, it made sense
for the physicians to take the lead, because very often the allied
health professionals came into the workforce for 10 years and
then left to pursue a family life. Over the last 20 years or 30
years, in the fields I deal with, there has been growing
professionalism and increased educational requirements for the
allied health professionals. For many of them, their job is no
longer just a job; it is a career, a profession that they stay in for a
lifetime. We need to recognize that increased professionalism of
all the allied health professionals.
|
| The number one thing we have done is to recognize that and
shift the responsibility accordingly. If the radiation therapist who
heads the planning says to me or to one of the other physicians,
"This is going to cause us an extra two hours of work and
planning; is there any way to change the process?" that person has
the mandate, the authority and the responsibility to look at the
process and try to change it. That is a very difficult thing to do in
a traditional structure.
|
| Senator Keon: Let me push you a little further on that one,
that is, to deal with the physician in the integration of the health
care team. With respect to method of remuneration, as to whether
fee-for-service remuneration works or whether alternate payment
plans work better in an integrated team, what is your opinion?
|
| Dr. McGowan: I do not think that any single method of
payment is necessarily the best. We just have to be very careful in
the way that we design them. As long as the goals of the payment
system are aligned with the goals of the organization, I think it
can work. I think different models work.
|
| My model is on a fee-for-service basis. That focuses the
physician on the main shortage in radiation oncology, which was
radiation oncology consultation and treatment planning.
|
| I will give you an example. In many of the current models of
radiation oncology remuneration across the country, people
receive a flat fee for the radiation treatment planning, which is
their scarce skill, and they receive a fee for service for the
follow-up with patients. Hence, the only way to enhance income
is to maintain a large follow-up practice, and I think we see that
happening in that there are large follow-up practices.
|
| I think a well-defined alternative payment plan can work, a
focussed fee-for-service payment plan where the incentives are
appropriate, where they do not incent large volumes of relatively
straightforward problems but rather incent people to treat and see
those patients where their scarce skills can be used most
effectively. In our system, in radiation oncology - which is the
only system I really have an in-depth understanding of - the
scarce skill is radiation treatment planning - hence, where the
incentive and payment system is based upon paying people to do
that.
|
| Senator Callbeck: You operate out of the Toronto Sunnybrook
Regional Cancer Centre. I read here somewhere that the
recommended time from the time of referral to therapy is four
weeks?
|
| Dr. McGowan: Yes.
|
| Senator Callbeck: In your written document, on the second
page, you say: "If the wait at their designated cancer centre is too
long, the chart will be sent to Cancer Care Ontario."
|
| Does that mean that everybody in Ontario is reaching that
target now?
|
| Dr. McGowan: No, they are not.
|
| Senator Callbeck: Does it mean that if the waiting time is in
excess of four weeks at a patient's designated centre, the patient
goes to you?
|
| Dr. McGowan: Yes.
|
| Senator Callbeck: What about transportation? With respect to
a patient in Thunder Bay, say, would the patient pay his or her
own way, or does the government pick that up?
|
| Dr. McGowan: People from Thunder Bay are not travelling
down to see us. In fact, Thunder Bay has sufficient treatment
capacity, so the people who live in Thunder Bay are not waiting.
In fact, Thunder Bay had excess treatment capacity and, as such,
were taking people from Southern Ontario.
|
| The people we are seeing live in the local area; therefore, we
see people from the Hamilton region and the GTA. They travel on
their own. They fall into the same travel requirements that
patients that are treated in the daytime do. If accommodation is
needed, they can stay at the Canadian Cancer Society Lodge.
|
| Senator Callbeck: I see that your annual target was for
500 patients. You have already treated 534 patients, which is
quite a lot over what you projected. How many can you possibly
take?
|
| Dr. McGowan: Our capacity is limited by the availability of
machines and the availability of staff.
|
| At the cancer centre that we are operating right now, because of
the requirements for machine maintenance and so on, we are
essentially close to the maximum machine capacity. We are
somewhere around 1,000, I would say, in a year, maybe a little bit
more.
|
| Senator Callbeck: Has there been any interest from any of the
other provinces in your company, or is it too early to tell?
|
| Dr. McGowan: No, there has not been any interest from any of
the other provinces.
|
| Manitoba has just announced that they will be sending patients
from Winnipeg to Thunder Bay for treatment, and I think
geographically that makes a lot of sense. There has not been any
interest from any other provinces yet. No one has contacted us.
|
| Senator Callbeck: You have not contacted them, either;
correct?
|
| Dr. McGowan: No, I have not contacted them. The first six
months of operation I focussed on making sure that we were
delivering good and appropriate clinical care in our location. That
was my first and foremost priority.
|
| Senator Cordy: Thank you very much for attending here this
morning. I would agree with the chairman in saying that is a
common-sense solution to things. With Senator Callbeck's
comment about other provinces, perhaps we can encourage other
provinces to take a look at this model, because it certainly seems
to be one worth pursuing.
|
| I have a couple of clarification questions. Patients do not call
you directly; correct?
|
| Dr. McGowan: That is correct.
|
| Senator Cordy: How does that work?
|
| Dr. McGowan: Radiation is a tertiary care specialty. Patients
are generally first seen by a surgeon for a biopsy. We do not see
people for a diagnosis. We are a therapeutic specialty. Patients are
referred from their community physician, their community
surgeon, their community medical oncologist in one of the cancer
centres for consideration of radiation treatment.
|
| In the GTA, patients would then be referred to the Hamilton
Regional Cancer Centre, the Princess Margaret Hospital or the
Toronto Sunnybrook Regional Cancer Centre. If the waits at those
cancer centres are too long, patients are then referred to us
through Cancer Care Ontario's referral office.
|
| Senator Cordy: Just dealing with the issue of equipment, and
you talked about it earlier, we have heard comments from so
many witnesses before us about the state of disrepair of
equipment in Canada.
|
| Is that a concern to your operation?
|
| Dr. McGowan: No. Actually, the radiation equipment in
Ontario is, by and large, in good shape. It is well-maintained and
operational. The state of the equipment is not an issue at this time.
|
| There is, nevertheless, an issue of ongoing machine
replacement. These machines need to be replaced every 10 years.
We are reasonably close to being on that target in Ontario.
|
| Senator LeBreton: I apologize for being a little late. If my
question has been asked, please just say so and we will move on.
|
| In your paper you talk about operating out of Sunnybrook and
having your own physicians, radiation therapists and support staff
and that these people all work during the daytime in other cancer
centres. Does that not cause a problem in terms of workload and
stress levels?
|
| If there are people who are working during the day at a cancer
facility and then working in the evening for you, how do you get
around that?
|
| Dr. McGowan: One of the points I made earlier is that one
third of our treatment capacity is provided by people who would
not otherwise be working in the system, because they are at home
with their children during the daytime. We get around it for
therapists by having them work a maximum of one or two shifts a
week. Second, we review with Toronto Sunnybrook shift
scheduling and the incidence of absences, to see whether there is
a correlation between being scheduled on a shift for us in the
evening and an absence the next day. With those two mechanisms
in place, I also believe people need to have autonomy and respect
for their ability to decide for themselves if they are able to work.
|
| The issue of burnout is a real one. If there were an increase in
absences, then that person would not be rescheduled.
|
| In addition, given that we have no long-term sustainability, it is
very important for us not to burn out our staff. We try not to
operate the machines beyond 10:30 at night, so that people can
get home in enough time to get a good night's sleep. They do not
get free time at home after their shift, but they get home early
enough to get a good night's sleep to start work the next day.
|
| People have asked us, "Why don't you extend your capacity by
operating until 11:30 or 12:00 at night?" That might be fine for
those people on our staff who do not have another job; however,
for those who do, I do not think it is sustainable.
|
| Senator LeBreton: Are you planning to set up other facilities
around Ontario?
|
| Dr. McGowan: There are ongoing capacity issues across
Ontario, and we have been discussing the possibility of looking at
other potential operations with Cancer Care Ontario.
|
| Senator LeBreton: I told our chairman that I have a cousin in
the Ottawa area who had to go to Thunder Bay and spend quite a
lot of time there, with very little support other than the good
support that they provided there.
|
| Dr. McGowan: Yes, it is a difficult thing for patients to face to
have to travel. We did treat people from Ottawa for awhile. We
had a number of prostate and breast cancer patients who came to
us from Ottawa to be treated.
|
| In the first six months of operation, we focussed very much on
ensuring that our operation was sustainable, that our staffing
structure was sustainable and that we had good clinical quality. At
the beginning, I was maintaining most of the clinical load myself,
until other physicians came on board.
|
| The Chairman: I have three or four technical questions, and
then I will ask you to speculate a bit.
|
| Have you had any trouble with public-sector unions? I ask the
question because, in theory, it seems to me that a union could take
the position that you are using public facilities and a
non-unionized workforce, and then proceed to make the argument
that in a sense you are taking away unionized jobs. Has that issue
been raised?
|
| Dr. McGowan: The unions have not raised the issue that we
are taking away public-sector jobs.
|
| The unions have raised the issue that this model falls outside of
the Canada Health Act, that it should not have been done in this
way, that it should not have been awarded this way, but they have
not made the argument that it takes away public-sector jobs.
|
| I do not believe it does; it is not as if there was not the will to
increase capacity as much as possible. I think there are
organizational blocks.
|
| The Chairman: Given all the flak that surrounded Alberta's
Bill 11 - and by the way, what you are doing is essentially more
or less what the final version of Bill 11 allowed - how have you
done this without any flak? It is extremely impressive that you
have done it without flak.
|
| Dr. McGowan: I am not sure I would say I did it without flak.
|
| The Chairman: Perhaps I just did not notice the flak.
|
| Dr. McGowan: I did.
|
| The Chairman: Welcome to the club. We are always willing
to get people who get flak into our tent.
|
| Seriously, was there opposition?
|
| Dr. McGowan: Yes, there was. There were groups opposed to
it. The prime objective of the group Friends of Medicare, which
established itself after the contract was awarded, was to get the
government to cancel the contract.
|
| There was a letter from CUPE, I believe, to Allan Rock, stating
that the process of awarding a contract should be looked at. There
were letters and articles in newspapers, editorials, essentially from
people who objected to the operational administration, a private
company using public facilities, rather than having the services
comes from continued public administration.
|
| I think your definition of "public administration" is the one that
is most important - the single payer. From the patient's
perspective, the system is transparent; the patient does not care, as
long as he or she is well-treated and gets good treatment.
|
| The Chairman: Has the flak disappeared?
|
| Dr. McGowan: It has improved. I think our success has helped
to mute it.
|
| What is interesting is that we are getting good press outside of
Canada. There was an article in The Wall Street Journal in May
about this initiative. The Irish Times featured an article a week
ago Saturday about a reporter who came to Canada to look at the
Ontario health care system. The reporter said that the system was
pretty good. The article referenced this committee in a way that
was supportive of this initiative as a way to improve treatment
capacity.
|
| The Chairman: We would appreciate you sending the
committee copies of those articles, at some point.
|
| Dr. McGowan: Sure.
|
| The Chairman: How is the company paid? Is it paid on a
per-patient basis, or does it depend on whether you are seeing a
breast cancer patient or a prostate cancer patient?
|
| Dr. McGowan: It is a flat fee per patient.
|
| The Chairman: A flat fee per patient?
|
| Dr. McGowan: Per patient, yes.
|
| The Chairman: How is that fee arrived at?
|
| Dr. McGowan: It is the fee that the Ministry of Health pays
Cancer Care Ontario per patient.
|
| In addition, given the operational barriers and the fact that we
needed to pay people more, the contract also allows for a bonus
incentive, based upon volume of patients treated, of $250 per case
once we hit a target of 500, rising to $500 per case if we hit 750.
|
| The Chairman: Just help me a bit; I may also need Senator
Keon's help on this.
|
| Typically, in Ontario and elsewhere, hospitals get global
budgets.
|
| Dr. McGowan: Yes.
|
| The Chairman: Hospitals are not paid on the basis of fee for
service.
|
| Dr. McGowan: Yes.
|
| The Chairman: You are paid on the basis of fee for service, I
understand that.
|
| Let's take the Ottawa Regional Cancer Centre as an example. It
is included in the global budget of the Ottawa Hospital, or does
the centre receive a per-patient fee?
|
| Dr. McGowan: Organizationally, the cancer centres have
separate governance from the hospitals.
|
| The Chairman: Like the Heart Institute.
|
| Dr. McGowan: I am not sure about the Heart Institute.
|
| The Chairman: In this case, it does.
|
| Dr. McGowan: Separate governance. There are two
organizations that deliver radiation therapy, Cancer Care Ontario
and University Health Network. Hence, the budget for the Ottawa
Regional Cancer Centre, for instance, flows from the Ministry of
Health to Cancer Care Ontario and then from Cancer Care
Ontario to the Ottawa Regional Cancer Centre.
|
| The Chairman: In other words, you are reimbursed on the
same fee-for-service basis that the Regional Cancer Centre would
be if that patient were treated during the daytime; correct?
|
| Dr. McGowan: Yes, plus the bonus based on volume.
|
| The Chairman: Right, but that is an incentive to get more
patients?
|
| Dr. McGowan: Yes.
|
| The Chairman: Last question. Do you want to speculate for a
minute as to what other areas of medicine this system would work
in? It obviously would not work in very unique one-off cases;
correct?
|
| Dr. McGowan: Right.
|
| The Chairman: It would only work in something in which you
have a reasonable ongoing volume with a consistent type of
treatment.
|
| Dr. McGowan: Yes.
|
| The Chairman: So where else would it work?
|
| Dr. McGowan: The characteristics that make this work, are,
number one, it is capital intensive. Second, there is unused capital.
I believe it has to be in an area where staffing shortages are a
result of there being multiple professions involved - not so much
of there being a staffing shortage but a staffing integration issue.
And the third characteristic would be related to the staffing
shortage of the allied health professionals, where there has been
growing professionalism - something like diagnostic imaging,
where there is a very straightforward staffing relationship, where
there is a technician on the machine and then the information goes
to a radiologist, one-off. There has to be relatively complex
interactions.
|
| I would say that the model would primarily fit in the surgical
specialties, where there are ORs that are underutilized in the
afternoons and evenings, where there are significant staffing
issues, relationships between nursing, anaesthetists, hospital beds
- a model where a lot of different professionals need to be
brought together.
|
| What I would do in that instance is bring a group of people
together and say, "How can we do this in a slightly different
manner? How can we organize what we are doing?" In addition, it
has to be a very focussed area. There are issues such as vascular
access, where it is a problem when people need vascular access
for dialysis or for portacaths, for chemotherapy, other surgical
procedures, perhaps medical oncology.
|
| I have not thought enough about it, but those are the key
characteristics. It has to involve multiple professionals, where it is
always reported that the problem is a staffing shortage but where
really I think it involves more of a mismatch.
|
| I met with the Provincial Chief Nursing Officer of Ontario a
couple of weeks ago. She said that, in Ontario - and I cannot
remember the exact figures - millions of dollars are being spent
on overtime and agency nurses. There are very large numbers of
nurses - and I do not remember the figure, but it was somewhere
around 2,000, 3,000 or 6,000 - who were not working in the
profession but who were maintaining their licence. In a time of
nursing shortages for beds and ORs, this is an ideal opportunity to
bring together these people who obviously are interested in their
profession, because they maintain their licence. It would make
sense, given the money that is spent on overtime and hiring
agency staff; there appears to be a willingness to pay premium
rates. It may not be possible, however; one of the specialties may
be working to full capacity.
|
| Until we look at how we can raise the allied health
professionals to a level of decision-making, I am not sure we can
say that there really is a shortage.
|
| The Chairman: Thank you for attending here this morning.
Your testimony was fascinating.
|
| Senators, I will introduce our next set of witnesses. We have
with us Walter Robinson, the Director of the Canadian Taxpayers
Federation, Stephen Allen, on behalf of the Canadian Council of
Churches, and Mr. Edward Buffett, the President and CEO of
Buffett Taylor, Employee Benefits and Workplace Wellness
Consultants.
|
| I would each of you to make a five-minute presentation, and
then we will turn to questions. We will begin with Mr. Robinson.
|
| Mr. Walter Robinson, Federal Director, Canadian
Taxpayers Federation: Mr. Chairman, it is a pleasure to appear
before you and your colleagues here this morning to share our
views on Canada's number one social policy challenge.
|
| The CTF was founded in 1990 and has grown in 11 short years
to become Canada's largest and most effective taxpayer
organization, now boasting some 61,000 members. Our
organization is non-partisan and not-for-profit; nor do we receive
financial assistance from any level of government.
|
| Although I appear before you in my capacity this morning as
federal director, I wish to note that in my community I have
served as a trustee on the board of the Ottawa Hospital and
currently am a member of the Ottawa Regional Cancer Centre
Foundation Board of Trustees.
|
| Allow me to formally begin by commending your activities. To
date, your research, hearings and publications have created room
on the public policy playing field for an emergent, broad and
inclusive debate. This inclusion is fundamental because the health
care debate, until recently, was dominated by a limited number of
public policy surrogates. Sadly and regrettably, this group has
diminished the complexity of health care reform to facile, bipolar
country comparisons and/or left versus right ideological disputes.
These surrogates have also created a climate where invective
rhetoric, slippery-slope logic and personal character attacks have
combined to mimic a sustained Arctic cold front that freezes out
new entrants or ideas when it comes to health care reform.
|
| Still, Canadians yearn for an ideas-based discussion about all
possible options for health care reform. Collectively, we know
that we will spend $95 billion, or 9.3 per cent of our GDP, on
health care this year. With health care costs consuming 62 per
cent of all provincial budget increases over the last three years, it
is clear that health care is a taxpayer issue.
|
| Last month, we released a major research and position paper
entitled "The Patient, The Condition, The Treatment," copies of
which were provided to you last week. In that paper, which we
hope to discuss in greater length during our interactive dialogue
this morning, we outline seven core beliefs: the first is that health
care is in a state of crisis; second, Canadians are ahead of their
politicians on the need for reforms; third, health care is a shared
jurisdiction between Ottawa and the provinces; fourth, the Canada
Health Act is not the Bible; fifth, it is impossible to measure
health care systems by numbers alone; sixth, our present debate is
too continental and not global; and seventh, quality and
excellence must be the primary focus of options for reform, not
cost containment.
|
| The development of health care policy in Canada over the past
century reveals that Canadians can handle exhaustive and
sometimes painful debate; hence, we owe it to ourselves to mirror
and build upon this history by objectively considering all options
for reform. The logical starting point is a review of the Canada
Health Act, since it is the de facto standard by which all reform
options are judged.
|
| Increasingly, scholars and medical practitioners have converged
around one dominant school of thought about the act; that is, that
it constrains provincial initiatives and its core principles are often
in conflict with each other. Meanwhile, public opinion reveals a
thirst for fundamental changes, even if these changes contravene
some of the act's principles.
|
| The act, in part, has also fuelled the fight between Ottawa and
the provinces over historic and recent funding levels. While some
jurisdictional tension, we admit, is inherent and necessary for our
federal system to work, it has reached a counterproductive level.
|
| In the provincial capitals, health ministers, regardless of
partisan stripe, have all stated that health spending increases that
double or even triple annual revenue growth are unsustainable, yet
they continue to do so in each provincial budget. If this spending
continues unabated, today's tax cuts versus social investments
debates, which we all are well aware of, will quickly give way to
tomorrow's spending cuts versus spending cuts debate.
Legislatures will be forced to choose between MRIs and
textbooks or, worse still, coronary bypass versus cancer tumour
resection. Provinces will need only two ministries, finance to
collect the money and health to spend it.
|
| Our estimates point to this troubling tomorrow coming as soon
as 2007 for the provinces of British Columbia and Newfoundland
when health care spending is projected to consume 50 per cent of
all resources. Similar fates await Alberta, Manitoba and
Saskatchewan in 2012, 2014 and 2019 respectively.
|
| At the root of this problem is medicare itself and its flawed
economics. Its present pay-as-you-go funding configuration is
unsustainable. In this context, it is somewhat similar to an illegal
pyramid scheme. Today's surgeries are paid from yesterday's tax
collections, but we know with demographics that the pyramid at
the bottom is getting smaller, not bigger.
|
| Funding flows from taxpayers through a variety of
intermediaries - government, insurers, et cetera - and insulates
patients from the financial ramifications of their consumption
decisions. As a result, we are left with a patchwork system of
perverse incentives for patients, doctors, bureaucrats and
politicians - and you can refer to appendix C of our paper for
specifics. This perversion serves to drive up costs and vaccinates
the system against innovative options that could improve quality
and health outcomes.
|
| Even more damaging is the assessment by the Word Health
Organization that last year rated the health care systems of 191
countries - Canada ranked 30th. Dr. Chris Murray, the director
of evidence-based medicine for the WHO, put it bluntly: "Canada
does not have the best health care system in the world."
|
| The lesson is clear. We should examine the best practices in
terms of funding, service delivery and financing from these other
countries and adopt them to our own Canadian situation - and
the sooner, the better.
|
| Turning to system cost drivers, demographic pressure is already
upon us and, by 2020, will ensure that 60 per cent of health care
expenditures will be consumed by those aged 65 or older,
compared to 45 per cent now. Societal aging is irreversible, and
we all know the ramifications as well for the practitioners of
health care.
|
| On the technological front, advances in rational drug design,
genetic mapping, artificial blood, just to scratch the surface, bring
exciting promise and hope to millions, if not billions, worldwide,
yet they come with a cost.
|
| Pharmaceuticals now consume more resources than physician
billings. With new and aggressive drug therapies in the works to
treat a variety of conditions, from cancer to the protein-based
diseases of aging like Parkinson's and Alzheimer's, it is axiomatic
again that costs will only escalate.
|
| Finally, patient demands and expectations for right here, right
now services will magnify exponentially. To date, the reforms in
our system have been supply-side driven. To be fair, some modest
economies have been found, but patient demand, patient
responsibility and the perverse incentives inherent in our system
have largely been ignored as focal points for reform.
|
| Health care is complex and there are no magic-bullet solutions,
but at the legislative level, we believe that a modernization of the
Canada Health Act is long overdue. Its five current principles
should be replaced by the following six: public governance,
universality, quality, accountability, choice and sustainability.
|
| At a structural level, guiding principles of reform include:
individual accountability and responsibility, perhaps co-payment,
like every other OECD nation; intergenerational fairness -
pre-funding of health care expenditures, such as Singapore; and
the embrace of innovative approaches with respect to capital
construction, service provision and technology renewal.
|
| Mr. Chairman, the principal and laudable aim of medicare was
to provide health services without hindrance. The greatest
hindrance to reform to date are those who have the intransigence
to refuse and accept that the problem with health care is the
system itself.
|
| I should like to conclude on a personal note. Thirty-five years
ago, I was born in this city at the old Doctors Hospital. As a very
sick three-year-old, 32 years ago health professionals at The
Hospital for Sick Children worked for four years to save my life
from a very serious illness. My family received great health care
in this community, and the cancer services that my father received
at Princess Margaret allowed him to die with a degree of dignity.
|
| Today in Ottawa, the story is the same for my family, as I hope
it is for everybody in this room, at this panel and behind me, but
we can and must do better.
|
| The sign of a healthy democracy is one that finds fault with
itself, for if it cannot, it has ceased to be a democracy. We must
succeed in this debate. Anything less constitutes a disservice to
those who went before us, to the health care practitioners who
work so hard for us today, and it would be an inexcusable
abdication of our responsibility to future generations of
Canadians.
|
| We urge you to consider our ideas for reform and options to
build a better health care system.
|
| Mr. Stephen Allen, Member of the Commission on Justice
and Peace and Co-chair of the Commission's Ecumenical
Health Care, Canadian Council of Churches: Members of the
committee, on behalf of the network I thank you for this
opportunity to comment on some of the options that you have
suggested in "Issues and Options."
|
| Historically, Canadian churches have contributed to the
development of Canada's publicly funded and administered health
care system as service providers, stakeholders - pastoral
ministries, chaplaincy services - and as supportive advocates of
new ideas and approaches - community-based programs such as
parish nursing. For Christians, Jesus has taught us that illness or,
more important, wellness requires spiritual as well as physical
well-being.
|
| Our written presentation comments on six areas: first,
principles for the provision of health care; second, financing
health care; third, accountability of all levels of government;
fourth, the need for evidence-based research; fifth, expanding
health care to include pharmacare and home care; and sixth, our
support and acknowledgment for the work you have done in
focussing on the determinants of health in ensuring integrated
strategies and programs.
|
| Members of our network support the five principles of the
Canada Health Act. These five principles enjoy public support
and must serve as a starting point in our discourse on reforming
health care in Canada.
|
| Our support is based on the following principles and values,
which we believe serve to uphold those included in the Canada
Health Act. The first is the dignity of the person. The second
principle is the right to health care, regardless of one's wealth or
status in society. The third is health care as a service available in
response to need; in other words, health care service should not be
viewed as a product or a commodity. The fourth is that health care
providers should not be diverted from their primary responsibility
- the relief of suffering, the prevention and treatment of illness
and the promotion of health. Underlying this responsibility, in our
view, is a relationship between provider and patient based on
trust. The fifth principle is wise stewardship. It is not possible,
and we recognize this, to do everything we might wish to do in
our health care system. Making decisions about priorities will
involve public policy debates involving citizens and Parliament.
Finally, equity, collective responsibility to each other, compassion
and caring are the values we consider fundamental, and these
values should guide us in reforms that we acknowledge need to be
made.
|
| I would like to acknowledge the four objectives that you have
outlined in chapter 8, "Financing Health Care in Canada" - and I
will come back to those a bit later.
|
| Our health care system is based on the value that all citizens
share the risks. No one wants to have an accident. No one wants
to become ill or to develop a life-threatening disease. We draw
comfort in knowing our health care system is there should we
need it. Sharing this risk represents something of a social
covenant among citizens. It is a value to be lifted up, protected
and cherished.
|
| In our written brief are questions about the spending in this
country as compared to other countries, and we look forward to
further reports from this committee.
|
| Let me quote Joseph Stiglitz, a Noble prize winning U.S.
economist. He was commenting on the growing unemployment in
the U.S. prior to the tragic events on September 11, and he said, in
part: "What worries me is that we don't have a safety net. We
don't have adequate welfare or unemployment insurance." He
went on to say that, worse still, U.S. workers who lose their jobs
typically also lose their health coverage, exacerbating the pain.
You know well the number of citizens in the U.S. who either have
no coverage or very limited coverage, and most of them work.
Our system, as imperfect as it is, we believe provides a measure
of security and comfort to citizens in this country.
|
| Let me also quote Steven Derks, the Vice-President of
Advocate Health Care, a religious-based health care provider in
Chicago. This quote is taken from a October 13 meeting in
Chicago of public policy directors of the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America. They provide over $2.7 billion in care
annually in the Chicago area. He said of U.S. health care the
following:
|
We do not have a health care system in the U.S. What we
have is a constellation of services that exist in separate silos,
that are hard to trade off and which are responsive to the
reimbursement mechanism... Whole patient care is good but
it is awkward for U.S. providers.
|
| As we consider the options of expanding for-profit provision in
our health care system, we recommend and hope that much more
evidence will be provided that avoids fragmenting our health care
system.
|
| In terms of some of the options that you have outlined, and I
must say, you have provoked our thinking, we would ask if the
proposed options outlined in chapter 8 enhance the availability of
publicly administered services to the vulnerable sectors of our
country and to the vulnerable regions of our country. Your
committee's own research helpfully points to some of the flaws,
for example, in user charges. The system would not necessarily
generate much revenue. It can be a disincentive for poorer citizens
seeking care, and my own experience outside of Canada certainly
substantiates this. Would a user fee system based on income
further stigmatize poorer citizens in our community? If poorer
people were excluded from user charges, would this lead to
resentment by those who pay user fees?
|
| Your report helpfully cites some evidence from Sweden. The
system is not designed to generate revenue, but, as you note, it is
intended to change the behaviour of citizens to prevent misuse of
the system. We would ask the following questions: has it in fact
done this? Do Swedes, as a rule, misuse and abuse their health
care system? Do caregivers contribute to this problem?
|
| As you consider various options and as you present those
options to the Canadian public, we ask you, as much as possible,
to draw on evidence-based research.
|
| We concur with this committee in its observation on page 56
that it is impossible to trace how provinces and territories use
federal funds. Citizens need to know that if they are presented
with tax cuts it could mean fewer dollars for health care or, for
that matter, for social programs or post-secondary education. We
welcome a national transparent annual reporting on how
provinces use federal funds for health care and, for that matter,
other programs that are provided through the CHST. It is our hope
that your committee will offer models that are beyond voluntary,
models that will provide for mechanisms to ensure the mutual
accountability of all levels of government to each other for the
principles, values and objectives of our health care system.
|
| Thank you for the focus you have given, not just in volume 4
but in volume 1, to the social determinants of health. In volume 1,
I was struck by figures that suggest that only 25 per cent - I
think that was the figure, but I am not sure how you arrived at it
- of the health of the population can be attributed to the health
care system, while 75 per cent is attributed to the social
determinants of health care. At page 87 of volume 1, you say that
improving health and reducing disparities in literacy education
and income distribution is an objective, that due attention must be
given to the social determinants of health in this country.
|
| In conclusion, we affirm all five principles of our health care
system. We welcome an expansion of the program and we
acknowledge the need for debate in terms of choices and
priorities. The values I have articulated in my introduction
provide a solid foundation for our health care system. Our health
care system has a vital role in building a society where we are
committed to healthy individuals and healthy communities.
|
| We are uncomfortable with the emphasis given to market-based
options. The growth in private expenditures as a share of the
health dollar warrants much more public debate and discourse,
and we welcome that. We need to remind ourselves that we enter
the health care system as citizens requiring care and compassion,
not as consumers shopping for a product. Health care need not be
treated as a commodity.
|
| We acknowledge that our health care system can be improved,
and we support policies and programs that improve health
outcomes and that result in wise stewardship of resources.
|
| We live in community. We are interdependent. We need to
support each other. Such notions as human solidarity, care, and
compassion for the weak are foundational issues of justice for the
churches. Health care is a public good, vital to the common good,
a vision that we believe is important to Canadians and a vision
worth holding up to the world.
|
| For our part, we plan to participate in the Commission on the
Future of Health Care in Canada. We look forward to reports from
this committee. We hope to engage in further discussions with our
members, and we are planning a roundtable in Ottawa in late
February or early March.
|
| On behalf of the Ecumenical Health Care network of the
Canadian Council of Churches, thank you for this time to be here
with you this morning.
|
| Mr. Edward Buffett, President and CEO, Buffett Taylor &
Associates Ltd., Employee Benefits and Workplace Wellness
Consultants: Thank you, Mr. Chairman and senators. I appreciate
your providing me with this opportunity to make a submission to
you.
|
| Buffett Taylor & Associates is involved in the provision of
worksite wellness and health promotion. I am also the chairman
of the Wellness Councils of Canada, a not-for-profit organization
that acts as a forum for the dissemination of information related to
the promotion of healthier lifestyles, utilizing the workplace as a
mechanism to accomplish that objective.
|
| I am the former chairman of the Whitby General Hospital and
the Durham Foundation. I am currently the vice-chair of
McMaster University, which, as you all know, is one of this
country's leading medical schools and research-intensive
institutions.
|
| In particular, I want to thank you for the opportunity for
enabling me to speak to you concerning volume 4 of your report,
and particularly that section dealing with health promotion.
|
| There is, as you will know, a significant body of research that
suggests that the reactive nature of our health care system has had
a dramatic impact in terms of the cost associated with its delivery.
Simply stated, too much of our focus is on curing and managing
illnesses as opposed to preventing them in the first instance. I can
speak to that on a personal level as an individual who is a heart
attack survivor. Although the federal government, through Health
Canada and its Health Promotion and Programs Branch, does play
a meaningful role in the population health, that role, in my view,
needs to be broadened considerably.
|
| In preparing my comments for this morning, I endeavoured to
determine exactly what portion of Canadian health care
expenditures is allocated to health promotion and disease
prevention; however, frankly, I was unable to find a definitive
response. I contacted both Statistics Canada and Health Canada,
along with a number of provincial jurisdictions, but was advised
that the number was not available, although it was suggested that
it was likely in the range of about 5 per cent. This number seems
to be consistent with U.S. health care expenditures allocated to
disease prevention and health promotion.
|
| Intuitively, most Canadians recognize that the pursuit of a
healthier lifestyle results in improved health, a reduction in the
number of illnesses, which in turn results in reduced pressures on
the health care system. A significant percentage of the Canadian
population spends about 8 hours to 10 hours a day at its place of
employment. In fact, working Canadians spend more of their
waking hours at work than anywhere else. Tremendous
opportunities exist to utilize some of this time to promote health
and well-being, and this is a trend that is being evidenced in the
United States, in New Zealand and Australia.
|
| Here in Canada, Health Canada has developed a program to
encourage worksite wellness and health promotion and to
recognize those employers who have demonstrated excellence in
this area through their Healthy Workplace Award program.
Although well-intentioned and a great initial first step, this
program simply does not go far enough, nor is the scientific and
financial data readily available that would substantiate the
business case for wellness and health promotion at the worksite.
A tremendous opportunity exists to utilize the worksite as a forum
to promote health and well-being. It is in an organization's best
interest to do so.
|
| The Health Management Research Centre at the University of
Michigan, a very well-respected university, has studied over
2 million employees at 1,000 worksites for a period of over
15 years, and their research has enabled them to conclude that
worksite wellness and health promotion, when delivered as a
comprehensive health initiative, results in healthier lifestyles,
which in turn translates into less incidental absenteeism, fewer
long-term disability claims, increased productivity, improved
employee morale and lower overall health care costs.
|
| Unfortunately for us, this research has been developed utilizing
the American health care model, and frankly it has been my
experience that Canadian employers will challenge this data and
question its relevancy because it is based on the American model
and not the Canadian health care system. Some enlightened
Canadian employers, employers such as Nortel, Telus
Corporation, MDS Nordion, Husky Injection Molding and the
Town of Richmond Hill, have forged ahead with very aggressive
comprehensive wellness initiatives because they know intuitively
that these programs make good business sense.
|
| Nevertheless, the vast majority of Canadians want to see data.
They want to see scientific research that clearly demonstrates the
economic benefits associated with these types of initiatives. We
desperately need to access research and meaningful data that
substantiates the benefits of these programs.
|
| The benefits that I am referring to, again, are an improvement
in population health, an improvement in our global
competitiveness and a reduction in overall health care
expenditures.
|
| I urge you in your final report to consider recommending a far
greater role for the federal government in developing this
necessary research, which needs to be undertaken in order to
encourage much greater participation by employers in programs
of this nature.
|
| In conclusion, during the last century, the life expectancy of
North Americans increased by 30 years. Science has determined
that 25 of those years are applicable to healthier lifestyles; only
5 per cent relate to clinical interventions. We simply cannot
afford to overlook the tremendous potential impact of prevention
on population health.
|
| The Chairman: Mr. Buffett, I found that last statistic so
amazing. Do you have a reference for that?
|
| Mr. Buffett: I do indeed, sir. In fact, I have referenced it in the
material that I have provided.
|
| The Chairman: It is an amazing statistic.
|
| Senator LeBreton: I will start with you, Mr. Robinson.
|
| When we were in Alberta, quite a few people used terms such
as "consumers of medicare" and "medicare marketplace."
|
| On page 7 of your written presentation, you say: "Funding
flows from taxpayers through a variety of intermediaries -
government, insurers, et cetera - and insulates patients from the
financial ramifications..."
|
| How would you correct this? I personally believe that most
people have no idea what is being billed by doctors, technicians
and other health practitioners. How do we educate the public?
How do we determine from them how they want the health care
system to work and make them realize the costs that are already
there?
|
| Mr. Robinson: We have included in our materials a diagram of
the funding model. It is actually a Health Canada diagram that we
adapted, as did the B.C. Medical Association.
|
| Your question, Senator LeBreton, concerns how we make
people more aware of their consumption decisions. Mr. Allen and
I would obviously disagree as to whether we treat health care as
an expenditure, a commodity or just a pure public good. Let me
answer your question three ways.
|
| First, we surveyed our own supporters and asked them, "How
much do you think you are spending on health care?" If we take
the $95 billion expenditure and divide it by 30 million, our
population, we arrive at $3,000. Of course, that figure varies. For
me personally, the figure would be lower; for somebody who is
65 and has health ailments, it is a lot more. It also varies
geographically.
|
| We received a variety of responses, so I agree with the premise
of your question that people do not really know what their health
care cost. They do not know, for example, the difference in cost
between a flu shot at a doctor's office and one at an emergency
ward. User fees or a co-payment would solve that. They are in
place in every OECD nation, much more extensively than here in
Canada.
|
| As my colleague has pointed out, it is an issue of controlling
costs; it is an issue of making people aware that health care is not
free. Health care comes with a price. A free product of value will
fundamentally be over-consumed, a law of economics that has not
been disproven, as far as I know anyway, since The Wealth of
Nations was published.
|
| The other way to do it, as we talked about, is the Singapore
example, where they pre-fund a variety of expenditures.
Intergenerationally, they pre-fund through health care savings
allowances. In Singapore, there are four: Medifund, Medishield
and Medisave, and now Eldershield to deal with their aging
population. We are attracted to health care savings allowances
because you can income test it for low-income Canadians, who
will always be reliant upon the state for the majority of their
medical expenditures, and for those of us who will always be
reliant for the catastrophic coverage. No market mechanism will
cover a malignant gastrocytoma grade 4 cancer tumour. There is
no insurance company that will cover that.
|
| We are talking about having people pay throughout their lives.
We do it for our housing. We fund our housing costs over a
generation; it is called a mortgage. We fund our retirement
income. The government has already said that CPP is one small
pillar. You as Canadians have a responsibility through your own
savings to fund through a variety of other ways. Only in health
care do we not do that.
|
| To answer your question, then, I think we could make people
more aware of their lifetime consumption of health care if we
were to implement intergenerational funding.
|
| Senator LeBreton: A very good point.
|
| Again to you, Mr. Robinson. On page 4, you say that the
modernization of the Canada Health Act is long overdue, and you
advocate replacing the five principles of universality, accessibility,
comprehensiveness, portability and public administration with
public governance, universality, quality, accountability, choice and
sustainability.
|
| In those suggested principles, for instance, portability, where
would portability fit within the six principles that you advocate?
|
| Mr. Robinson: As we set out in our paper, we could
incorporate the other principles into a broader, a more
comprehensive definition of universality. The Conference Board
of Canada has shown that support for universality has remained
fundamentally constant, and that is a principle that we all support.
The issues of portability, comprehensiveness and accessibility
vacillate over a 20-year time period, according to the Conference
Board of Canada, and support for public administration has
consistently declined, to about 59 per cent.
|
| Define "portability". Portability to some Canadians would
mean that if the Ontario government covers fertility treatments,
then that same coverage should be available in Quebec. In reality,
however, that is not the case. Those fertility treatment would not
be covered in Quebec; hence; no portability.
|
| There is also the issue of de-listing of various services, of what
is covered in one province but not in another; there is not
portability in that sense.
|
| Accessibility was brought into the Canada Health Act in 1994;
however, accessibility is a principle that is violated every single
day in this country. It is better to be a cancer patient in Ontario
than it is in Saskatchewan. Saskatchewan has the greatest
migration of cancer patients, to Calgary and British Columbia;
they cannot get access in Saskatchewan.
|
| In terms of universality, those are some of the principles we
wanted to talk about.
|
| Those are not proprietary to us. Other organizations, such as the
IRPP and the OMA, have coalesced on the left and political right
around some of those new principles of governance, which is a
truer reflection of where our health care system is now and where
it is going to go, freeing up the state-provided provision of
medicine.
|
| The government has a role to govern and to ensure that a public
service is provided; however, it does not necessarily follow that
they must provide all of those public services. Our opinion is that
if you free up the back end for a variety of ecumenical, private
and public providers, as has been the fundamental history of the
health care system, it would more truly reflect the reality of where
we are and where we are going.
|
| Senator LeBreton: You could probably make the same
argument about comprehensiveness. It might have meant
something in the 1950s and 1960s; it would mean something
completely different now.
|
| Mr. Robinson: If I could just add to that, it does. The
Diagnostic Services Act and the Medical Care Act were
introduced in 1957 and 1966, respectively. We must remember
that back then the majority of health care services, as your
research has pointed out and as we point out in our paper,
65 per cent, was delivered in hospitals and by doctors. Today, that
number is below 50 per cent, in the growth of partial
privatization. An individual does not have to go to a hospital for
cataract surgery anymore; it gets done at a laser eye clinic.
|
| The legislative framework, the technology and the evolution of
delivery of health have not reflected that.
|
| Senator LeBreton: Mr. Allen, on page 5 of your presentation,
it says:
|
| While a national home care program would be an
important expansion of health care, home care is not
necessarily the preferred option for all those requiring care
and for those family members providing the care. Home care
needs to be implemented in a way that does not unrealisti
cally unload responsibilities onto the caregivers. This
responsibility generally, but not always, falls to women.
|
| And I totally agree with that.
|
| That begs the question: what should be done, in your view, to
correct this? How would you approach the whole issue of home
care under the health system we have now?
|
| Mr. Allen: There may be instances where, for the caregiver or
for the patient, it is preferable that they remain in palliative care.
|
| In other cases, and I think of my own experience with my
father. My mother could not have looked after him; it simply was
beyond her. He received very good palliative care in Ottawa. For
others, and I guess this is an intensely personal choice made with
families, there are those individuals who prefer to be at home and
to die at home. An element of the system needs to recognize those
kinds of important, ethical decisions, and for those families and
individuals who wish to be at home, there must be provisions in a
home care policy to provide the support.
|
| There are many facets of care that are covered in hospitals but
that are not covered at home, and as we look to the future those
costs could become quite burdensome for families, particularly for
low-income families.
|
| The committee needs to wrestle with how that choice can be
given in a way that recognizes profoundly personal and ethical
moments in people's lives.
|
| If a caregiver has to leave the workforce - and it is usually
women who provide the care - what is the impact of that on her
CPP? If an individual is out of the system for longer than two
years, does the individual suffer in any way; and if so, is that
something this committee could be looking at? I know there have
been also studies to show that home care can be cheaper than
hospital care.
|
| Given all of the changes that are needed in our health care
system, which is very complex, involving the provinces, the
federal government, regional bodies, municipalities, these changes
must be made at a reasonable pace. Over the past few years, the
system has been under a great deal of stress to change. An
institution is generally better able to absorb the changes and retain
what is worthwhile if there is the space and time to absorb those
changes.
|
| Senator LeBreton: Mr. Buffett, you say that we desperately
need access to research and meaningful data on the whole issue of
health and wellness - and I guess you are dealing with private
research and U.S.-based research. The last paragraph of your
presentation was obviously based on some research, where you
talk about the life expectancy of Americans having increased by
30 years.
|
| Is there no research available in Canada to convince the public
that proper diet, not smoking, and common sense health
management issues are the routes to take?
|
| Mr. Buffett: Absolutely, that type of research exists. Beyond
that, both Martin Shain, who you may be familiar with, and Linda
Duxbury at Carleton University have done some groundbreaking
research in the area of health promotion.
|
| The kind of statistical data and research that we are missing
and the obstacle to introducing these programs effectively at the
worksite is our inability to demonstrate to the CFO or the CEO of
an organization that it makes good economic sense to do this.
Hence, what we desperately need is research that clearly
demonstrates the cost benefits associated with these interventions.
|
| We have a lot of American data right now that makes it very
clear that not only are there savings, but they are very significant.
We are looking at organizations like IBM and others claiming that
for every $1.00 they spend on disease prevention at the worksite
they get a $6.00 return on their investment.
|
| I think there is recognition. The Executive Editor of Fortune
magazine wrote an interesting article two years ago about how
CEOs would be spinning in their graves because, as we move into
the 21st century, wellness and health promotion are what will
separate the winners from the losers, that the intellectual capital
represented by our employees in the new society becomes an
organization's most valuable asset.
|
| Where we are falling down as a country, in my view, based on
my experience in Canada and the United States, is in that area of
research. There are some organizations that are enlightened, that
have said, "Notwithstanding the absence of this research, we
know intuitively this makes sense." There are others that have
said, "Show me that data." I believe that the federal government
has a very significant role to play in that area, and it needs to be
identified as an opportunity area.
|
| Senator LeBreton: Yes, it comes down to leadership.
|
| Mr. Buffett: Yes.
|
| Senator Cordy: My first question is for Mr. Robinson. In your
presentation, you talked about innovative options in dealing with
health care. The whole exercise of this committee is to discover
innovative options.
|
| Innovative options can succeed or they can fail, the very nature
of being innovative. Inventors have to go through many steps
before they reach the final result.
|
| In Canada, how can we look outside the box, in terms of
delivery of health care, which, by its very nature, can lead to
failure, when we have got health care dollars that are being
stretched to the limit at this time?
|
| How can we tell the Canadian public that millions of dollars
have been spent on something innovative but it has not worked
the way we thought it would? How do we deal with those types of
things? I agree with you that we have to look outside the box.
|
| Mr. Robinson: With respect to innovative options - and to
pick up on Mr. Allen's presentation, where he discussed
evidence-based medicine. Dr. Keon has spoken about the issue of
innovative options, something as simple as falls prevention, which
is the number one cause of hospital admissions, other than
co-morbid or chronic diseases, for seniors in this country. Falls
prevention is an example of an innovative option. It is something
that can happen in and of itself; it does not need any legislative or
policy direction.
|
| In terms of innovation, I think we have to realize, and this is
where the Bill 11 fight in Alberta is very instructive. Alberta
chewed up a lot of political capital for infinitesimal changes in
terms of how they deliver health care.
|
| The beauty of federalism is that it allows us, with 10 provinces,
to have a province experiment. To be fair, if it does not work in
one province, the moral hazard of that is that the other nine
provinces do not implement it. They learn and they do something
else.
|
| At the federal level, we need a more interpretive reading of the
Canada Health Act, in terms of the spirit as opposed to the letter
of the law. Claude Castonguay, the father of medicare in Quebec,
told your committee that the innovative co-payment Quebec drug
plan violates the Canada Health Act. It falls outside the Canada
Health Act. Should it, in the spirit of the act? No. In the
letter?Yes. You need to resolve that at the federal level.
|
| Another option is the New Brunswick innovative approach of
extramural hospitals, which is basically what they were trying to
do in Alberta. They are not ultimate-level-of-care facilities, they
are not full hospitals, but they can do minor surgical interventions
and have people stay overnight and not be in an acute or tertiary
care hospital. That approach is outside the Canada Health Act. It
falls within the spirit but not the letter in terms of the funding. We
think with some of our principles, in terms of choice and
sustainability, those sorts of things can happen.
|
| Let me talk about off balance sheet financing. The Royal
Ottawa Health Care Group is currently looking to have - and the
government has agreed to this - a private consortium build a
hospital and lease it back to the hospital corporation and the
ministry.
|
| That approach will allow the private-sector consortium to get a
return on its investment over 50 years, 75 years, 90 years,
however long the institution will be around and modernized. That
innovative approach helps the taxpayer, by spreading the cost of
that institution over 50 years or 90 years, but at the same time
meets an immediate need for psychiatric and psychogeriatric
services in the Ottawa region.
|
| Senator Cordy: Mr. Allen, you said that our health care
system is based on the value that all citizens share the risks. If you
look at that and interpret that as being that we have the social
responsibility for those who are ill and we care for them, I would
agree with you. I am not sure that citizens and the health care
system have actually looked at wellness in assuming
responsibility for their personal health and the health of the
citizens.
|
| I would like to talk to you about that, and perhaps Mr. Buffett
can also talk about it.
|
| Should we have incentives for citizens and for corporations
who are willing to focus on wellness at their worksites or just
individuals looking at wellness?
|
| Mr. Allen: No one can predict what their health will be a year
from now, two years from now, 15 years from now. I have
stopped smoking. I run everyday. I have no idea what disease will
befall me or what accident will happen to me.
|
| Surely, there is a societal role and an individual role to take
care of ourselves and to know how we can best do that. That issue
needs to be in the context of the unpredictability of our health.
|
| I think that is the advantage of sharing the risk in our society.
|
| Senator Cordy: I am aware of the unpredictability of health.
We are unable to predict it, but there are certain factors, such as
diet, exercise and smoking cessation, that an individual can
assume responsibility for.
|
| Mr. Allen: So how would you weigh that? Would you
apportion a certain number of health points to people who did not
exercise or to people who smoked?
|
| Senator Cordy: I am not sure. I am just wondering if there
should be incentives.
|
| Mr. Buffett: I think there is a real risk with incentives in a
number of respects.
|
| First, I believe that there will always be those employees who
work for organizations that are not as enlightened and who will
not engage in those kinds of programs that will entail incentives
or the delivery of the kinds of educational information that you
are speaking to and, as a result of that, will find themselves in a
disadvantaged position as it relates to this.
|
| Getting back to my comment about the data, the real incentive
here for Canadians, and not only for employers but individual
employees, is improved health.
|
| For employers, we are seeing in the United States, for example,
organizations that have absenteeism rates significantly lower than
their competitors, the result of which is that they are able to price
their goods and services far more competitively.
|
| The best example I can give you here in Canada is Husky
Injection Molding Systems Ltd. The average rate of absenteeism
for their industry is 9.7 per cent. That particular organization,
which is a worldwide entity based here in Canada, now has in
excess of 2,000 Canadian employees, primarily at their Bolton
operation, and has a rate of absenteeism of 1.2 per cent. The
savings are phenomenal. Husky Injection Systems provides
on-site naturopathic services. They have two physicians who visit
the plant on a regular basis. They have a child care centre. Their
enlightened initiatives, frankly, have made them a world-class
competitive organization. That is the pay-off.
|
| What we need is more broadly based research that makes the
case to convince industry and the private sector that the incentive
here is a more productive, healthier workforce, which translates,
frankly, into greater profitability.
|
| Mr. Robinson: People have talked about tax credits for
companies that put in gyms. Mr. Buffett has articulately made the
case that the incentive is a market incentive already, and there
does not need to be any government tax policy interference in that
regard.
|
| If we walk the tax-credit road for putting in a gym and having a
healthy work force, why do we not have a tax credit in terms of
social engineering because I held the door open for Senator
LeBreton this morning or something like that?
|
| Through the tax code, people cannot be made to be smarter in
terms of taking care of themselves.
|
| Senator Cordy: Would the role of the federal government be
to provide research data and to educate the public and businesses?
|
| Mr. Buffett: Absolutely.
|
| Mr. Allen: I have seen newspaper articles in the past few
months about children and teenagers in Canada and the growing
problem of obesity in this country and in the States. You do not
change that overnight, but I think there is a role for governments,
for schools, our educational system, to address that issue. The
amount of time that is spent in front of the television, the
computer, the type of food that is eaten, are all habits that cannot
be changed overnight.
|
| I think there is a role for the provincial and federal
governments to work with the educational system in convincing
all of us that good health has a value in and of itself. You may not
live longer, but you will feel better.
|
| Senator Keon: I would like to pursue a theme with Mr. Allen
and Mr. Robinson and then enter into a discussion with you,
Mr. Buffett, about clinical trials and so forth.
|
| Mr. Allen, in the third bullet of your conclusions you say:
|
We are uncomfortable with the emphasis Vol. 4 gives to
market based options.
|
| I believe the tremendous preoccupation in the minds of the
Canadian public with tampering with our so-called health care
system now is that we have pushed them back to where they were
in the 1950s, where they had catastrophic illness and bankruptcy
due to medical fees and hospital fees.
|
| If one were able to separate the payer from the provider and the
evaluator from both the payer and the provider, would one still
have the same objection to private initiatives that could deliver
health care services in a more proficient and cost-effective
manner and with the same quality control as the public system is
doing now? In other words, if we preserve the single payer
concept or at least the government responsibility to pay for health
care in one way or another for every citizen, and then separate the
provider and simply allow government, or whatever supplemental
insurance companies exist, the option of going to the lowest
bidder who can satisfy the criteria of the evaluator for quality
control, would you still object to private people, private
organizations providing health care?
|
| Mr. Allen: What we have said is that we are uncomfortable
with the thrust or the spirit of volume 4.
|
| In the second paragraph on page 5, we briefly refer to a report
that was in The Globe and Mail a couple of weeks ago based on a
report by the Alberta Auditor General who said that there is
growing potential for conflict of interest in light of increasing
private ownership of health care facilities, and he called for more
stringent controls on the contracting out of surgical services to
prevent senior doctors from diverting public health dollars to
clinics in which they have a financial stake.
|
| This is not a discourse or debate about the market system that
we are having in the course of these hearings, it is about the
appropriate role for the public sector and the private sector in
delivering health care. We must ask ourselves: What are the
values that underlie health care and care; and what is the
appropriate role for the private sector in that health care system?
|
| Henry Mintzberg, who is a management theorist at McGill
University, has said on a number of occasions that there are
certain things that should be done in the private sector, and be
done more effectively, and that there are certain things that should
be done in the public sector.
|
| The questions that we would ask are: What are we looking for
in altering or changing the health care system? Are we looking to
contain the costs? We now spend about 9.3 per cent or
9.4 per cent of our GDP. That is not very different from what we
were spending 10 years ago, so do we have a crisis of costs? Is
the issue a value-based one such that that there has to be a role for
the private sector in the delivery of care to citizens?
|
| How will you measure efficiency if the system changes in that
direction? What are we looking for? If we are looking to reduce
costs, how will that affect those who work in the system?Those
are the kinds of questions we would ask.
|
| Senator Keon: Do you think that your organization would
tolerate private sector involvement in the delivery of services,
provided they were delivered to the standard of an evaluator that
was publicly controlled and provided they were paid for by the
single-payer concept at least, the guaranteed payment by
government?
|
| Mr. Allen: If it meant that those who are vulnerable, who are
poor, who live in poorer regions of the country were not excluded,
then we would certainly look at it. I cannot speak on behalf of all
the members of the Canadian Council of Churches. If this
committee can make a case, a values-based case for the point that
you are raising, then it would be unfair for us not to consider that.
|
| Senator Keon: Thank you. Mr. Robinson, what is your view
on this?
|
| Mr. Robinson: We believe that, on the issue of payer and
provider, the patient needs to be aware of the choices. It can be
done through health care savings allowances, through co-payment
options, with the appropriate income contingent areas for lower-
and lower-middle income people, or through the insurer. We want
to see that.
|
| Dr. David Gratzer, in his Donner Prize winning book, Code
Blue, makes the point that we have separated and severed that
payer-patient-doctor relationship. On a primary care level, yes,
that may be so. I see Dr. Rachlis in the room who may disagree
with me in another presentation.
|
| To get back to my previous point about the Medisave fund in
Singapore and acute care and catastrophic issues, private
individuals in Singapore fund that through at-source deductions
and it is backed by the government for catastrophic illnesses in
the latter years of life. We recognize the limitation of that.
|
| To pick up on Dr. Allen's questions, I talked about the facile
public-private or bipolar ideological things that this debate has
been minimized to, to the exclusion of all others. I think we need
to put back on the table the fact that hospitals in this province are
private corporations. They are incorporated under the Ontario
Business Corporations Act and under the Ontario Hospitals Act.
Those are the two governing pieces of legislation. They are
private corporations managed by community trustees as a public
trust.
|
| We should also remember that, in terms of this public-private
distinction, doctors are private entrepreneurs. They are
businessmen. Some may disagree, but I believe that they are
business people, businessmen and businesswomen, offering a
pre-eminent societal public-good service.
|
| The public-private distinction is not a question of yes or no; it
is a question of the appropriate balance and mix. I think that
moves the debate onto another plane.
|
| Senator Keon: I noticed that in your presentation you did not
deal with the population health and a suitable evaluation of that
being done. Can you deal with the concept that any evaluation
should be done on the basis of population health, and every move
we make should be reflected in a measurable outcome that would
improve population health.
|
| Mr. Robinson: We do touch on that in our paper, although we
did have time limitations.
|
| The population health concept has been flourishing in this
country for almost 30 years since Mr. Lalonde's paper. There was
an update of that by Mr. Epp under the Conservative
administration, and then by Mr. Rock in the Population Health
Directorate which now exists Health Canada.
|
| The factors that you list in volume 1 of your report were
brought home to everyone with the issues that were raised in
Walkerton and North Battleford. You can have the best hospital
system in the world, but if you do not have clean drinking water,
good luck.
|
| We say that we are dealing with health care. We would make
the point that you, as a committee, must see the health care
envelope in the context of population health and how it relates to
finance, how it relates to the environment, to the food inspection
agency and so on.
|
| We also make the point that you should not focus on cost
containment. It was Dr. Fyke, in his submission in Saskatchewan,
who pointed out that good quality in health care actually costs
less, not more. If you focus on quality and excellence within a
population health envelope, we think you can build a very good
system.
|
| I am not sure if that answers your question, but we have
addressed it and we are aware of the issue.
|
| Senator Keon: It does. Thank you very much.
|
| I will move to you, Mr. Buffett, and then deal with the
evaluator portion of the triad, so to speak.
|
| You expressed your frustration with the fact that frequently the
information about things we do is just not available. You are one
of the senior officials of McMaster University, which is Canada's
hotbed of clinical trials. I believe that one of the traps we fall into
in science is that, if we cannot prove something statistically, we
ignore all the other information that has unfolded over the ages.
|
| In my debates over the years with statisticians and clinical trials
experts at the scientific table, when losing arguments I would
repeatedly point out that there never was a clinical trial on
parachutes before they were used. The army never sent every
second soldier out without a parachute to see if they worked.
|
| The same applies to population health. The evidence is
absolutely overwhelming that rich people are healthy; poor people
are unhealthy. Sometimes I think we are preoccupied with trying
to design clinical trials that prove that snow is white.
|
| What do you think would be the ideal evaluation system in
Canada? Should it be led by the federal government? Should it be
a federal-provincial initiative in concert with the universities?
Should the federal government be responsible for quality, and
should the evaluators work on contract as private agents? How
would you see this whole evaluation system being set up?
|
| Mr. Buffett: My thinking is that the leadership role would be
played by the federal government in concert with, in particular,
the universities.
|
| In looking at the recent initiatives by the federal government in
funding a multitude of research chairs, I wonder if the same
mechanism cannot be utilized with a narrower focus specifically
directed towards the whole population health worksite wellness
milieu.
|
| Senator Keon: Do you not think that you would have to take a
broader approach and look at our pockets of population, for
example, some of our northern populations?
|
| Mr. Buffett: Absolutely. In responding to your question, I am
simply, in the broadest possible sense, trying to indicate where I
think the activity must take place. We certainly need to look at
some of our more northern groups. There is a phenomenon now
that we are recognizing for the first time in a multicultural society,
and that is, frankly, people from different ethnic backgrounds
respond very differently to health promotion initiatives.
|
| A whole area of learning needs to take place for those of us
who are not of a particular ethnicity so that we can identify how
we can communicate effectively about health promotion with
people who are, for example, from East Asia, because it would be
markedly different from how we would communicate with people
from South America. A tremendous amount of learning needs to
take place, not only about some of our Native peoples who live in
remote communities, but also as it applies to that broad mix of
people who now comprise the Canadian populace. There must be
a far greater degree of sensitivity in delivering this message.
|
| My focus has been, for the most part, on how to utilize that
worksite as a means of not only disseminating health promotion
related information, but also encouraging people to participate. As
I mentioned earlier, there would, potentially, be an enormous
payback for the employer. The investment, when viewed against
that potential payback, would be rather nominal.
|
| The multicultural nature of most workforces means that we
need to be far better equipped to deal with a diverse population. I
am married to an East Indian woman, and her response to health
prevention and health promotion is markedly different from many
of her peers who are native Canadians. There must be a far
greater consciousness of that reality.
|
| Senator Robertson: Your oral presentations have been
excellent. Unfortunately, we have run out of time. We will study
the prepared texts that you have provided to us. Many people now
understand that, perhaps, the best delivery of health care is found
in the workplace, the community and the schools, that is, where
we live, where we work and where we play.
|
| Is there anything that governments, federal and provincial, can
do to help encourage the workplace to get involved in these good
programs?
|
| Mr. Buffett: We spoke briefly about incentives, and I am not a
proponent of incentives. I believe that there are sufficient
incentives.
|
| The federal and provincial governments have a role to play in
educating the business sector about the financial benefits
associated with the delivery of health promotion at the worksite. I
never fail to be astounded at how difficult it is to locate or identify
anyone in a senior capacity in a Canadian private corporation who
thinks in any great depth about the role his organization does or
does not play in financing the Canadian health care plan. As you
know, in this province, we have an employer tax, and yet the
perception is that health care is free.
|
| We do a terrible job of making the point that we all pay for
health care through our taxes. We also pay indirectly through such
things as payroll taxes. We have little information that will tell us
how organization A functions versus organization B, C or D.
|
| One of the questions I would suggest that the federal
government in particular must wrestle with is to what extent the
government will intervene. I want to stay away from the word
"incentives" or any word that would mean "incentive." A
tremendous educational role needs to be played by the federal
government in encouraging captains of industry to recognize that
this is not unlike training.
|
| In the 1960s when I finished university, training was, for want
of a better word, a joke. You worked in an organization and they
told you they would train you. Of course, you trained yourself or
you would not get ahead.
|
| That is where we are today relative to issues such as health
promotion. We need to make that organizational commitment to
employee health for the simple reason that it makes great business
sense. It also makes great sense in terms of preserving our
national health care system.
|
| You are aware of these statistics. You know that 35 per cent of
the Canadian population are considered to be obese. Over
50 per cent of Canadians live sedentary life-styles. I believe that
35 per cent of working Canadians indicate that they are
experiencing severe stress. According to the Roundtable on
Mental Health, 20 per cent of Canadians at some point in their life
will suffer from depression. In the last month two individuals
whom I knew, although somewhat remotely, who were in their
30s, took their own lives. These people who were successful in
their careers, for all intents and purposes, and yet, unbeknownst to
those of us who associated with them, they were afflicted with
depression. They kept it to themselves and, ultimately, they took
their lives.
|
| There is an incredible need for the government to play a
significant role in educating people about the opportunities that
exist for them and for this country, if we can become a healthier
nation.
|
| Senator Robertson: Mr. Allen, the council, understandably so,
is generally concerned about those people in our country who are
poor, who are disadvantaged, and who do not have the benefits
enjoyed by a certain other group of people.
|
| There is the concern, rightly expressed by the council, that
should changes in the health care system, for instance, require
participatory action by citizens, that might hurt those less
fortunate people. They may feel that they are receiving a poorer
quality of care.
|
| Not that many years ago, universality was a sacred cow in this
country. Not that many years ago, and in fact, it was this
committee with a different membership, recommended to the
federal government that family allowances, money going from the
federal government to children, and payments to senior citizens,
should be targeted to those who needed the money the most and
that it should not be a universal payment. That was the first break
in the story of universality. We no longer hear anything about
family allowances or pension monies going to those who need it
most.
|
| If we could design a health system along those lines, without
stigma, and provide health care that ensures certain participation
for those who need it most, would that be offensive to the
Council?
|
| Mr. Allen: We have hardly made a dent in child poverty in this
country since 1989. The fact is that the gap between those who
have and those who do not have has grown in this country.
|
| Senator Robertson: I understand that.
|
| Mr. Allen: In looking at what we spend on health care as a
percentage of our GDP, we compare favourably with most OECD
countries. Some may argue, in fact, we are on the low end of the
scale; that we are not spending too much.
|
| If we are concerned about the health and well-being of citizens
and communities in this country, then health care is only part of
the mix, if you like. I am not an economist, but it may be possible
to actually reduce what we spend on health care if we had better
social programs. Over the past five or six years, the social
programs in many provinces in this country have been
eviscerated. Our denominations have more people using
out-of-the-cold programs, more people using the food banks, and
not just individuals or not just individual males but families.
|
| I think the Committee needs to look at that issue. You must
weigh what we spend and where we spend it, to remind all of us
that other social programs have an important bearing on our
health as individuals and as communities. That, for us, would be
fundamental.
|
| Senator Robertson: You are talking about the restructuring of
all the social programs. We will deal with that at another time.
|
| The question that this committee has asked on different
occasions is: If more money is needed, should it come from the
taxpayers in the form of higher taxes or directly from the users of
the system through some form of partial payment for the services
rendered? How would you respond to that question,
Mr. Robinson?
|
| Mr. Robinson: Either way, it will come from the taxpayers
who use it.
|
| Senator Robertson: That is right.
|
| Mr. Robinson: The issue for us is that there be a greater
individual accountability at the primary care level, if not direct
payment, at least an understanding.
|
| Two provinces are now doing point-of-service verification
where they are double-checking and auditing, The will ask
patients: "Did your doctor do these procedures? Do you know
how much they cost?" That is an appropriate step in the right
direction.
|
| We think the system is focussed too much on the supply side of
the equation and not the demand side of the equation in terms of
our utilization of health care.
|
| At the end of the day, there should be greater individual
accountability, again, respecting our principles and respecting the
issues of low-income needs, access needs and disease-specific
extraordinary costs which nobody can afford to pay.
|
| Senator Robertson: Earlier you mentioned the extramural
hospital in New Brunswick, that is, working outside of the
system. It does not work outside the system, sir. It is registered
under the New Brunswick Hospital Act and works in the system.
The only thing we removed was the hospital.
|
| Mr. Robinson: I understand that, Senator, but it falls outside
the Canada Health Act because New Brunswickers have made the
decision to pay for that themselves through their provincial taxes,
and CHST transfers do not pay for the extramural hospitals.
|
| Senator Robertson: No, that is wrong.
|
| Mr. Robinson: Mr. Robichaud from the National Advisory
Council on Aging, in his presentation to Elsie Wayne's committee
- and it is a government-funded commission - has said that the
CHST does not fund New Brunswick extramural hospitals.
|
| Senator Robertson: Perhaps that was a very recent change. I
will check on that. Thank you.
|
| Senator Callbeck: Mr. Allen, in your brief you talk about
accountability of governments, the fact that governments should
have to tell the taxpayer how the money is spent. If provincial
governments sent out a statement to each person at the end of the
year explaining how much that person had cost the system, do
you think that would be effective? Would it be worth the effort?
|
| Mr. Allen: I think you will get much better advice on that from
other briefs. However, I believe you would need standards across
the country so that the same questions are asked and the focus is
on the same issues, whether you live in Newfoundland or British
Columbia. There should be one standard, in a sense "report card."
I do not think is the appropriate term, but you would need
standards that the federal government and the provinces could
agree on. As to how you would achieve that consensus across
those two jurisdictions, is a matter you may want to think about.
|
| There must be some common denominators across the country
that would include not only costs but also some standards or data
on wellness. Why should citizens in one part of the country not
hear about innovations in another province, innovations that have
enhanced the care of the individual and the care of the
community?
|
| The Chairman: I would thank all of you for coming. As you
know, we could have continued for a considerable amount of
time.
|
| Senators, our last panel before lunch will consist of Dr. Michael
Rachlis, who is one of the most prolific writers and
speech-makers, and so on, on health reform issues; Dr. Joel
Lexchin from the Medical Reform Group; and Dr. Arif Bhimji
from At Work Health Solutions Inc., and he is accompanied by
Gery Barry, who is the CEO of Liberty Health.
|
| Dr. Lexchin, I will begin with you. Since we have a lot of
questions to ask you, perhaps you would just touch on the
highlights in your paper.
|
| Dr. Joel Lexchin, Medical Reform Group: On behalf of the
Medical Reform Group, which is a group of about 150 physicians
in Ontario, we will make a couple of points that are elaborated on
in our brief.
|
| Earlier, I heard Senator Keon asking whether it would be
acceptable to ask the public to pay for private delivery. The
United States example is an excellent illustration of why that
would not be a good choice.
|
| I know that the committee has not been particularly interested
in hearing evidence from the United States because they believe
that our systems are too divergent. However, I would draw your
attention to the dialysis clinics in the United States. All renal
dialysis in the United States is paid for under medicare, regardless
of the age of the person. About two-thirds of the dialysis is
delivered by private facilities; one-third is delivered publicly. A
recent study in the New England Journal of Medicine looked at
mortality rates in these two sets of clinics and at the referrals for
renal transplantation from these two different kinds of clinics. The
results show that mortality rates are significantly higher, about
20 per cent higher, in the private clinics, despite the fact that they
are being funded publicly. It is the same source of money. They
also showed that there is a lower rate of referral for
transplantation from the private clinics than from the public
clinics. This is only one study that has looked at differences
between private and public delivery, but in this case it is
particularly apropos because the money comes from the same
source. It is public money.
|
| The interpretation is quite simple. Private medical delivery is
not as good as public medical delivery. That is a major reason to
reject the private delivery of health services.
|
| Earlier, someone was talking about how the Quebec drug plan
respects the spirit of the Canada Health Act. Respectfully, I
disagree. The figures in volume 4 of your report on the percentage
of people who have drug insurance are grossly inaccurate. Not
100 per cent of people in Ontario have drug insurance.
|
| In Quebec, while nominally 100 per cent of people may have
drug insurance, given the user fees that are charged in that
province to the elderly, which can go up to I believe $750 per
year, de facto a large percentage of people there do not receive
any benefits from drug insurance. The public-private model of
drug insurance delivered in Quebec has been shown to result in
significant problems for Quebecers.
|
| A study done out of McGill showed that, after the institution of
the Quebec system, hospitalizations, doctors' visits, and visits to
emergency departments by people on welfare and people over the
age of 65 went up dramatically because they had to pay a user
fee. User fees defeat the purpose of drug insurance. If you pay
user fees, you will forego the use of necessary drugs and that will
make your health worse. That was demonstrated in Quebec.
|
| Finally, the Medical Reform Group has to wonder why it is that
volume 4 of your report ignores or downplays the principles in the
Canada Health Act and puts forward positions that are more in
tune with the American system.
|
| We have to look at whether or not there is a conflict of interest
here amongst certain members of the committee, specifically the
Chair of the committee, Senator Kirby, with his position on the
board of Extendicare. Extendicare is a private delivery system,
and volume 4 of the report seems to be in tune with supporting
private delivery, private sources of money. We think there is a
major problem there too.
|
| The Chairman: Since you raise it, let me make two comments
on that.
|
| First, the report is a unanimous report of a dozen people, not
just me, including Senator Keon who is, as you well know, in the
medical profession; Senator Yves Morin, who is former Dean of
Medicine at Laval; Senator Brenda Robertson, who is a former
Minister of Health; and Senator Catherine Callbeck, who is a
former premier. That is the first point.
|
| The second point is that the document puts forward options. It
does not put forward particular solutions. I think you are being
unfair to my colleagues. Whatever you want to do with me is your
business, but it is unfair to my colleagues for you to take the
position that, because of something that I do, this report reflects
only the view of one person and not in fact what it is, which is the
unanimous view of the committee.
|
| I do not want to debate it with you. I am just responding to
your point. Continue.
|
| Dr. Lexchin: Yes, that is fine. I am finished. Thank you.
|
| Dr. Michael M. Rachlis, as an individual: Senators, it is a
real pleasure to be given the opportunity to speak to you this
morning. I have met some of you previously, and I look forward
to renewing my acquaintance with you.
|
| I have given a copy of the outline of my presentation to your
staff. I hope you have copies of it. I have also provided a floppy
disk with three of my recent papers to which I may refer.
|
| Firstly, I want to make the point that I believe that medicare
was the right road to take, although there is a lot of concern that
we may have gone on the wrong road. Some people have said that
it was a good thing for us to have done years ago when we were
young and healthy. Now that we are old and decrepit, we can no
longer afford it.
|
| Canada and the U.S. had similar health systems, a similar
health status 50 years ago when Tommy Douglas started the road
to medicare in Saskatchewan. We were paying similar amounts
for our health system at that time. Now Canadians spend
50 per cent less of their GDP on health care. Approximately
42 million Americans have no health insurance whatsoever. Tens
of millions have such inadequate coverage that 500,000 declare
personal bankruptcy because of health care bills. Canada's infant
mortality rate is 30 per cent lower.
|
| Despite the fact that the committee has been at pains to say that
you are looking for policies outside the United States, we must
remember that there was a fork in the road 50 years ago; and
while the rest of Canadian society has become more American in
the last 50 years, our health system has actually become more
Canadian. That should be a great point of pride, and we should
not forget the impact of making that correct decision 50 years
ago.
|
| Secondly, the real problem with medicare is not that it is
publicly financed or that we rely upon not-for-profit delivery, but
rather that it was designed for another time. We first started to
debate medicare in this country about 100 years ago. In 1919,
Mackenzie King forced the Liberal Party of the day to include
medicare in its election platform. God bless you and them, it only
took another 47 years before the legislation was passed.
|
| The Chairman: Things move slowly in government, as they
do in universities.
|
| Dr. Rachlis: For those who are wondering about that 1997
promise of home care and pharmacare, we only have to wait until
2043, although I hope that your committee will make it happen
sooner than that.
|
| The real problem is that we designed medicare for another time
- a time when tuberculosis, diphtheria, polio, et cetera, were rife.
Accidents and injuries were much more common on a per capita
basis than they are now. Even in the last 10 years, tremendous
advances have been made which, unfortunately for people
awaiting transplants, has meant that there are fewer organs
available because trauma is less common.
|
| Our major problem is that we are not coping well with the
transition we have made to dealing with, mainly, chronic illness.
Our acute care services are some of the best in the world. If you
are going to have a serious heart attack or a serious car accident,
there is no other place in the world where you should have it than
in Canada. God forbid you should have it at all, but if you do
have anything serious that requires acute care, you will get as
good or better care in Canada than anywhere.
|
| However, our care for chronic illness is anywhere from poor to
appalling. Currently, our diabetic control program in Canada is
mainly bypass surgery and kidney dialysis. Interestingly, we see
good examples of diabetic care - in fact it is the best I have seen
in the country - in the Northwest Territories. They started their
dialysis program in 1997 with seven patients. My most recent
information is that they have three or four now, and this is at a
time when, in the rest of the country, the dialysis rate has gone up
by over 40 per cent.
|
| The real problem is that we take care of chronic illness so
badly that thousands of people die prematurely every year
because they need physicians and hospital care.
|
| Another example is hypertension. At best, 30 per cent,
probably closer to 20 per cent, of Canadians with high blood
pressure have their blood pressure properly controlled. Thousands
of Canadians are dying every year simply because of that.
|
| Thirdly, the system is neither too costly nor grossly
underfunded. Canada spends about the same proportion of GDP
as other wealthy countries. We spend a little bit less than France
and Germany, more than Denmark, Norway and Sweden, and
much less than the United States, who is wasting a lot of money
in their system on overhead costs.
|
| The distribution of costs has changed with the federal
government paying much less, the provinces more, and this has
limited the federal government's ability to enforce the Canada
Health Act.
|
| My fourth point is my major point. We can and are fixing
medicare's problems. There are literally thousands of examples of
this. If I had a few days with your committee, I believe that I
could give you, on paper, solutions to every single problem that
you believe we have with access and quality in this country. The
political implementation is tricky, but on paper I feel I could solve
all these problems. The recommendations to solve these problems
have been extant for 20 or 30 years.
|
| I know that the Senate is and has been very concerned about
palliative care. Far too many patients in this country with
predictable deaths due to cancer are dying in acute care beds or in
emergency departments.
|
| In Edmonton, in the midst of a big budget cut, the regional
authority developed a comprehensive palliative care program
which led to better quality care and lower costs. If this program
could be swiftly applied across the country, my back-of-the-envelope calculation is that it would free up roughly
1,800 hospital beds, as many as are found in the entire city of
Winnipeg.
|
| Waiting for care is a big problem in this country. Some wait list
problems we probably cannot solve without more resources. For
example, based on the epidemiology of hip disease in this
country, we probably should be doing more hip surgeries.
However, the demand for most other procedures is the same now
as it was last year; and it will be the same next year as it is this
year.
|
| Built-in administrative delays reduce the rapidity of care that
can be provided. When we remove these administrative delays, as
was done in Sault Ste. Marie, we can reduce waiting times,
particularly for cancer care, by 80 per cent plus. In
Sault Ste. Marie, simply by going to more centralized booking
for procedures, they were able to reduce the median time from
mammography to definitive treatment for breast cancer from
107 days to 18 days. It took them only three months to do that.
We could do that everywhere across the country. I can go into
details as to how this could be done. Almost all the waiting times
in this country for cancer care could be slashed by 70 per cent
plus, without new resources.
|
| Fifthly, private finance and for-profit delivery would aggravate
our problems. Private finance raises overall costs, particularly
administrative costs, and tends to injure vulnerable patients.
For-profit delivery tends to increase costs, particularly
administrative costs, and tends to decrease quality. There are
some private for-profit operators in this country who are doing a
very good job. On the other hand, I do agree with Dr. Lexchin
that the weight of evidence shows that this approach is nothing
close to a panacea. Almost all the studies show increased costs;
decreased quality.
|
| Given that we could fix medicare's problems within our
historic policy framework of public finance and not-for-profit
delivery; given that private finance and for-profit delivery would
likely make things worse, and given that even most of those who
suggest private options claim to share the values of medicare,
should we not first implement the proven interventions which
would improve quality and access while holding the line on costs?
Should that not be the first thing we should do?
|
| I can give you hundreds of examples of what we can do to
improve quality within that traditional policy framework and that
would not result in increased costs. Should we not first do those
things and then see if we really need to go private? I do not think
we will have to go private.
|
| I would close my testimony by urging the committee to
consider solutions within our traditional value framework of
public finance and not-for-profit delivery; and recommend those
solutions to the Canadian public instead of those that involve
private finance and for-profit delivery.
|
| The Chairman: We will next hear from Dr. Arif Bhimji from
Work Health Solutions. With his is Mr. Gery Barry who is the
CEO of Liberty Health. Will one or both of you make the
presentation?
|
| Dr. Arif Bhimji, President, At Work Health Solutions Inc.:
Thank you very much for inviting us to be with you today and to
share our perspectives on what has happened to health care in
Canada.
|
| First of all, let us introduce ourselves. I am the founder and
President of At Work Health Solutions Inc. an independent
provider of occupational medical, health and safety and health
promotion services based in the Greater Toronto Area. Previously,
I was responsible for managing health care initiatives for Magna
International's global operations as a vice-president of health
services, a position I held for the past nine years. For the past six
years, I have also held the position of medical director at Liberty
Health, one of Canada's leading health insurance companies. I am
a graduate of the University of Saskatchewan with a Doctor of
Medicine. I have also completed a Masters in Business
Administration and hold an academic posting within the
Department of Health Administration at the University of
Toronto. In my spare time, I continue to work as an emergency
room physician at the South Lake Regional Health Centre in
Newmarket.
|
| With me today is Mr. Gery Barry. Mr. Barry has a B.S. in
Mathematics, magna cum laude, from the University of Notre
Dame and a Master of Science degree in Applied Mathematics
from Rutgers University. He is a Fellow of the Society of
Actuaries, the life and health actuarial profession's
chief credentialing organization for both the U.S. and Canada. In
his prominent actuarial career, Mr. Barry has specialized in group
pension and group health insurance plans, including 21 years in
the U.S. at Aetna's head office and the last five years as president
and chief executive officer of Liberty Health, a Canadian-based
health insurance and group benefits company here in the Greater
Toronto Area.
|
| Liberty Health was initially Ontario Blue Cross, a voluntary,
government-subsidized health insurance program established by
the Government of Ontario. To date, Liberty Health is the largest
supplier of individually purchased supplemental health insurance
in Canada. We are also one of the handful of companies
competing for major group insurance accounts on a national level.
|
| On the basis of our joint professional expertise in insurance and
occupational health, and our practical work experience and
personal involvement in a wide variety of Canadian health care
forums, we have drawn the following key conclusions that we
should like to share with you today.
|
| The most helpful way to think clearly about the health care
issues we face is to go back to basics. The key is to examine what
we call medicare today precisely for what it is and has always
been - a health insurance program. The Canada Health Act did
not establish a population health management program, although
it has implications for population health.
|
| Though it has implications for the structure of health care
delivery, neither did the Canada Health Act establish a program
for the delivery of health care. What the Canada Health Act did
was to establish an exclusive, government-controlled and
operated, universal health insurance program that we
affectionately call medicare.
|
| The root cause of the problems we see today is that, as an
insurance program, medicare is failing. It is failing simply
because it is no longer paying for the full level of benefits which
are owed to the group of people it ensures, the Canadian people.
The value of the insurance coverage provided by medicare has
been diluted to the point of inadequacy. Most people know it and,
unfortunately, many directly feel it.
|
| Just how much are we shortchanging the medicare program?
What is the actual level of health care being paid for versus what
is necessary? We cannot know exactly, but a number of
reasonable methods for projecting this, including one that is
consistent with what we do to price future health premiums in the
private sector, all point to a 20 per cent to a 25 per cent shortfall,
or approximately $20 billion worth.
|
| What is the fallout from this? If we are only funding 75 to
80 per cent of the necessary doctor services, hospital services,
nurses, labs, and so on, what is happening? The answer is that we
are restricting access. Restricted access is the price for inadequate
funding, and it is a painful one, particularly in clinical terms.
|
| There are a few telling examples of this. Only 60 per cent of
cardiac patients requiring an angiogram get one within the
maximum waiting time, and 6 per cent of those who are waiting
either have a heart attack or die while they are waiting. An
Ontario cancer treatment study has shown that waiting times for
cancer treatment in Canada are substantially longer than the time
radiation oncologists consider the medically acceptable
maximum. On January 2 of last year, 23 of 25 Toronto emergency
rooms were closed to all patients, regardless of the severity of
their illness. My last example for today is: The waiting lists for
joint replacement surgery have grown to such an extent that
health system administrators now contemplate a comprehensive
registry and program just to manage it.
|
| Restricting access results in rationing of services, employing ad
hoc, inconsistent criteria at the local level for deciding who gets
care and who does not. This compromises medicare's fairness,
equality and equity provisions.
|
| How do we fix this problem? The simple answer is that we
need to adequately fund the benefit levels that medicare has
always promised. This might not be as impossible as it seems. If
Canada were able to sustain our recent year-over-year
improvements in productivity levels, government revenues would
be able to keep up with the necessary real increases in per capita
health care spending and even start making up some of the ground
that we have lost over the last decade or so. This would begin to
put medicare back on a sound actuarial footing. If we cannot do
this, or if we choose not to do this, then we need to redefine
medicare's commitment in a way that re-establishes equilibrium
between its health care benefit commitments to its citizens and the
revenues that it generates.
|
| There are various ways of doing this while preserving
universality for medically necessary acute care. Anything short of
increased funding or a redefinition as to what the Canada Health
Act covers, while it may be helpful, is likely to be of marginal
value. This includes things that have already been presented and
discussed in the volume 4. I am referring to primary care reform,
modest user fees and the like.
|
| From a fairness perspective, we must ensure that Canadians
have options for alternate care if we are to continue limiting their
access to services and keep on rationing medically necessary care
through a publicly funded system.
|
| Are there other sources of funds that can be brought into the
picture quickly? Perhaps there are. Employers, in particular,
already have a vested interest in health care by virtue of their
dependence on employee productivity. While employers are
already covering a large portion of the cost for supplemental
insurance, there are economic advantages to them in paying for
some additional health care services in order to reduce
absenteeism and disability costs, and to improve at-work
performance.
|
| In many cases, our studies, reviews and reports on the state of
the Canadian health care system forget to address the cost to
society of lost time from work, morbidity, lost productivity and
the loss of quality of life for the 14 million Canadian workers who
are unable to access health services and return to work in a timely
manner after illness or injury.
|
| These are the true hidden costs of the health system and they
by far outweigh the costs of our medical care system, according to
research carried out by the federal government. Employer-funded
health programs include short-term disability, long-term disability
and workers' compensation. These programs cover the majority
of Canadian workers and are all provided outside the auspices of
the Canada Health Act.
|
| Unfortunately, the closed nature of our current health delivery
system means that all individuals must seek care through the
publicly funded system which we acknowledge already has
capacity restraints. This limitation adds to the productivity
shortfall that I spoke of earlier. As the provision of workers'
compensation and third party services are not covered by the
Canada Health Act, a strong private sector health delivery
capacity could be added to take this load off the existing public
facilities. Private sector organizations could be encouraged to
capitalize existing or new facilities to service the needs of workers
specifically. This, in turn, will allow public institutions to service
a greater number of Canadians' everyday needs as promised
under the Canada Health Act.
|
| By embracing and strengthening the private sector, the public
sector will have a complementary available resource to use as it
chooses to optimize its own requirements for access and
efficiency. The implicit promises of the Canada Health Act can
more readily be realized if publicly funded coverage is clearly
defined and the private sector is encouraged to service those
individuals not covered by the provisions of the Canada Health
Act.
|
| I thank you very much for listening. We look forward to your
questions.
|
| The Chairman: Dr. Lexchin, would you send us the data on
the health care coverage? I say that because when we saw the
100 per cent number in reference to Ontario, we were as
surprised as you. Frankly, I cannot at this point remember where
the committee researchers or I got it from, but if you have more
accurate data on that, it would help us a lot. If you would send
that to us, it would be most helpful.
|
| Dr. Rachlis, where in fact waiting line reductions could be
made, if they are as simple to do as you say they are, and I have
no reason to believe you are not right, why have they not been
done? I am always concerned when there seem to be simplistic
solutions to complex problems and those solutions have not been
implemented. That is my first question.
|
| The other question relates to what you say at the end of your
paper. You ask: "$should we not start Medicare's renewal by
quickly spreading the best practices across the country?" Again,
we would agree with that, which is why we talked about primary
care reform. The question that the committee grappled with, as
you can tell, is: What happens if that is not enough?
|
| There are two schools of thought. One school of thought says
worry about that problem when you get there. Our concern as a
committee, and I think we tried to express it reasonably clearly,
was that we ought to start thinking now about what we do if it is
not enough, rather than waiting until we get to the crisis and
discover it is not enough.
|
| Even using our data, let alone Dr. Lexchin's data, it is very
clear that there is a growing gap in the safety net with respect to
drug costs. One clearly needs consider how you expand the
system to at least provide catastrophic drug coverage, if not drug
coverage below the catastrophic level. That led us to the
conclusion that we ought to think about how to handle the
problem if the changes are not enough.
|
| That is the real issue that we grappled with as a committee. If
you can enlighten us on both those points, that would be helpful.
|
| Dr. Rachlis: As to your first question about why we have not
implemented better wait list management specifically, and other
best practice as well, I think there are several reasons for that. The
main problem with any of the best practices that I am
recommending, some of which have been implemented, relates to
providers. Understandably, like many of us, they do not
necessarily want to work differently, even if their future work life
would be made better. No one wants to change the way they
work.
|
| That dovetails with another problem which is that there is not
the political support for those changes because the public does not
understand these issues. I am embarrassed to say that, up until
about a year ago, I did not know specifically about these
administrative delays that are inherent in wait lists.
|
| As was recently described in an article in the Canadian
Medical Association Journal over the summer and in a previous
article in the Canadian Journal of Public Health a year ago, in
Ontario, where the situation seems to be the worst in this regard,
typically, a woman will have a screening mammogram done in a
private radiologist's office. The radiologist will read that
mammogram with others. If the test is positive, the radiologist
will dictate the findings, which have to be transcribed, and send
those to the family doctor's office. There are many dozens of
steps along the way.
|
| The family doctor will bring the woman in. Understandably,
she will be upset and want a biopsy to be done as soon as
possible. It is not until after the biopsy, which can be weeks later
or longer, when the family doctor gets the biopsy back, that he or
she can then make a referral to the surgeon for definitive surgery.
Then the patient has to start in the next line. You have these
built-in delays.
|
| However, we could plan on the basis of need. We know that if
we do 1,000 mammograms this week 50 or 80 will be positive.
Those women will want their biopsies as soon as possible. We
could keep 50 slots open next week and fill those slots after the
women have had their mammograms.
|
| In a similar fashion, perhaps five or eight of those women will
have breast cancer and want their surgery as quickly as possible.
We could save five to eight slots the second week so that they
would be available. That is how it was done in Sault Ste. Marie.
|
| Why is this not happening everywhere? I presented this
information to some senior managers in the health system in the
spring, and I have presented it to others. What I have heard back
quietly is, "We know we could do some of this stuff, but the
present booking of surgical slots depends on the community." In
fact, it is almost always done through the Department of Surgery,
but in some communities it is very democratic and everybody
knows what is going on, including the administration. In other
communities, even senior administrators in the hospital do not
know how the surgical time is allocated.
|
| To implement this kind of wait list management you must
somehow be able to centralize bookings, not for all procedures
but some of them. You need not disrupt normal referral patterns,
because, in conjunction with the physicians in a community who
do breast cancer surgery, you just ensure that you save the number
of slots you need that week for women who have had their
diagnostic procedures the week before. You do not have to disrupt
normal referral patterns.
|
| Administrators may be reluctant to do this because there may
already be an ongoing conflict between the administration and the
physicians and they do not want to add to it. If there is no public
demand, then they will not get into it.
|
| That is my understanding of why we have not implemented
this.
|
| Where it has been done, it has worked like magic. I heard last
week that Winnipeg has recently started this in their breast cancer
surgery, and it works just as I have described in Sault Ste. Marie.
|
| The Chairman: The answer is that it works, but there is the
resistance of - let me call it "the system" - the current players
in the system, and that is huge.
|
| Dr. Rachlis: There is resistance, as has been documented many
times, and that is why I was hoping that your committee would be
a leader in the country in highlighting these issues and then
getting the political support we need to make these changes.
|
| The Chairman: "Force the changes," is what you are saying?
|
| Dr. Rachlis: There are numerous ways of doing this politically,
and again, I know your time is short this morning. If I had a day, I
could give you all the examples in the world of how to make this
happen politically. Clinical practices need to be changed. You
need public policies to support the change in clinical practices,
and then you need to have the political process to make sure it
happens.
|
| As to your second question about what happens if this is not
enough, I am a community medicine physician, and I would try to
prevent ethical and policy dilemmas rather than treat them.
|
| On the subject of drugs, I can tell you that I am taking the
number one or number two recommended drug for hypertension
in this country and in the United States by professional societies.
It is hydrochlorothiazide. Almost no one takes it because it is
45 years old. It is off patent. When it is tested head to head with
newer drugs, it has fewer side effects, there are fewer drop-outs,
and it has more effectiveness. It is prescribed to less than 5 per
cent of Canadians with hypertension because the drug companies
spent twice as much on marketing as they did on the research and
development of it.
|
| The Chairman: "Pushing it" is not the right adjective here.
|
| Dr. Rachlis: I will let you use that word.
|
| Some people with diabetes and congestive heart failure should
not take hydrochlorothiazide, but probably at least half of the
Canadians with hypertension could be started on this drug and
most of them would stay on it. It costs me about $1.00 a year for
12.5 milligrams a day. It costs me less for two years of my
medication than what the average Canadian spends for one day of
their hypertensive medication.
|
| There are many examples like that. If we simply improved the
quality of prescribing, there would be many examples of where
you could dramatically improve quality of care and reduce costs
at the same time. I think we should spend at least a year or two
implementing those kinds of programs. Then we could assess
whether we really need more money. If we do need more money,
then we can decide whether it should come privately or publicly.
|
| I would favour publicly. If you start to implement the programs
that provide better quality and reduce costs, you will get so much
more efficiency that you will not have to worry about money. You
can just focus on quality. That is what I would like to see.
|
| For me, back to basics means not looking at how we finance
the system; it means providing improved quality of care, and as
Fyke said, that is almost always less expensive.
|
| Senator Keon: Michael, are you convinced that
hydrochlorothiazide is as effective in preventing progressive
atherosclerosis as ACE inhibitors?
|
| Dr. Rachlis: We do not have the long-term data on that, and
that is why ACE inhibitors would be recommended for patients
with congestive heart failure and diabetes.
|
| In the short term, we can see it is at least as effective, if not
more effective, than ACE inhibitors in controlling blood pressure.
Quite frankly, I am very comforted when I take my pill in the
morning that it is a drug that has been out for 45 years because, as
you may know, within a few years of new drugs coming out, we
often find out about side effects that were not found in the few
thousand patients who were given it during clinical trials.
|
| I am very comfortable taking this drug. It is the number one or
number two drug recommended by professional societies in the
U.S. and Canada.
|
| Senator Keon: Let me start with Dr. Bhimji and bring you
back to something that the whole panel will comment on.
|
| The Canada Health Act fundamentally set up a system that
placed doctors in hospitals, and as it relates to doctors in
hospitals, people are pretty secure. They are pretty well covered,
not all, but most of them are.
|
| When you examine it closely, you discover that they are
certainly not covered. I have had extensive experience with this in
trying to implement prevention programs in cardiovascular
disease where there is no funding for it, and your competitor is an
American firm that blows into town, gives cooking lessons, hires
impressive speakers, and gets people to enrol and pay the fare.
|
| At the other end of the scale, you have the end-of-life and the
chronic situations where coverage is just not adequate. Any
practising physician will tell you, hopefully, of the difficulties that
are being encountered now where people are discharged from
hospital; they get some home care; it runs out; and then they have
to pay the fare. Many of the chronic institutions are not
completely funded.
|
| Should we level the system that is now, fundamentally, 70 per
cent publicly funded and 30 per cent privately funded? Should we
level the system so that everything is 70 per cent publicly funded
and 30 per cent privately funded?
|
| Dr. Bhimji: That is certainly one option that could be made
available.
|
| I speak somewhat on behalf of employers when I say that the
current system does not work well for employers. Employers are
picking up specific costs within the health care system as a whole.
For example, 70 per cent of the cost of drugs is paid for privately
in Canada and 30 per cent is paid for through public vehicles of
various sorts.
|
| If we were to come up with a system that said that we need to
share the cost across society as a whole, and that includes
workplaces, then I could be fairly supportive of that, provided we
define what the contribution will be from each side and what
services we can be expected as a result of that contribution.
|
| We must remember, as Mr. Robinson earlier pointed out, that
there is only one taxpayer, and in a sense, there is also only one
consumer.
|
| It does not matter what scheme we use, but we must ensure that
we have adequate funding for the services that we state we are
going to provide. That is a basic principle of insurance, regardless
of whether that insurance is done from a public sector perspective
or a private sector perspective.
|
| As I indicated earlier, the concern that I have with the health
care system today is that it is actuarially unsound. It does not fund
what it purports to provide to Canadians, and I have given you
clear examples of where that failure has occurred.
|
| The Chairman: That is in part, though, because people in
public life always talk about our publicly funded health care
system when what we really have is a publicly funded hospital
and doctor system. The terminology that is classically used is not
descriptive of what the system really is.
|
| Dr. Bhimji: Ultimately, it comes down to how many dollars
there are and what those dollars will be used for. I have no
disagreement with Dr. Rachlis' ideas of introducing further
efficiencies to the system. However, I do believe that the system
is underfunded, based on our expectations as Canadians as to
what our health care system is to provide.
|
| That is what we should be focussing on, not the 9 per cent that
is being spent out of GDP or the like. We must decide what
services we want; what services will be covered; and who will
cover them, private sector or public sector. Then we must ensure
that there is an alternative for those services that we choose not to
provide in a publicly funded system.
|
| Senator Keon: Michael, before you address this, let me
broaden the situation a little for you.
|
| In my own life as an administrator, one of the frustrations I
have encountered is, because we have a salaried staff at the Heart
Institute, I could always introduce new programs because it did
not impact on physicians' incomes. When we would go
extramural, we were scuppered because it takes years to get others
on the billing system for OHIP. There was simply no way of
dealing with this.
|
| Let me present you with a double-edged sword here. I would
ask you first to address the question I asked of Dr. Bhimji and
then to address this whole issue of physician remuneration as it
relates to progress and how we can overcome this tremendous
barrier we have to progress right now.
|
| Dr. Rachlis: The first question I will answer briefly so I can
spend a little more time on your second question.
|
| To reiterate what I said earlier about public payment, I think
that it is more efficient, it reduces overheads, and it is more
equitable. It seems to me that, rather than looking at introducing
private payment for hospitals and physicians' services, we should
be looking at the 1997 promise made by Mr. Chrétien that we
would move to home care and pharmacare being publicly funded.
The same advantages would pertain there.
|
| As Dr. Lexchin has pointed out, the examples we have in
Canada with mixed public-private drug coverage such as in
Quebec indicate that that move seems to have resulted in
thousands of extra hospital admissions and probably some deaths.
It does not look like as if that is a profitable way to go.
|
| In general, I believe that the advantages of public payment
mean that we should be moving towards more public coverage.
|
| In terms of how we do this logistically, I do not recall the
details from Malcolm Taylor's book - although I could look
them up just as your staff might - but as I recall that, when we
moved to hospital insurance in this country and then medical
insurance, because most large firms were paying for coverage for
their workers, there was a tax adjustment situation. When we
moved to more public payment, some increased taxes went along
with it.
|
| Although I certainly would not speak for large employers in
this country, I think that many of them would likely be interested
in some trade-off, because most large employers are probably
paying more now for direct benefits for their workers than what
they may pay if they have to pay increased taxes to support a
government plan.
|
| Typically, in these kinds of situations, it is the small employers,
who are not paying benefits, who are caught in a squeeze. In the
U.S., in fact, they have been major opponents to public coverage
for that reason.
|
| On your second question, Dr. Keon, regarding physician
payment, I feel strongly that, if we are to move to many of the
new delivery models that people have been talking about for
decades, we have to look at a change of the physician
remuneration to make the rest of the programs work better, not
just for its own purpose. There are two reasons for that.
|
| One is that you just cannot run certain programs when
physicians are mainly on fee for service. For example, over the
last 10 years we have had clear evidence from the diabetes care
and control trial, a U.K. diabetes study, and other diabetes control
experiments which indicates that, if we move to a model of
diabetes care where the patient's usual point of contact is a nurse
who is then backed up by physicians and dieticians and others in a
multidisciplinary team, just like the diabetic clinics that we have
in many Canadian cities these days that serve a very small
minority of diabetic patients, you will get better monitoring.
Consequently, there will be dramatic reductions in the rate of
kidney failure and other complications.
|
| Physicians working in those kinds of programs they mainly
play a consultative role and they receive alternate payment. We
cannot move to where we need to go, particularly for the
management of chronic illness, unless physicians are paid
differently.
|
| The second reason to support changes in physician payment is
because the fee-for-service system for physicians is extremely
unfair to doctors. We have a situation where the Canadian public
thinks that medicare is the height of an example of Canadian
fairness, and that we are different from our American cousins
because of how much we care. It is true that, compared to
Americans, Canadians of all income classes get some of the best
quality health care in the world.
|
| For physicians paid on fee-for-service, the best doctors make
the least money and the worst doctors make the most money. In
Ontario, a family physician can work 70 hours a week doing all
the right things, spending long appointments with patients,
making long calls, and that physician would never net $100,000 a
year. That is the reality.
|
| That doctor looks across the hall and sees another family
physician only working 9:00 to 5:00, seeing 60 patients, 80
patients, or even more. In New Brunswick studies have shown
that some doctors see over 100 people a day. That doctor may
provide very bad care and generate high costs for the system but,
in Ontario, that doctor would net $250,000 or $300,000 a year,
two and a half to three times what his conscientious colleague
would net.
|
| A major problem we face in Canada now is that Canadian
physicians see the medicare system as corrupt because it rewards
bad medical practice, and of course, even within specialties, there
are tremendous disparities. Of course, within medicine, people
have tried to address these disparity issues. Typically, the potential
losers, the sub-specialist surgeons in particular - not
cardiovascular surgeons, I should say - ear, nose and throat
doctors and ophthalmologists and others will fight these changes
to the death. The doctors who would benefit will not fight hard.
|
| As most of you will know, in Ontario, Dr. John Wade spent two
and a half years writing an excellent report. Now, like so many
others, that report will be put on the shelf to gather dust because it
could not correct the disparities.
|
| Canadians do not know how the present perverse incentives for
physicians reduce the quality of care being provided and result in
thousands of Canadians losing their lives every year because of
the poor management of chronic illness. They do not realize that
many doctors are treated unfairly by the payment system. I would
like to see this committee bring these issues to the attention of the
public and, hopefully, galvanize some public opinion that will
lead to change.
|
| Senator Keon: Dr. Lexchin, would you care to address that
issue?
|
| Dr. Lexchin: I would be happy to do that.
|
| With regard to the 70-30 split, I would point out that the
70 per cent public funding by Canada puts us at the low end of
the OECD average. Public funding in European countries, by and
large, is much higher as a percentage of overall health care
spending. In fact, in Denmark I believe it is up around 92 per
cent.
|
| The Chairman: Am I correct that OECD countries also cover
more?
|
| Dr. Lexchin: They do cover more services and, with a couple
of exceptions, they spend less of their GDP on health.
|
| We have to question whether our system is underfunded. What
does that say about the European systems? If we are considering
spreading the public-private split over the range of services, then
before we start that one of the things we need to do is raise the
percentage of public funding. Somebody said that we must
remember that there is only one taxpayer. I agree with that but,
when you start to add in private funding for health services, you
must ask: Who actually pays the money?
|
| The more you have a public system of funding through
taxation, the more it is progressive. In other words, the people
who have the most money pay, and the people who need the
services the most who, generally speaking, are the poor, benefit
from that. When you start throwing in user fees and private
funding, then the poor people start to pay more for their health
services because they are the heavier users.
|
| When talking about a single taxpayer, you have to consider
how you will distribute the money. A public system is the most
efficient and the most equitable way of distributing the money.
|
| I have done some work in the area of pharmacare. Using 1996
figures for prescription drugs, we were paying about $6.6 billion
or $6.7 billion a year in 1996 for prescription drugs. That does not
include dispensing fees, markups, et cetera. If you went to an
all-public system, yes, the public would be spending more,
probably about $3.1 billion more than we are now, but we would
end up saving around $600 million per year on prescription drug
costs.
|
| Those efficiencies would be realized in two ways: First, there
would be lower administrative costs. The figures I have seen
suggest that private insurance companies are spending about
8 per cent of the dollar on administrative costs versus 2 per cent
in systems such as the Ontario Drug Benefits Program. There
would be a saving of about $100 million per year on
administrative costs. You would also save money because you
would have a monopsony buyer.
|
| To illustrate that, consider the difference between drug costs in
Canada and in Australia. Both countries have roughly similar
economic systems. Both countries have roughly similar health
care systems. In 1993 or 1994, the average price for drugs in
Australia was 30 per cent below the OECD average; in Canada it
was about 30 per cent above the OECD average. That difference
was largely in favour of Australia because of their position as a
monopsony buyer. They had a single drug plan for the entire
country and, as a result, they were able to reduce drug costs.
|
| The Chairman: That is why one of our options is a national
formulary. Would you agree with that?
|
| Dr. Lexchin: I would agree with that, yes.
|
| As regard to how physicians are to be paid, again drawing from
the area of prescribing, there is some evidence to indicate that
doctors who are not on fee for service are better prescribers than
physicians who are on fee for service.
|
| I agree with Michael that moving off of a fee-for-service
system would be beneficial in terms of quality of care. You can
deliver better quality of care, I believe, through other methods of
payment than you can through fee for service.
|
| Senator Cordy: Dr. Lexchin, you mentioned surveys that had
been done. Can you provide us with that data?
|
| Dr. Lexchin: Which survey?
|
| Senator Cordy: I am referring to surveys of Canadians who
support the principle of increased general taxes rather than user
fees.
|
| Dr. Lexchin: I will try to get that.
|
| The Chairman: We may have mentioned that in our first
report. I have certainly mention of such surveys in the
newspapers. If you have something else you can provide to us,
Joel, that would be helpful.
|
| Senator Robertson: When you are talking about moving from
fee for service to salaried positions, how long would it take us?
|
| I understand very well what you are saying about some
physicians seeing patients for five minutes and rushing on to
another one. How long would it take us to train a sufficient
number of physicians so that there could be a better time ratio, a
better care component, a better relationship between the physician
and the patient?
|
| Dr. Rachlis: Are you asking how long it would take to train the
physicians to work in this model?
|
| Senator Robertson: No.
|
| In some parts of the country you cannot find a family
physician. If you are lucky enough to have a family physician, he
or she squeezes you in for a three or four minute consultation. If
the physician does that all day long and into the early evening,
then his or her income can be sizable. Conversely, the patient who
is seen in a normal time ratio is provided with very good medical
care. If there are not enough doctors to go around, how long will
it take us to catch up so that we have an adequate supply of
physicians?
|
| Dr. Rachlis: If we do not change the way we pay doctors and
the way that they provide health care, family doctors in particular,
we will never have enough.
|
| I, respectfully, strongly disagree with the Canadian College of
Physicians and Surgeons report last week which stated that we are
3,000 short. Dr. Ben Chan, from the Institute for Clinical
Evaluative Sciences in Toronto at Sunnybrook Hospital, did a
good survey about two years ago where he found that, in just six
years, between 1991 and 1997, there was a 55 per cent relative
increase in the proportion of Ontario family doctors who did no
care outside their offices; that is no hospital care, no nursing home
care, no obstetrics, no emergency work, et cetera.
|
| The number of family doctors per capita in this country has
gone down by about 4 per cent in the last decade, although it is
going back up again now. The number of family doctors has not
changed much, but what has changed dramatically is that family
physicians are finally responding to those perverse incentives. It is
not strange that so many family physicians practice that
revolving-door type of practice.
|
| The real mystery is why there are so many dedicated Canadian
family doctors still providing comprehensive care despite the
financial penalties and the penalties to their personal life, given
that we have approximately one full-time equivalent family
physician for every 1,400 people in this country. We do not know
the exact numbers of course, but I can point to numerous
examples where one family physician working as part of an
interdisciplinary team can manage 2,000 patients or more.
|
| The best example of that is Dr. Tony Hamilton in Beechy,
Saskatchewan, north of Swift Current. When the other family
doctor in the community left, he was skeptical of working more
closely with nurses, but he gave it a try. Now he is working with
three advanced clinical nurses and the other home care and mental
health staff as part of the District Authority, and between all of
them, they are managing 4,000 patients. That is one family doctor.
They also have a diabetic registry in their program. They provide
good quality care. If every doctor in this country worked like
Dr. Tony Hamilton, there would be an excess of 10,000 family
doctors in this country.
|
| The solution to the problem is not to find more doctors to work
in this terribly inefficient system, the solution is to change the
system. I think that most family doctors would find those new
practices much more professionally rewarding.
|
| Senator Robertson: It is that thrust to a multidisciplinary
practice that is so important.
|
| Dr. Rachlis: Of course. We also need specialists to work
differently. They have to be much more consultants to the primary
health care team, and to integrate their expertise into that practice.
Then we might easily find that the number of specialists we have
is more than adequate to provide us with great health care.
|
| The flipside of that is, without changing the way we pay
doctors, without having them work in a team, as Dr. Keon was
describing within his Heart Institute, we could add 30,000 doctors
to the Canadian complement and we would still have many gaps
in services.
|
| Senator Robertson: Thank you for reinforcing that.
|
| The Chairman: Just to echo your point, last week we heard
evidence - and I cannot remember if the number is 195 or 295
- that there are either 195 or 295 fully trained, fully licensed
nurse practitioners in Ontario who are unable to practice because
of scope-of-practice rules. That absolutely confirms, in terms of a
specific number, everything you said.
|
| Dr. Rachlis: I think that Ontario has some of the most
progressive legislation to allow nurse practitioners to work.
|
| The real issue is, rather, that the Ontario government, because
of some strategy on primary health care reform, has not insisted
on the use of interdisciplinary teams.
|
| As you will hear this afternoon from Mr. Gary O'Connor, there
are upwards of 50 Ontario communities who would like an
interdisciplinary community health centre, but the Ontario
government is not responding to that. Many of us are very
concerned that their primary health care strategy will not work for
patients, and that it will not work very well for doctors.
|
| The Chairman: Thank you all for coming.
|
| The committee suspended its proceedings.
|
| The committee resumed.
|
| The Deputy Chairman: Senators, our first witnesses of the
afternoon are from the Consumers' Association of Canada and the
Ontario Association of Optometrists. I would like to welcome
Jean Jones, Chair of the Health Committee of the Consumers'
Association of Canada; Mel Fruitman, President of the
Consumers' Association of Canada; and Dr. Joseph Chan,
President of the Ontario Association of Optometrists.
|
| Mr. Mel Fruitman, President, Consumers' Association of
Canada: Thank you for inviting the Consumers' Association of
Canada to appear before this committee to contribute our
consumer views to your study of Canada's health care system.
|
| The CAC is a 52-year-old independent, not-for-profit
volunteer-based organization with a national office in Ottawa and
provincial and territorial branches. Our mandate is to inform and
educate consumers on marketplace issues, to advocate for
consumers with government and industry and to work with
government and industry to solve marketplace problems in
beneficial ways.
|
| CAC focusses its work in the areas of health, food, trade,
standards, financial services, communication services and other
marketplace issues as they emerge.
|
| All of our policies on specific issues are framed within a set of
general consumer-oriented principles. Eight such principles
govern consumer associations worldwide. Among these principles
are the right to choice, safety, information and a healthy
environment. The attached CAC "Policy Statement on Consumers
and Health Care" is based on these principles.
|
| For more than a decade, delegates at our annual general
meeting have identified health care as a priority consumer issue to
be addressed by the association in the coming year. Each year the
issue presents a more critical challenge.
|
| Ms Jean Jones, Chair of the Health Committee,
Consumers' Association of Canada: In 2001, CAC consumers
give the highest prioity for action to the inclusion of home care
and pharmacare within the parameters of the Canada Health Act.
The shift of necessary treatment and care from the insured
hospital setting to the uninsured community setting has placed a
heavy - often overwhelming - financial burden on the
individuals and their families at a time of great vulnerability due
to lost income of a patient and/or the family caregiver at the
stressful time of coping with the illness.
|
| It is recognized that in many instances home care is the
preferred or feasible option only because of the availability of
drug treatment that can be administered outside a hospital. This
dependence of the home care option on the accessibility of drugs
demonstrates the urgent need for a pharmacare program to be put
in place concurrently, in order for home care to provide the
required level of health care at the time needed.
|
| One successful aspect of the British health care system has
been the provision of both home care and pharmacare within the
public health system.
|
| Certainly, the introduction of publicly insured home care and
pharmacare programs would have cost implications for the health
care systems, yet over time could prove cost-efficient by
expediting the movement of patients through the expensive
hospital system, thereby reducing waiting lists and pressure for
expansion of high cost facilities.
|
| From a consumer point of view, the major flaw in the
government's initiatives in closing hospitals and beds over the
past decades has been the failure to have an adequate home care
program in place prior to undertaking the downsizing. Costly
bottlenecks and waiting lists have been the consequences.
|
| Now, our next comments will focus on matters raised in your
report.
|
| The role of the federal government: Consumers emphasize the
federal role in health protection and place high value on its
responsibility to provide thorough, expert assessment of the safety
of both drugs and medical devices before they come on the
market and also to monitor their safety record while they are in
use. Consumers also expect a strong role for the federal
government in the development of standards to ensure a healthy
environment and safe drinking water across the country.
|
| Primary care reform: Consumers concur with the report's
definition of the need for changes in the practice of primary care.
Success in shifting treatment and care from hospitals to the
community and to the home depends on structural changes that
would provide 24-hour seven-day-a-week professionalconsultation services to consumers.
|
| Delivery of primary care by community health clinics and
health service organizations are meeting these needs of consumers
in some communities by providing easy access to the services of
other more appropriate health professionals as well as physicians.
However, lack of timely access to needed health services and
waiting lists continue to be experienced universally.
|
| With regard to the Canada Health Act, consumers continue to
strongly support the principles contained in the act and would like
to see the political will to apply rigid consequences to those who
do not follow the principles.
|
| There is also support for a stronger role for the federal
government in setting national standards, both measurable and
accountable, allocating resources for comprehensiveness and
equity, and monitoring accountability to report back to the
taxpayer/consumer.
|
| As long as the provinces deliver the services, they need to be
pressured to deliver the services consistently across the country
and ensure their accessibility to all Canadians and be accountable
for the performance of their responsibilities.
|
| In the report's discussion of the prohibition of extra billing, the
fairness of "preventing individuals from purchasing the service" is
questioned. Critics of extra billing - and certainly CAC is one -
however, see the transaction as the purchase of the privilege of
gaining access to service when payment of the service itself is
charged to medicare. There is no constraint preventing individuals
from purchasing the service when the transaction is entirely
independent of the medicare program.
|
| In considering the pros and cons of a privately funded system
parallel to medicare, consumers look to the example of such a
situation in Britain and see the deep erosion of the public system
capacity and waiting lists that are far longer than those in Canada.
|
| Another example of the deleterious impact on consumers of
alternate private payment for a publicly provided service appears
in the Alberta CAC's "Canary" report. This report documents the
longer waiting lists for cataract treatment provided under the
public system in cities where alternate private public payment
systems were available from the same physicians.
|
| In contrast, an example of the positive impact on consumers of
improved management within the system is demonstrated in the
reduced waiting lists for cardiac care after the Cardiac Registry
was introduced in Ontario.
|
| It is certainly apparent that there are already aspects of a
two-tier system already existing in Canada. Consider the disparate
situations of one worker who is injured at work and his neighbour,
also in the work force and similarly injured at home. The first
worker is likely to receive accelerated access to treatment and
rehabilitation services due to the purchase arrangements that the
Workmen's Compensation Boards may make.
|
| The consumer who understands how the system works does
have an advantage in accessing its services and provides the
rationale for the constant efforts of the CAC to promote ways of
informing consumers about their rights in health care and how to
exercise them.
|
| On the subject of financing, it has been disappointing that the
report, once again, is suggesting consideration of user fees at
point of use as part of the financing solution - particularly in
view of the repeated studies that have documented the negative
impact on the economically vulnerable seniors and low income
earners in limiting their use of necessary health services. As yet,
CAC has found no convincing evidence on the merits of user fees
to consider changing its long-standing position that rejects user
fees in the medicare system.
|
| Suggestions in the report that mechanisms are needed to make
the individual aware of the cost of their care to medicare are
consistent with the proposals of the CAC in the early 1970s that
consumers receive statements of expenditures on their behalf by
medicare. Such a procedure would also allow the individual to
monitor that he has received the services that were billed to
medicare, thus providing one measure of accountability for
charged items.
|
| The prohibitive cost of implementing such a procedure and the
hospital systems' inability to assign individual costs were reasons
given at the time for rejecting the proposal. They may still be
valid objections if, even in the present computerized systems, the
administrative costs remain high in relation to the benefits.
|
| The options that are suggested in the report for reducing drug
costs - namely, a national drug formulary, which required use of
least-cost therapeutically equivalent effective drugs andmaintaining current prohibition of direct-to-consumer advertising
of prescription drugs - are all strongly consistent with
established CAC policies.
|
| Further suggestions from consumers to reduce the increasing
costs of drugs include: Assessment of the cost effectiveness as a
component of the new drug approval process; an effective
post-market surveillance of drug performances to identify drugs
having adverse side effects that require treatment in the
emergency room or a visit to a physician or hospitalisation - all
of which add cost to the system; expedite the approval process for
lower priced bio-equivalent generic drugs to enter the market; and
stronger monitoring of advertising of over-the-counter drugs.
|
| With respect to research, consumers recognize the importance
of the federal government's role in providing adequate funding for
research and its responsibility to regain its position as the
dominant funding source for health research to ensure that the
research is directed to issues of public interest. Consumers
appreciate research that contributes to the reduction of social and
economic costs for either the individual or the health care system.
|
| Consumers also see the need for an "awareness campaign to
inform Canadians about, for example, genetics research, animal
cloning and embryo research," as suggested in the report. It is of
utmost concern for consumers that the campaign be undertaken by
an unbiased, credible organization that is adequately resourced
and accountable for its public funding.
|
| CAC has long contended that consumers need to be fully
informed to participate in their decision-making on health issues
affecting them individually or collectively.
|
| Thank you for your attention, and we look forward to
discussing these issues with you.
|
| Dr. Joseph Chan, President, Ontario Association ofOptometrists: Madam chair, senators, on behalf of the Ontario
Association of Optometrists, I extend our deepest gratitude for
this opportunity to speak to you today.
|
| We are pleased to be able to offer you our perspective on this
national debate on health care delivery in Canada.
|
| The Ontario Association of Optometrists, OAO, is aprofessional association representing the over 1,000 optometrists
who practice in Ontario. Optometrists are widely regarded as the
primary eye care provider in this province. In this position, we
have a unique perspective on eye and vision care delivery in
Ontario.
|
| In our presentation today, I hope to touch on several key issues
discussed in Volume 4 of your committee's report, which have
particular significance for optometrists and the patients that we
serve.
|
| The OAO joins the committee in their support of the
patient-oriented principles espoused in the Canada Health Act,
namely, universality, accessibility, comprehensiveness andportability.
|
| We also support the concept of a patient "bill of rights" to
further define these values. Notwithstanding our support for these
principles, we believe that changes are both necessary and
possible within this framework.
|
| We strongly agree with the suggestion put forward by the 1997
National Forum on Health that said "public coverage should be
refocused to follow the care and not the site." To this, we would
add that public coverage should be focussed on the service, not on
the provider.
|
| The OAO believes that the current statutory provisions in the
Canada Health Act are obstacles to the use of non-physician
services by virtue of their exclusion. In other words, funding
seems biased towards physicians and hospitals.
|
| We would support amending the Canada Health Act to redefine
"medically necessary" services to include those services deemed
necessary for the continued or improved health of the patient,
regardless of the provider.
|
| With respect to primary eye care, inter-provincial differences in
the coverage of optometric diagnostic services have led to
limitations in patient access to optometric care. Certain provinces
do not have coverage for all medically necessary services
provided by optometrists. Instead, patients are channelled to
utilize insured specialists and institutions for the delivery of
primary eye care services, which could have been provided more
cost effectively, more locally and usually more quickly by
optometrists.
|
| Optometrists are more widely distributed geographically and
have the appropriate training, equipment and experience to
provide these health necessary services. Having optometrists
provide the insured services would ease the burden that is now
being placed on emergency rooms, ophthalmologists and family
physicians, and on the patients themselves who have to travel or
wait in discomfort to obtain the service from an insured provider.
|
| In your most recent report, you recognize that health services
are often not coordinated, nor are they provided by the most
appropriate practitioner. The knowledge and skills of many
practitioners are not being fully utilized. This is particularly true
for optometrists.
|
| For example, the ability of optometrists to prescribe drugs for
the treatment of eye disease is not equal in all provinces and
territories. Although optometrists are fully trained inpharmacology and in the appropriate use of therapeuticmedications for treatment of eye disease, only five provinces and
one territory have currently authorized optometrists to provide
these services.
|
| The four patient-oriented principles articulated by this
committee are compromised in the more restrictive provinces -
including Ontario - since patients do not have access to the same
level of care. In Ontario, patients get a referral to obtain a written
prescription, resulting in extra expense to the system and delays in
treatment.
|
| For the most effective use of resources, each health care
provider should be permitted to work at his or her highest level of
recognized professional training. We encourage the Senate to
make it a priority to encourage provincial governments to enact
the necessary changes so that practitioners can provide their full
scope of practice.
|
| In addition, the OAO supports the committee's suggestion that
there be a move away from the hierarchical structure that exists
and move towards the "spectrum" approach where all health care
providers are recognized for their strengths and more properly
valued and deployed. Coupled with this, the OAO believes that
long-term health resource planning needs to be undertaken on a
national level with global consideration.
|
| With regard to future planning for health care delivery, we
support the Senate committee's concept of primary care reform.
The reform will embody the following principles: it iscoordinated; accessible to all consumers; is provided by health
care professionals who has the right skills to meet the needs
individuals and the communities being served; and is accountable
to the local citizens through community governance.
|
| As we move forward on these reforms, though, it is important
to ensure that health care providers are paid fairly for their efforts.
While funding may be rationalized, efficiencies should not be
achieved at the providers' expense. Adequate funding is critical to
sustain the system and to encourage the graduation and retention
of new practitioners to our country.
|
| The OAO also recognizes the unique challenges related to
providing health care to our Aboriginal population. This group is
particularly at risk for many sight-threatening eye diseases, such
as diabetic retinopathy.
|
| The OAO recognizes that there is an unmet need for services
and is prepared to work with the population health strategies
aimed at providing a more multidisciplinary coordinated approach
to reach this group.
|
| In summary, the OAO has made eight recommendations. First,
that the services, not providers or locations be funded. Second,
that bias in the definitions of insured services, which restrict
accessibility, be removed. Third, that all barriers to creative and
efficient delivery of health services be removed. Fourth, that the
use of non-physician health care providers be encouraged,
particularly where it can be shown to be cost effective and such
action would enhance accessibility and reduce waiting times.
Fifth, that the knowledge and skills of health care providers be
fully utilized. Sixth, that a "spectrum" approach to health human
resources planning be adopted. Seventh, that primary care reform
includes the coordination and integration of non-physician
providers, and finally, that the federal government has an
obligation to increase funding for, and coordinate the delivery of,
eye care services to Aboriginal people in Canada.
|
| Thank you for this opportunity to share our thoughts on these
important issues.
|
| Your committee has an enormous task, but by facilitating this
meaningful discussion on health care in Canada, your efforts can
already be considered a success.
|
| The Deputy Chairman: I would like to clarify one pointMs Jones. We are not suggesting user fees in this committee. User
fees were on the table as a consideration. I just did not want the
record to suggest that we were suggesting user fees as a
committee. We are not.
|
| We cannot address this issue without putting everything on the
table for discussion, and that is how we approached it.
|
| Senator Callbeck: Dr. Chan, you mentioned that in five
provinces optometrists can write prescriptions. What is the reason
given in the other provinces why they cannot?
|
| Dr. Chan: At this particular point, just for information, all U.S.
States also allow optometrists to provide prescriptions.
|
| In many of the other provinces, this movement towards
authorizing optometrists to write prescriptions has only occurred
in the last three to five years.
|
| Currently, in Ontario the Ontario Association of Optometrists
has a proposal in front of the government, and we are moving
forward with the Ministry of Health to try to allow that to happen
in Ontario as well.
|
| I do not think there is any specific reason why it has not
occurred. I think it is partially due to the political process in each
of the provinces.
|
| Senator Callbeck: What are the five provinces?
|
| Dr. Chan: The five provinces are Alberta, Saskatchewan,
Quebec, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, and the one territory
is the Yukon.
|
| Senator Callbeck: I have a couple things marked here on the
Consumers' Association of Canada brief.
|
| You mentioned about the workers getting preferred treatment
under the Workers' Compensation Board. I take it you do not
agree with that?
|
| Ms Jones: Well, it is a little hard for us to understand. If the
goal is to get the worker back to work as soon as possible, why is
the worker who is injured at home not eligible for the same care
as the worker with a similar injury because he is at work? There
seems to be a disparity there when we claim that equity in the
health care system is one of the fundamental principles.
|
| Senator Callbeck: I do not disagree with you. I just wanted to
confirm your position.
|
| You also suggested that consumers receive statements of
expenditure on behalf of medicare. Do you have any evidence of
where this has been done that it has really been beneficial to do
so?
|
| Ms Jones: I cannot. I am trying to think back to the 1970s
when we were preparing our proposals, whether we had any
examples then or not. Mr. Fruitman is telling me that apparently
there is some reporting of this in Alberta, but I think that is quite
recent.
|
| Senator Callbeck: I believe that Saskatchewan did it at one
time. I do not know why they did not continue it.
|
| Ms Jones: That was my impression about the Alberta situation
also - that it had been discontinued because the high
administrative costs are a consideration.
|
| Senator Callbeck: With respect to suggestions from
consumers to reduce increasing costs of drugs, one of the things
you say here is "stronger monitoring of advertising
over-the-counter drugs." Would you please elaborate on that?
|
| Ms Jones: That there be clear indication of potential side
effects in relation to the over-the-counter drugs, because when
consumers are taking over-the-counter drugs, they do not have the
benefit of the professional advising them. Therefore, theinformation has to be all there.
|
| In a review of advertising, we found an imbalance between the
claims of efficacy and the reporting of possible side effects as
well as alerting consumers to the adverse consequences of the
medication if it is taken with certain other medications.
|
| There has been a long effort on the part of CAC to get full,
informative labelling on OTC drugs.
|
| Senator Callbeck: In other words, you feel that in certain
situations, if consumers had the proper information, they would
not be buying the drug and that would reduce the cost of drugs?
|
| Ms Jones: Right. In addition, as we mentioned earlier, adverse
side effects could mean a costly hospitalization and, at a
minimum, a pretty miserable feeling consumer.
|
| The Deputy Chairman: I have a quick supplementary to
Senator Callbeck in regard to a point on which we heard
testimony earlier today
|
| Has the Consumers' Association of Canada actually looked at
this notion of consumers receiving statements of expenditures in
view of the new technologies? We can get gas bills now and bills
that are itemized and broken down, and I am just wondering if the
Consumers' Association has taken a look at that again?
|
| Ms Jones: Well, we have not again, but that is why we are
rather tentative in promoting the idea that this could be an answer.
|
| I believe that, had it been introduced back when we were
suggesting it in the 1970s, the system would have adapted to that
and it would no longer be a costly administrative problem. It
should be explored again.
|
| The Deputy Chairman: The assumption appears to be that
because it did not appear to work then that it would not work
now. I do not think that is a proper assumption.
|
| Ms Jones: No. We are suggesting is that there needs to be
reconsideration in view of the computerized systems.
|
| The Deputy Chairman: It would also inform the public that
health care is not free.
|
| Ms Jones: That is one important aspect. As well, the benefits
payer could be certain that the service for which a reimbursement
is requested has been provided.
|
| There is the recent situation in Ontario where the consumer had
great difficulty in conveying that the physician had billed for
services extensively that he had not received.
|
| The Deputy Chairman: Exactly, thank you.
|
| Senator Robertson: With respect to your concern about the
improper use of drugs, I expect that re-emphasizes the importance
of moving to an interdisciplinary approach to the consumer.
|
| It would seem that the pharmacist is probably one of the most
important keys to giving advice about medications. It appears that
many medical doctors - especially the family doctors - do not
seem to have the time to explain the side effects. I think we will
have to look at that very carefully.
|
| I would like to move to another concern that some of us have
had for some time. Has your Consumers' Association done an
appraisal at any time about the quality of assessment of new
pharmaceuticals by the Department of Health? There seems to be
a lengthy period in comparison to some other jurisdictions, that
the approval of some of these drugs is done in a circuitous
manner, although we certainly want to make sure it is done well.
|
| From time to time there seems to be evidence that perhaps that
division of the Department of Health needs a little shaking down
- not for speed, in particular, but for the type of testing that they
do.
|
| It is difficult, we know, to keep up with the most up-to-date
developments in the testing and in the approval of drugs. I am not
sure if those departmental people have the opportunity for
continual additional training to maintain a level of confidence that
the Canadian people demand.
|
| Ms Jones: The Consumers' Association of Canada has not
done a particular study on that, however we were engaged when
there were hearings on the transition process and the changes
within the former Health Protection Branch.
|
| We got a reading from consumers at that point that there was
lack of confidence. I think it is time again to review whether the
changes and the increased resources to the assessment program
have really made a difference.
|
| The most impressive finding that we heard from consumers at
that time was the lack of confidence. The CAC has taken the
position that the emphasis within the assessment process should
be on safety, not on expediting the approval. We are aware that
there are consumer groups with specific diagnostic problems that
are pressing hard for early approval of new drugs. However, our
approach has been that we cannot sacrifice safety for the speed in
approval.
|
| There is also considerable awareness by consumers that the
faster the new drug is on the market, the more profits for the
pharmaceutical company. They are also aware that this can be
added cost to the system.
|
| We need to have close assessment that the effectiveness of the
new drug surpasses that of the similar type drugs that are on the
market, because in too many instances consumers in Canada are
paying for their drugs out of their own pocket. They are very
aware of those costs; that is why we have so many suggestions on
how to reduce them.
|
| Senator Robertson: If we could move to a decent pharmacare
program so that the consumer would not be hit with these
excessive costs, and if we could move to coverage for community
and home care rather than in the hotel-type hospital, it would
make a significant difference.
|
| Do you believe we could do that within the existing framework
of the Canada Health Act? How do we pay for it?
|
| Do you believe we could make sufficient savings by better
design delivery to help pay for those programs? Or do you believe
that Canadians would have to come around to some form of - I
do not like the word "user fees" - a participatory process for
certain levels of income?
|
| Our governments are saying they have no more money and that
they cannot increase dramatically to the system. I suppose a
problem for us to address is whether we can get sufficient savings
by doing things differently now or would we have to go to some
other means - a blend of something else?
|
| Ms Jones: We might question how you could determine that
until you have tried.
|
| It would put a much heavier responsibility on the drug
assessment system so that we were sure that it was operating
effectively. That is really the rationale behind our suggestion that
the cost effectiveness of the introduction of new drugs be part of
the assessment program. It is not now. Australia had it for a time
- with great opposition.
|
| We have indicated our concern that there would be heavy cost
implications by doing it. However, we also see the importance of
health promotion and health prevention in reducing costs in the
long term. Those areas have been cut back the most and are
always the areas that are cut back when there are any constraints
on the system.
|
| There is evidence now that the older population is going to be
healthier in the future, and I think that has relieved people of
some of the concern of that high cost down the road. I think the
health promotion in promoting self-care could be very effective as
a cost-reduction technique.
|
| Senator Robertson: Well, thank you. I shall not go further
with this.
|
| Dr. Chan, thank you for coming. You have five provinces under
your belt now, so good luck with the rest of them, and may we
have more acceptance of other professions in the health system.
Thank you for coming.
|
| Senator Cordy: I would like to talk about the issue of
pharmacare and pharmaceuticals.
|
| Has the Consumers' Association done any work in terms of the
amount of money that pharmaceuticals spend on marketing? In
your brief you talked about maintaining restrictions on direct-to-consumer advertising, but the reality is that with television -
particularly in the American channels - Canadians are receiving
direct-to-consumer advertising by the pharmaceuticals.
|
| In addition, I have a number of who are in the pharmaceutical
industry and there is - it certainly appears to me as an outsider
- a tremendous amount of money spent by the pharmaceuticals
in direct marketing to the health care professions. I am talking
marketing in terms of trips, golf, and that type of thing.
|
| Have you done any work in that area?
|
| Ms Jones: We have not, but I recently saw a report from the
Families USA, a health consumer advocacy group in Washington,
and they identified that the pharmaceutical companies spend twice
as much on marketing and promotion than on all of the research
that they sponsor.
|
| We are dependent on the research findings of other consumer
groups, and that has been reported in other places as well. It was
just this very recent report that I read that immediately came to
mind.
|
| There are concerns relating to any changes to our policy on the
prohibition of direct-to-consumer advertising. We see that as
adding tremendous cost to the system. I know of another finding
on the U.S. system - about four years ago in 1997. After they
allowed direct-to-consumer advertising, the pharmaceuticalcompanies were spending more on advertising to consumers than
to the health professionals. That is pretty scary, considering how
much they have spent on that.
|
| Indeed, we see the television advertising from the U.S. as a real
deterrent to the consumers' evaluation of the drugs. We do know
that that promotion has prompted consumers to ask their
physicians about changing their prescription to this great new
advertised drug. We certainly see it is a very important restriction
to maintain if we are ever going to restrain the drug costs.
|
| Senator Cordy: I had also heard those statistics. The amount
of money spent on marketing is quite alarming - especially
when you consider that in discussions about the high costs of
drugs, the costs are usually attributed to the amount of money that
is spent on research and development, not marketing. I am
alarmed by those statistics.
|
| Dr. Chan, my next questions is an offshoot as to why you
appeared today - to include optometrists within the realm of the
health delivery system. People very often tend not to think about
eye care when they are thinking about receiving health benefits.
How do we ensure that children, particularly, are receiving proper
eye care?
|
| I know many years ago in the school system the public health
nurse would do an eye check on the children. Children were given
referrals if it was considered necessary. Lately, I have not seen the
public health nurses in the schools doing that. How do you ensure
that children are receiving proper eye care?
|
| Dr. Chan: You are correct in your observation that primary
students are no longer screened in the schools. The community
public health units no longer do this because of funding.
|
| In terms of ensuring that children do receive proper eye care,
there is probably a two-prong approach.
|
| First, as we move forward on health care reform and adopt a
multidisciplinary format for care, I think that the health care team
will expand to include other non-medical members, including
optometrists. In a community health care clinic, for example, if
you had an optometrist on staff, it could be part of an annual
assessment. When the child comes in for a check-up, the
optometrist would be readily available within the location. This
would apply to a hospital, clinic and so forth. From that
viewpoint, it makes the services of an optometrist more
accessible.
|
| Ensuring that those services are covered is certainly part of it.
Currently, in all provinces, from what I understand, those services
are covered.
|
| The second prong is patient education. I think that is part of
what your committee will be looking at as well. A well-informed
patient, or in this case, a well-informed parent, will seek out these
services.
|
| The Ontario Association of Optometrists has been vigilant in
this respect, and we acknowledge the fact that many of these
children are not getting caught early enough. We have participated
in many public service campaigns, public education campaigns to
help educate parents about the need to have their children's eyes
checked.
|
| In Ontario, the "Healthy Babies, Healthy Children" initiative
serves to address some of the concerns that you mentioned. This
program includes not only eye care but also the full range of
services that need to be administered to a child at a very young
age to try to catch problems that could have long-lasting effects
on their ability to be properly educated and properly adapt to
society.
|
| Senator Callbeck: Dr. Chan, your brief contains a suggestion
to amend the Canadian Health Act to expand the definition of
"medically necessary services." If we do that, those services have
to be paid for. The only reference I see to the financial aspect is
when you say, "Introducing a financial barrier by requiring the
patients to pay for a service restricts their ability to access that
necessary service."
|
| I would like to hear your thoughts on how you think these extra
services can be paid for?
|
| Dr. Chan: What we want to address with that amendment to
the Canada Health Act has less to do with allowing additional
services, for example, but to have more equity in terms of where
those services are provided.
|
| In Saskatchewan, for example, where medically necessary
services are not covered, a patient may walk in with an acute red
eye. If this patient sees an optometrist, the visit will have to be
paid for out-of-pocket. However, if the patient travels to
Saskatoon to see an ophthalmologist or a medical doctor for
treatment, the costs would be covered.
|
| In our recommendation, we do not believe that the number of
patients who require those services will increase just because
optometrists are permitted to treat those patients. We feel that in
some respects there might be some efficiencies where, in fact, you
may be able to reduce the cost of treating these common ailments
that occur.
|
| Senator Callbeck: If we expand the definition in the Health
Care Act and the expenditures go up because of those added
things, where do you think the money that pays for these should
come from? Do you think it should come through the taxation
system; in other words, should the government increase taxes?
|
| Dr. Chan: I do not think the association has a position on
where that funding to cover an increase in services needs to come
from. I expect we are prepared to consider any model that meets
the services.
|
| We realize that it is becoming increasingly evident that we
cannot be all things to all people in terms of the health care, and
so there will be some requirement to prioritize the services. What
is important, however, is once you have made those decisions
about which core services are covered nationally, that those
services are available to the public from whatever provider they
choose. If, for example, an optometrist or an audiologist is more
accessible in the community, then the patient should have the
ability to see that person.
|
| I do not think our association is advocating that we blow the
barn door open and cover everything. I hope that that was not our
impression. I think that our suggestion there was more to address
the accessibility issue.
|
| Senator Kirby: I have a brief question for Ms Jones. I will
read you a paragraph and then you can comment on it, because I
happen to agree with the paragraph. You say "The consumer who
understands how the system works does have an advantage in
accessing its services." Then you go on to say that you promote
ways of informing consumers about how to effectively get into
the system.
|
| All my anecdotal evidence would absolutely agree that you are
right, that if you know more about the system, you can take
advantage of it.
|
| My question is in two parts. First, have you ever done any
surveys of your members to try to understand what they do and
do not understand about the system? Second, if at some time you
could send us just a couple of examples of the kind of
communications you send CAC members in terms of explaining
to them, as you put it, how to exercise their rights, that would be
helpful for us to have.
|
| Ms Jones: We have not done a survey recently.
|
| Senator Kirby: I had thought you might have done some type
of survey of your members.
|
| Ms Jones: We are much more dependent on the spontaneous
reporting by consumers.
|
| We also have tried to get that message across in meeting with
small groups. We have recently developed a brochure of the
responsibilities of the doctor, the pharmacists and the consumer in
their health care. This brochure has been useful in formulating the
questions that the consumer should be asking and the answers
they should be expecting from those two professional groups. Our
theme is that an informed consumer is an effective consumer in
relation to anything at issue or in the marketplace. This is just
basic to our approach to the issue.
|
| From the anecdotal reporting that we have, I think it is clear
that even a short discussion with someone about how they can
better use the system pays off the consumer in getting the service
they want.
|
| It is not always who you know; we are saying it is what you
know too. I think that is a big area that should be developed.
|
| Senator Kirby: Thank you. I would agree with you on that.
|
| The Deputy Chairman: On behalf of the committee, I would
like to sincerely thank our witnesses for a very enlightening hour
of testimony, and I will now ask our next witnesses to come to the
table.
|
| They are, from Medical Devices Canada, Peter Goodhand;
from AstraZeneca, Gerry McDole; and from Comcare Health
Services, Mary Jo Dunlop.
|
| Senator Michael Kirby (Chairman) in the Chair.
|
| The Chairman: We will begin with Mr. Goodhand
|
| Mr. Peter Goodhand, President, Medical Devices Canada
(MEDEC): Let me begin by thanking the members of this
committee for the opportunity to appear before you and to
participate in one of the most important debates occurring today:
the debate on the future of our health care system.
|
| As you well know, the majority of Canadians feel the status
quo of our health care system is not acceptable, and this
committee should be applauded for taking a leadership role in
shaping this debate.
|
| Medical Devices Canada - better known as MEDEC - is a
national association representing over 125 medical device and
diagnostic companies. Our members are dedicated to serving the
health care community through the provision of high quality
medical products and services that benefit Canadians. Founded in
1973, MEDEC serves as a primary source for advocacy,
information and education for the industry. Our members account
for more than $2 billion of medical devices purchased annually in
Canada.
|
| Our members are world leaders in their own right, developing
innovative technologies that are used around the world. Our
membership develops technologies that work in concert withother health care technology sectors, such as imaging and
pharmaceuticals. Our members are responsible for enabling
hospitals to move from being a building of bricks and mortar to a
fully functional health care centre. They put the tools in the hands
of doctors and nurses and play a vital role in the delivery of health
care services that Canadians expect.
|
| As I mentioned previously, the committee has done an
outstanding job on shaping the debate of health care in Canada. I
would like to focus on four areas that are most significant to the
medical device and technology industry: support for health care
infrastructure; infrastructure and infostructure; funding forinnovative health research; and, health care technologyassessment.
|
| I would first like to talk about support for health care
infrastructure. Medical devices and technologies are instrumental
in improving the quality of life for Canadians. While we often
hear of the miracle drugs available on the market, we hear less
often of the "cutting edge" technology that has revolutionized the
way health care is practised. Better and more advanced
technology means better and more accurate diagnosis, more
success in curing disease and alleviating pain and, most
importantly, improving the quality of life for Canadians.
|
| It was not long ago that routine surgery would mean a patient
would be in a health care facility for several days or weeks.
Today, many of these surgeries are classified as "day surgery."
More and more procedures are becoming less invasive,minimizing the recovery time for the patient and allowing a
speedy return to work or independent living.
|
| Allow me to illustrate a few examples. Gallbladder surgery a
decade ago was an invasive and traumatic procedure. With the
development of laparoscopic surgery, patients undergo a relatively
minor surgery, and are usually discharged from the hospital within
24 hours. Scarring is minimal and the recovery of the patient is
more expeditious.
|
| Another example is cardiac stents. Prior to the development of
stents, patients were faced with a temporary fix from angioplasty.
With the development of cardiac stents, the effectiveness of the
less invasive procedure was significantly improved. The next
generation of stents are drug coated, and initial data suggests zero
restenosis of the arteries.
|
| Modern medical devices and technologies have not only
improved health outcomes for Canadian patients, by enabling less
invasive procedures and shorter hospital stays they have also
supported cost effectiveness in the health care system.
|
| MEDEC is pleased to see that the committee recognizes the
important and essential role of medical devices and technologies
in our health care system. Yet despite the recognition of the
essential role it plays in our health care system, as noted by this
committee, Canada lags behind other industrialized nations in
terms of availability of health care technology.
|
| We agree with the committee that the recent $1 billion
investment in health care technology was a positive step by the
federal government. However, we believe that it is still
insufficient to ensure that Canadians obtain timely access to
medical services they need.
|
| We currently have a very ad hoc system in Canada in terms of
employing the necessary technologies. While many technologies
and devices are available on the market, they are not necessarily
utilized by health care facilities due to the constraints on funding.
Depending on where you live, health care professionals may or
may not have access to necessary diagnostic equipment or
devices.
|
| A recent case in Winnipeg illustrates the consequences of silo
funding and the restriction of medical progress. An OB/GYN
surgeon left his practice and Canada because he was frustrated
with the slow adoption of new technologies. The physician had
championed the use of an innovative technology that would
provide better care for his patients and replace a major surgical
procedure. The technology - called TVT tape - is a minimally
invasive approach to cure female stress incontinence. Due to silo
funding, the physician was severely restricted in the number of
patients that could be treated by this simple, more effective
technology, at lower risk. In this instance, not only were
Canadians denied timely access to technology, but a vital human
resource also departed in frustration.
|
| The committee has also identified a problem with the recent
federal government funding initiative. The funding was provided
for the purchase of medical equipment and technology, but did not
provide for any operational funding. This has led provinces and
territories to look for other sources of funding - sometimes from
within their existing constrained health care budgets - to finance
the operation of these technologies. We believe this is also meant
that the uptake of this funding by some of the provinces and
territories has been slow.
|
| In our correspondence with the provinces and territories, we too
found a wide variation in the utilization of these funds. Some
provinces, Ontario for example, have provided an accounting of
how these dollars are being spent, while others are still
determining if and how their allocation will be spent.
|
| MEDEC is also concerned about the re-use of single-use
devices. Faced with overwhelming demands on their financial
resources, some hospitals are re-using devices that are developed
for single use. These products are developed, tested, and licensed
by Health Canada for single use only. This practice means that a
patient may be exposed to a single-use device that has been used
several times on other patients. The re-use of a single-use device,
such as a PCTA or diagnostic catheter, is potentially creating a
risk to patient safety.
|
| We believe that the health care providers should adhere to the
same standards that are imposed by the federal government on
industry in bringing these devices to market.
|
| We would like to support the committee in its astuteness to put
forward a recommendation for the federal government to commit
to a longer term program of financing for innovative health care
technologies, including support for the operation of these devices
and procedures. This will ensure that our health care facilities
have access to the latest technologies and have the funding to use
these technologies and train the necessary health careprofessionals to use the technologies effectively.
|
| Although the up-front investment in medical devices and
technologies can sometimes be intimidating to our individual
health care departments, physicians or professionals, the impact
on the overall health care system frequently leads to greater
efficiency, to a reduction in waiting lists, to better utilization of
scarce human resources and a rapid return to a productive or
independent living.
|
| In your report, you have identified each of these areas as
essential elements in creating a sustainable health care system.
The "fault lines" of timely access and human resource shortages
can be alleviated by sound investment in medical technology.
|
| In terms of infrastructure and infostructure, in the "Interim
Report" the committee identifies some witnesses that support the
need to invest in infostructure at the expense of increasingly long
waiting lists and denying Canadians access to modern medical
devices and technologies. We would submit to the committee that
this would be a mistake. We also believe that the two issues can
be addressed in concert.
|
| We support the need to implement a modern health care
information system but do not believe that its implementation has
to happen at the cost of reform in other areas of the system.
|
| Allow me to provide an example to the committee where we
see the potential for infrastructure and infostructure investment
without impacting the existing health care system.
|
| Industry has led the Efficient Healthcare Consumer Response,
EHCR, and has also worked with the Ontario HospitalAssociation, OHA, on the re-engineering of the health care supply
chain. Health care supplies are purchased and inventoried in an
antiquated manner. The system is largely manual and is a catalyst
for errors and confusion.
|
| With the introduction of e-commerce, we will see a system
where the right product will get to the right place at the right time.
We will no longer see a situation where a hospital is without the
supplies it needs or surgeries are postponed because the right
equipment is not available.
|
| The modernization of the health care supply chain will require
investment in both infostructure and infrastructure, but the return
on investment will be quickly realized, allowing the hospitals to
re-invest in other areas of the health care system.
|
| With respect to investment in research, Canada is privileged to
have world class researchers and academic research facilities. You
need look no further than the leadership in robotic surgery at the
London Health Sciences Centre or the pioneering work of the
Ottawa Heart Institute to appreciate that Canadians play a
leadership in revolutionizing the world of medicine.
|
| Canada also has research-driven industry partners, such as
CryoCath in Montreal and the World Heart Corporation in
Ottawa, with the skills and knowledge to turn brilliant concepts
into successful, viable, safe and effective devices.
Canadian-owned companies and leading multinationals are
developing new technology from Canadian research that will
benefit millions of people worldwide. Ironically, given current
health care funding, Canada may be among the last countries to
adopt these new technologies.
|
| The development of world-class technologies and companies in
Canada is in part dependent on the presence of a domestic health
care market that purchases and fully utilizes breakthrough
technology. The current health care funding model in Canada is,
of necessity, focussed on providing adequate care at the lowest
possible cost. Health care reform must include flexibility in
funding that will enable health care institutions to both acquire
and fully utilize modern technology.
|
| With continued investment into research, we can ensure that
Canada will remain a leader in the development of medical
devices and technologies. MEDEC fully supports the committee's
option on increasing the share of federal spending on health
research to 1 per cent of the total health care budget.
|
| We would also ask the committee to recognize and support the
critically important aspects of linking together scientific research,
academic medicine and innovative industry.
|
| MEDEC believes that health care technology assessments can
be helpful for government to adopt new and improved medical
technology. However, we would like to point out that while
Health Care Technology Assessment may be a useful tool in
determining that the right technology is available to Canadians, it
should not impede the development or perfection of medical
devices and technologies.
|
| Unlike pharmaceutical or biotechnology products, medical
devices and technologies are rapidly upgraded and improved after
the product is introduced. The nature of our industry is
incremental innovation, and any change in the role or use of
health care technology assessment should be sensitive to the
evolving nature of the sector.
|
| While all technologies introduced to the market are proven to
be safe and effective prior to their introduction, their usefulness
invariably improves over time. As physicians become more
familiar with a particular technology or procedure, outcomes
improve and efficiencies increase. Based on their feedback,
changes may be made to modify and improve the technology.
Health care technology assessments should not restrict this from
happening.
|
| Ideally, MEDEC and its members would like to see increased
global harmonization in both health care technology assessments
and regulatory approvals. Assessments performed in other
jurisdictions should be given consideration. While health care
technology assessment can be a useful tool in the environment of
limited health care resources, we need enough flexibility in the
system to allow adoption of new technologies.
|
| In conclusion, I would like to thank the committee again for the
opportunity to present to you today. We are encouraged by your
forward-thinking approach to the health care system and your
recognition of the importance of medical devices andtechnologies. Clearly, you understand and appreciate that, in
reforming and improving our health care system in Canada and
ensuring that Canadians receive the best health care available, a
continuing investment in medical devices and technologies is
required.
|
| I thank you for your time and would be happy to answer any
questions you have.
|
| The Chairman: Our next speaker is Mary Jo Dunlop, the
President of Comcare Health Services. I really should have
encouraged Mr. Goodhand to do this too, but rather than read
your report in detail, can you hit the highlights? I know there will
be a lot of questions we will want to ask you as well.
|
| Ms Mary Jo Dunlop, President, Comcare Health Services:
Thank you very much. I apologize for not having my remarks to
you ahead of time, but due to the sudden illness of a family
member, I had a crash course in acute care over the last two
weeks. Most of this was written at his bedside.
|
| The Chairman: How is he now?
|
| Ms Dunlop: He is very poor, but thank you for asking.
|
| The Chairman: Oh, that is too bad.
|
| Ms Dunlop: My expertise is home care, so I will comment
only on that aspect of the "Interim Report." I will try not to repeat
anything that is well documented but limit my comments to the
role of the federal government.
|
| Comcare is a community health service provider. It is a
national for-profit company. It has 30 locations in Canada, starting
in Montreal in 1969. We have over 6,000 employees.
|
| You have heard a great deal about the diversity of home care
programs in the provinces and territories. I would suggest that it is
also very evident in the working conditions of our employees.
Wage ranges still fall far behind the institutional wage ranges, and
they vary a great deal between the east and west coasts.
|
| An excellent example of the federal government's role in
research is the recently launched study funded by Human
Resources Development Canada, in collaboration with the
Canadian Home Care Association and the Canadian Association
for Community Care. This is a very important piece of work
when it comes to understanding how we are going to plan and
resource home care in our future.
|
| Research funding through the more traditional health research
programs and initiatives is seldom available to a for-profit
company. As a result, organizations with valuable ideas about care
models, including the need for investment in information and
communication technologies, are often slow to make progress.
|
| With better information, we could move to evidence-based
practice in home care, which we do not currently observe, and in
doing so, we could make our way towards standards in home care
and also to a national home care program.
|
| In addition, technologies that are already available and being
used in countries other than Canada would allow us to see more
patients with the same human and financial resources that we
currently have.
|
| As long as there is an accountability framework for research
funds and the need for an evaluation plan, I do not see any reason
to exclude for-profit companies from these research activities.
|
| Comments made in the "Interim Report" about the need for
timely transfer of knowledge based on the research are welcome
and absolutely necessary if we are going to improve practice in
home care.
|
| In addition to research, the federal government can play a role
in establishing the principles, if not standards, of a national home
care program. The principles would be consistent with those of
the Canada Health Act, thus ensuring that Canadians would have
consistency in access, portability and comprehensivenessanywhere in the country, without jeopardizing their home care
services. We frequently hear stories of patients who have been
afraid to move from one location to another once their home care
service has been established.
|
| The federal government must decide on what core services are
within the home care programs. That is a very difficult decision. It
would be a shame if the program were exclusive to only
medically necessary services, because social care and assistance
with activities of daily living have proven effective in keeping the
elderly in their homes.
|
| With regard to national standards, our organization was the first
home health care company to have a national accreditation award
by the Canadian Council on Health Services Accreditation.
Therefore we disagree with those who suggest that there cannot
be national standards.
|
| The approach can be standardized across Canada. However, if
"standards" are limited to resource allocation, then other factors
will influence how successful we will be at developing a national
set of standards. Things like financial health of the individual
province, physician practice in that province, other resources
available, provincial regulations that concern other health care
professions, and political will all complicate the ability to agree
on national standards. Today, variation in practice is great, and
provider incentives are not aligned with patient outcomes.
|
| The place where we have the most opportunity to change our
practice is to begin with the end in mind. We are not spending any
more money; we are just looking after more people with the same
money.
|
| We need investment in information and communication
technology in home care. Much of the technology already exists,
but our home care models in Canada have traditionally been on a
fee-for-service basis and they have only paid for a face-to-face
visit. Use of telehealth or other mechanisms through which we
can monitor patients are very poorly used so far in the country.
|
| We have been pleased to see the candour with which the
committee discussed the issue of private health care. As a private
for-profit corporation whose largest client group is the provincial
government, we believe in public administration and the
principles of the Canada Health Act.
|
| However, we see in practice every day a number of individuals
who either do not qualify for government programs or who buy
private service in addition to that provided by the government
because the government allocation is insufficient for their needs.
To suggest that provincial home care programs meet demand now
is incorrect. Even now, our provinces are just one insurer of home
care service. Obviously, Worker's Compensation and some
individual insurance products such as extended health benefits
also pay for home care services.
|
| Long-term care insurance is an insurance product that is on the
market, but in any practice we have seen in our company - and
we do about 3.5 million interactions a year with patients - it is
very expensive and limiting. The federal government should
consider a variety of financial mechanisms to support caregivers,
including tax concessions, employment insurance and related
employment legislation.
|
| We believe that the private sector is an important partner as we
go forward. Our participation does not contradict the Canada
Health Act, nor does it represent privatization. Privatization, in
our mind, is the active transfer of accountability from the public
sector to the private sector for regulation, financing and
production. We work well within a publicly administered system.
We have proven ourselves as valued stakeholder organizations
providing excellent health care within the context of economic
discipline. We focus on efficiency and effectiveness in
administration in order to invest in clinical excellence.
Profitability means re-investment in our system, which, as you
have observed in your documentation, is badly needed.
|
| We do need leadership from the federal government, both in
research and investment in information and communication
technologies. We are not asking for additional money; we are
asking for some access to some of those grants and programs that
are already available. I believe that we are just building on the
principles of equitable treatment and equitable access to resources
within Canada, and that investment will allow us to work towards
evidence-based practice so we will be more appropriate in our
utilization of human resources and financial resources. That can
lead to standards and, by virtue of the information, will move
towards a system of care.
|
| Mr. Gerry McDole, President and CEO, AstraZeneca:
Senators, I appreciate the opportunity to share my views with you
today on such important public policy issues.
|
| I have read with interest your "Issues and Options" paper, and I
would like to comment on a few of the points that have been
made. It is difficult to keep to five to seven minutes on a complex
issue, but we will do our best.
|
| Like you, I have always been very passionate about our
medicare system. I am old enough to remember with as well as
without, and I must tell you I prefer with. I remember the three
years I spent paying off the debt of the birth of our first child.
|
| Good systems can always be improved, and the single most
important change that that the system needs is a re-orientation of
the course, and by that I mean refocussing on the patient. Today
our fiscal pressure seems to be building a new system that is more
financially driven, and I believe that that is not in the interest of
Canadians' health and one that Canadian health can ill afford.
|
| Your work thus far has highlighted, among several other issues,
the much- publicized concern of rising drug expenditures. I would
like to offer my perspective on the debate of drug cost-containment policies and patient health outcomes.
|
| I want to say up front that I understand the challenge that
everyone has. Policy-makers must manage the limited public
funds and balance that against their fiscal responsibility, while at
the same time ensuring access to the proven medications.
|
| Having said that, public policy studies being conducted at
Harvard Medical School and at McGill University suggest that it
is time for us to revisit the rationale behind cost-containment and
other interventions since there are unintended and undesirable
results of well-intentioned but perhaps too "broad brushed"
approaches to drug management.
|
| Their advice is that studies should examine the degree of
inappropriate use of our medications before policies are
introduced. For the record, I define "appropriate use" as the right
drug for the right patient at the right time.
|
| Our industry has a key role to play in ensuring that our
scientific discussions with physicians encourage appropriate use,
and the answer to these issues lies in a collaborative approach
between industry and government. Policy-makers have, for too
long, tried to resolve issues surrounding our health care system
and rising drug expenditures alone. We need an evidence-based
approach to policy development and intervention, collecting the
data before, during and after implementation.
|
| I would like to quickly address the issue of brand name drug
prices, because we seem to remain in the media as a hot button.
|
| Several recent studies have demonstrated that utilization rates
and an aging population are behind the growth of the drug
program budgets - not the drug prices, per se. We mix up drug
budgets with drug prices.
|
| As you know, the federal government reviews each new
product through the Patented Medicine Prices Review Board. The
latest report shows that prices for innovative medicines are about
10 per cent below the international average. In fact, in the basket
of eight, there are only two countries lower than Canada. I , and I
might add that my own company has the second lowest prices in
the world after Korea.
|
| While our prices are monitored at the federal level, at the
provincial level we provide good cost/benefit studies each time
we apply to the formularies for drug reimbursement. Therefore, I
would suggest, honourable senators, that Canadians are already
well positioned to get value for money when medicines are used
appropriately.
|
| Following the most recent health ministers meeting in
Newfoundland, I read newspaper reports that suggested the
provinces feel pressured to approve new drugs that are available
in other provinces. A quick review of the approval rates from one
province to another would suggest that this is certainly not the
case.
|
| Nevertheless, it is interesting that provincial formularies do
vary considerably from one province to the other. One might ask
"what are the criteria for new product listings?" Does this support
a national cost effectiveness strategy, as suggested by the Federal
Ministry of Health is another question.
|
| My personal opinion is that our industry would be willing to
work with governments on any approach that delivers the best
possible individual care to patients using the available health care
resources.
|
| Today, however, a grave concern for patients, physicians and
health outcomes more generally, is that many provinces seem to
want to limit the number of medicines available to patients in
each product class. That is a concern to me because it does not
make scientific or economic sense. The federal regulations ensure
that new products are priced within a range in any given class -
even when there are substantial improvements. From a purely cost
point of view, it does not really make much difference which you
choose.
|
| These incremental improvements, in fact, are what drive
research. The history of medicine, pharmaceutical research, and
humankind in general is based on these incremental steps and
incremental innovations.
|
| Take, for example, the automotive industry. You did not get
your first car with ABS brakes, with air bags, seat belts and a
whole lot of other whistles and bells. With drugs too, these
improvements lead over time to reduced side effects, better or
faster healing, more convenient dosage forms, and so forth.
|
| They provide the physicians with more options to respond to a
patient's individual needs - no two patients are the same. These
medicines, unfortunately, are sometimes dismissed because they
are not dramatic breakthroughs.
|
| The committee also suggests that the reference-based pricing
should be among those serious policy options the government
might consider. Perhaps the committee would want to look again
at British Columbia's failed experiment with its reference-based
pricing.
|
| As you may know, the current government is now in fact
looking at alternatives to this system - which some suggest was
really just two-tiered medicine at its worst. For too many people,
this scheme meant that they could only get the medicine their
doctor prescribed if they had the money.
|
| Indeed, a poll asked B.C. health care professionals about the
impact of changing patients' prescriptions to fit the system;90 per cent of pharmacists and 95 per cent of physicians reported
that their patients had problems as a result. These percentages did
not diminish after the first year of introduction, by the way. It
continues to this day, some three years into the program.
|
| In addition, a B.C.-based policy research institute investigated
the savings generated by this cost-containment policy and found
that drug costs in fact overall grew at a faster rate in B.C. than in
any other province in Canada. They continued to grow over an
extended period of time. Moreover, it did not calculate any other
additional health care costs that were incurred as a result of the
policy. I have appended this for your information, thisinformation, to this paper.
|
| This brings me back then to the cost-containment policies
implemented without evaluating their impacts. HonourableSenators, we need to build a system that strengthens the
patient-physician relationship. Let us look for innovative and
cost-effective approaches that start with the patient's needs.
|
| For example, disease management programs are being
implemented into several Canadian jurisdictions. Disease
management is a systematic and evidence-based approach to
utilization of resources to achieve the desired health care
outcomes for patients. These programs are bringing the patients,
the health care providers, government, industry, information
technology and academia into a partnership that assumes that
health care and outcomes can be better. It shifts away from the
isolated inputs and controls to a systems view that works towards
an integration of components and improvement of the health of
whole populations.
|
| What is genius about the disease management concept is how it
really works. It begins with a baseline measurement, followed by
an analysis and then feedback to physicians. The feedback is
where the genius comes to life. All physicians want to do the best
for their patients. When they get the feedback they are quick to
adjust their behaviour patterns. It allows for better interventions.
In fact, you continue to raise the bar as new measurements and
new improvements come forward. All of these quality
improvements for patients are what makes disease management
shine against the other alternatives that exist today.
|
| These initiatives are opportunities to demonstrate a health
management approach that is a feasible alternative to restrictive
formularies and to the silo budgeting. It is the future of health
care, in my view, honourable senators.
|
| These programs do not ration care; they expand it. They save
money in the process by reducing hospital visits or other more
expensive interventions and by simply keeping healthy. That
should be the goal of our entire heath system: to keep people
healthy.
|
| I thank you for your time and would be pleased to answer any
of your questions.
|
| The Chairman: Thank you. Before turning to Senator Keon, I
wonder if I could ask Ms Dunlop a couple of questions for
clarification.
|
| On page four of your brief, you say:
|
The approach to home care can be consistent across Canada.
However, if "standards" are limited to resource allocation
then other factors will influence how successful we will be at
developing a national set of standards.
|
| Can you explain what you mean by that?
|
| Ms Dunlop: The Canadian Council of Health Services
Accreditation has a standards document that you follow when you
go through a national accreditation.
|
| The Chairman: I am sorry to interrupt, but this is for a
profession, not for an organization?
|
| Ms Dunlop: No, it is for an organization for their home care
accreditation.
|
| The Chairman: I see, okay.
|
| Ms Dunlop: So their approach is consistent. If looking at
creating national standards, and the national standards are around
allocation of resources, what is appropriate in terms of how many
home-making hours someone should have, how many therapy
visits someone should have? It becomes more complex because it
is no longer about approach; it is about all those things.
|
| Most of the health professions are regulated by the provinces,
so that we employ probably 12 different kinds of homemakers
across Canada.
|
| The Chairman: Sorry, home care is one thing we have heard
very little on, and that is why I am asking you the question.
|
| When you say "different kinds of home care providers," what
do you mean?
|
| Ms Dunlop: They have different titles. They have different
scopes of practice.
|
| The Chairman: Different skill sets?
|
| Ms Dunlop: Yes, different academic preparations.
|
| The Chairman: Just give me some examples. You would have
a nurse? You would have a certified nurse?
|
| Ms Dunlop: Nursing is one of the more consistent, but with the
home support staff, we have four levels just in Ontario. We have
several levels in British Columbia. There are those who can
perform delegated acts and those who cannot. Many of them have
different titles. It is very confusing and it is not consistent.
|
| Therefore, when you talk about standards and you are trying to
relate the standard to the academic preparation of the individual,
then it becomes more complex because the regulations are
provincial.
|
| The Chairman: In contrast to the fact that a doctor is licensed
nationally and a nurse is effectively licensed nationally.
|
| Ms Dunlop: That is right.
|
| The Chairman: You are licensed provincially. Not only are the
licences different, but the job descriptions are different, right?
|
| Ms Dunlop: That is right.
|
| The Chairman: The scope of practice rules are different.
|
| Ms Dunlop: That is right. Most of the standards with which we
comply are with the transfer payment agencies of the provinces,
and they all have their own.
|
| The Chairman: They are not national standards?
|
| Ms Dunlop: No. The problem with home care is that not that
there are no standards; it is that there are so many standards and
they are dictated by individual organizations.
|
| The Chairman: Further down on that page, you say that
essentially, up until now, you only fund face-to-face visits. Are
you really trying to say that some of the things - remote
electronics, for example, whereby blood pressure and other things
could be monitored from a distance - you could do, but would
not receive reimbursement because you did not see somebody
face-to-face?
|
| Ms Dunlop: That is right, so there is no incentive and little
ability.
|
| The Chairman: Why would you do it?
|
| Ms Dunlop: Well, because I think I am trying to prove the
system wrong, that there is a better way to do this within the same
resources.
|
| Part of our agenda is to put in a national information system so
that at least we could monitor people with the same diagnosis that
were having different resource utilization with the same diagnosis.
For instance, if Nurse Jones is using four visits to teach a new
diabetic and someone else is using eight, then let us find a best
practice to make sure that our teaching is consistent and that
becomes your standard.
|
| The Chairman: Right. Are you therefore training a lot of your
own people?
|
| Ms Dunlop: Oh, absolutely.
|
| The Chairman: So they are not all coming out of formal
educational institutions?
|
| Ms Dunlop: Well, actually, everyone comes out of a formal
educational institution except a very basic homemaker, the most
basic.
|
| The Chairman: The rest you add on the skill set?
|
| Ms Dunlop: Yes, or we fund their participation in a community
college program.
|
| Senator Keon: It is interesting to have the three of you here
together because, collectively, you represent a problem that exists
in the health system now. That is, we have traditionally known
how to deal with doctors and hospitals, but we have not done very
well when it comes to home care, to technology and, of course, to
pharmaceuticals, particularly on the outside. The pharmaceuticals
in hospitals are pretty well taken care of, but once the patient is on
the outside and needs home care, there is a huge problem.
|
| As well, you get into the tremendously complex problem of
physician remuneration, in particular as it relates to home care
where there are tremendous gaps and there is really no system for
payment in a lot of cases.
|
| You just raised the issue of telehealth, for example. There is no
technological barrier to the application of telehealth. It is mostly a
personnel barrier because you cannot impose it on the system or
the people who are working in the system.
|
| I do not know how to draw the three of you out, but I would
like to hear you speak collectively about how home care could be
integrated into the hospital system, the institutional sector.
|
| How do you construct a system outside the hospital that would
get adequate funding for technology and for drugs? Such a system
would have to provide you with the flexibility to change your
personnel in a way that you could accommodate the programs and
the flexibility to change the remuneration system, particularly as it
relates to physicians more than nurses and other healthprofessionals who are usually salaried.
|
| Can all three of you have a go at that and see what you come
up with collectively?
|
| Mr. McDole: Well, I could start by suggesting we need to
reform how we remunerate the various players in the system,
because with the current style of budgeting, it is a real challenge
to pull all those things together.
|
| If we were to look at managing the cost of treating a patient
and allocating resources to that task, then you would be able to
better allocate the appropriate resources - whether it be drugs in
one instance or home care in another. By the way, home care and
drugs are a tremendous complement because one will enable the
other perhaps to take place. It would be a real challenge to do it
without eliminating the silo budgeting we have currently.
|
| Senator Keon: Can you think of incentives to change from the
silo budgeting?
|
| Mr. McDole: I do not know how you would describe it, but it
should be some kind of block funding system for treating a
disease as opposed to the individual players in the field.
|
| Right now we have a "divide and conquer" system where each
player wants to make sure they get their piece of the pie. It is very
difficult in that environment to take either the most economical
route or the most appropriate use route.
|
| Senator Keon: So if you had disease-based program funding,
it would work fairly well for cancer, and I think it would work for
some other areas such as heart disease, maybe diabetes, AIDS,
probably arthritis, and then you run out.
|
| Mr. McDole: Well, no, we have an experiment in Quebec now
for a respiratory disease, so I think you would include asthma at
least and some of the other respiratory diseases. I think a managed
care system could apply to a greater number of diseases than the
ones we just named.
|
| Mr. Goodhand: I completely agree with Mr. McDole that one
of the fundamental issues is silo funding.
|
| Our experience with installing new technology is that
inevitably there is a savings somewhere in the system. The closer
that saving is to the point of purchase, the easier it is to justify the
technology. The further that saving is away from the budget
holder, the more difficult it is to introduce that new technology.
|
| I think regionalization of health care is probably a step in the
right direction. At least somebody looks at that funding envelope
and says, "By spending this here, we save this here, and get
people into a home care situation."
|
| One of our members has a product that would get somebody
out of a long-term institution and into a supportive home care and
probably into a productive living mode as well.
|
| In your report you quoted the 1998 study that discussed the
indirect costs of health care, lost productivity and disability being
as significant as the direct costs. I think that is one of the
challenges we face here. By doing the right thing in the hospital
that is integrated into what is happening with home care and that
is integrated into the rest of the home care system, you can effect
real change that will make people more productive living disease-
or disability-free.
|
| To persuade a hospital or an OR that they have to quadruple
their spending on a certain product to save money on the home
care today will not fly - and that is a huge fragmentation. We do
not have a health care system; we have multiple silos standing
side by side.
|
| Ms Dunlop: Without drugs and equipment, I could not have
probably half my patients at home. Therefore, they are absolutely
essential to effective home care.
|
| In terms of integration, the path of least resistance perhaps is to
do it through information. If you have an information network,
you can begin to follow a patient and at least what they are
utilizing from the public purse. I am not sure about whether or not
you could do that for the private purse.
|
| I think we can integrate through information. We must
determine what patient outcomes are, beginning with the end in
mind. We should know from the start what it is that we are trying
to achieve; the three of us and our hospital partners should all
know this when we begin. We really shouldn't be working ad hoc
- which is generally the way we do it.
|
| We are making some progress with care pathways that originate
in the hospital, for example. Home care is socially complex. A
50-year-old man who has his first myocardial infarction and is at
home and has extended health care and a wife and insurance
through his work is going to have a different home care outcome
than an 80-year-old woman who lives alone, perhaps in squalor,
and she is having her first infarct at 80.
|
| There is no "cookie-cutter" system in home care, because the
social context comes into play much more prevalently than it does
in an institution. We can certainly do a better job of integrating
through information and through all of us starting from the same
page.
|
| Senator Keon: Can I bring the three of you back to
information technology as it relates to information andcommunication?
|
| Having spent most of my medical career struggling with this
subject, I have become convinced of late that we have always
approached this from the wrong end. We were trying to do it at
the top, at the federal level, at the provincial level, at the big
institutional level and then farm it out. I think we are doing it all
backwards.
|
| We should be starting at the patient level: provide the patient
with a health card containing all of their information as well as
the appropriate firewalls. You can have a repository for home
care. You can have a repository for the hospitals with which you
interface. You can have a regional repository, a provincial
repository, a federal repository.
|
| Technologically - as the pundits in the business tell me - it
is really quite possible, and in fact, in another life I am kind of
working on it.
|
| What do you think of all that? Tell me.
|
| Mr. Goodhand: I completely agree. I have had personal
experience with a family member both in a hospital setting and in
home care. We actually made the health care system work and
ended up with extremely good health care in Canada because of
an informed patient and an informed patient advocate. We
connected the information that was necessary. Had we been
elderly or less able to communicate with physicians, we would
have had a terrible experience because the system did not connect
and it was not patient-centric.
|
| So just from my personal experience, I think that approach is
definitely there.
|
| Methods such as tele-monitoring can play a role in the link
between the hospital base and home care; tele-monitoring clearly
is patient-centred.
|
| Mr. McDole: Did you mean sort of a health funding account
for every individual patient as well then?
|
| Senator Keon: Yes, that could be included. Perhaps now we
could just stick to medical information.
|
| Mr. McDole: Yes, I agree it is essential that we share the
information better than we do today among all of the various
players, no question about it.
|
| Senator Keon: Where do you think it should come from? Do
you think the federal government should spend $10 billion setting
up an information system that will never work? Or do you think
we should build health cards that the individual will carry and the
individual would have the right to privacy as they release the
various firewalls in that system?
|
| Mr. McDole: As a consumer, I would prefer it to be on my
health card - a "smart-card" - that knows everything about me
and my health needs.
|
| Mr. Goodhand: You could spend $2 billion on one that really
did work, and maybe that would be worth it, but $10 million on
one that does not work, no.
|
| Ms Dunlop: I agree. I have heard of an individual who was so
frustrated with frequent admissions that he put his health history
on a CD ROM and would hand it in when he went to the ER and
tell them to plug it in.
|
| So I do think it would cut down tremendously on errors and
inappropriate use of resources. With home care, our health care
professionals are sending paper copy back and forth to physician
offices. If we had good, solid information at the local level that
we could share easily, we might be able to overcome the
physician frustration with home care. Physicians are frustrated
because they cannot leave a waiting room full of patients to go
out and look after someone who is at home and perhaps we
sometimes call them inappropriately.
|
| Electronic health records, a series of pilot projects, and the
expansion of those would take us a long way, as long as we are
maintaining people's privacy and allowing only the appropriate
people access to the information.
|
| My father was a very sick man, and he had this document and
he would hand it in at the ER. It was all typewritten. He just
refused to go through it one more time. I think patients who have
chronic illnesses get frustrated and do not want to go through the
whole story again, and then we operate, as health care
practitioners, with half the information.
|
| Senator LeBreton: Senator Keon's questions are a perfect
entree into what I wanted to raise. Mr. McDole, I would like to
talk about the issue of inappropriate use of medications.
|
| A few years ago, I sat on a committee with John Crispo. He
talked about health smart-cards then - he used that term. A
system like that makes sense. You would have to ensure that the
information was properly protected, and I am curious as to how
you see the privacy issue resolved.
|
| However, we have people who have been prescribed
pharmaceuticals that they are not taking. We have people running
from one doctor to the next and having prescriptions filled in
different pharmacies. In addition to that, they are buying
over-the-counter drugs and probably are causing great damage to
themselves in whatever illness for which they are being treated.
|
| In your statement, you refer to "unintended and undesirable
results" of studies being done. Have you given some thought from
your industry's perspective as to how this particular problem can
be addressed and overcome?
|
| Mr. McDole: The reference that we made to the managed care
system would be probably the most efficient way of dealing with
that. It is much more complex than the inappropriate use. It can
be overuse, as you have described. It can also be underuse -
patients who do not comply, do not take their medications or seek
help in the first place.
|
| It is a case of managing both sides of that coin. We need a
more close system that would involve all of the stakeholders and
provide more appropriate follow-up and interventions at different
levels. It would lead to better outcomes at the end of the day.
|
| Senator LeBreton: So you generally would support a health
smart-card?
|
| Mr. McDole: Yes. We need an efficient way to communicate
that information - presumably electronically in some fashion -
whether it is through the patient's records or through their health
card or some other means.
|
| Senator LeBreton: Mr. Goodhand, in your testimony, you
talked about the re-use of single-use devices, and I wrote one
word on the paragraph, "Scary!" with a big exclamation mark.
|
| How prevalent is this and what kind of savings do the facilities
who subscribe to this practice think they are affecting?
|
| Mr. Goodhand: This practice has been around for probably a
decade or more because of health care constraints. The only real
reason for re-using a single-use device is to save money.
|
| A Health Canada report, which will come out in the next month
or so, will show that it is fairly widespread and that most hospitals
do not have written procedures for how and when to re-use
single-use devices.
|
| Two independent surveys, which will be released next month,
indicate that this practice is fairly prevalent. Because of these
reports, hospitals have conducted some recent assessments as to
whether or not to re-use some of their most sensitive products.
"Scary" is a good word.
|
| Senator LeBreton: To say nothing of the potential patients'
faith in the system I think that they still have some faith in.
|
| Mr. Goodhand: Right. We have often said that if the patient
knew the product had been re-used, they may have a different
discussion with their physician.
|
| The Chairman: No kidding. Well, that has certainly shaken up
a lot of us who are not in the medical profession.
|
| Senator Callbeck: Did I understand you to say that in some of
the hospitals there is no standard regarding using these devices?
|
| Mr. Goodhand: Again, I am cautioning my remarks here
because I would like to wait for the reports coming forth from
Health Canada and another associated body. I believe they
surveyed 700 hospitals and had 400 responses. It shows that in
most cases, when they are re-using, there is not a written
procedure.
|
| Industry's biggest concern is that Health Canada puts us
through enormous and appropriate scrutiny to make sure that the
device that we have sold as a single-use, is not only sterile but
that it will perform as it is expected to perform, for example, that
a balloon catheter will expand at the same rate. If that product is
re-sterilized half a dozen times or 25 times, we as a manufacturer
can no longer have any control over how it performs.
|
| Industry has said is that there really should be no re-use of a
single-use device. However, if that re-use takes place, the hospital
should be held to the same standards as industry was when the
product was introduced in the first place. That is a good question
to ask your physician next time.
|
| Senator Callbeck: Ms Dunlop, did you say that there were six
classifications in home care?
|
| Ms Dunlop: In homemaking.
|
| Senator Callbeck: Just in homemaking there are six?
|
| Ms Dunlop: In Ontario, a level 1 homemaker is considered
someone that we have recruited with some skills and whom we
have trained. Level 2 is a community college program. Now we
have a personal support worker, and then there are still categories
out there of health care aides that are no longer being trained in
Ontario. So there are five right there, just in Ontario. These
people are not covered by regulated health professions. They have
no legislation overseeing their practice.
|
| Senator Callbeck: For the basic one, who do you hire there or
what do you look for?
|
| Ms Dunlop: Well, our work force is still 96 per cent female.
The people that are hired just for general housekeeping duties are
usually people that have run a household themselves, have
experience with elder care or child care, but those are people that
are doing light housekeeping, meal preparation and laundry. They
are not in a position to assist with personal care, do transfers,
feeding and so forth. They have to be trained specifically for that.
|
| Senator Callbeck: So there is no educational level there?
|
| Ms Dunlop: Not specifically. In New Brunswick, in particular,
these are minimum wage workers. It is terrible.
|
| Senator Callbeck: I believe you said you are in six provinces?
|
| Ms Dunlop: Yes.
|
| Senator Callbeck: You are in New Brunswick?
|
| Ms Dunlop: Yes.
|
| Senator Callbeck: Are you in any other Atlantic provinces?
|
| Ms Dunlop: Nova Scotia. Nova Scotia provides a little better
reimbursement than New Brunswick.
|
| Senator Callbeck: How long have you been in those two
provinces?
|
| Ms Dunlop: The organization has been in those two provinces
for about 10 or 15 years. I have only been with Comcare for four
years. We have been lobbying the province of New Brunswick
consistently every year of the four years with no change. We have
made significant progress in other provinces.
|
| Senator Callbeck: Mr. McDole, I do not have a question for
you, but I was curious about a statement in your brief. I was quite
surprised when you mentioned approval rates of new drugs by
province and that if one province accepts the drug, there is an
extreme pressure on the other one to accept it.
|
| Mr. McDole: The implication - perhaps I misinterpreted what
I read - was that they were succumbing to that pressure. I do not
see any evidence of that. There is tremendous variation from
province to province, so whatever pressure there is, they seem to
be managing it quite well from that point of view.
|
| Senator LeBreton: I meant to ask you, Mr. McDole, about
that. On the graph that you have provided where you have got the
drug approvals for new drugs and you see Quebec obviously, you
know, they are quite high and Ontario is at nine, New Brunswick
at seven and P.E.I. four.
|
| How does a company like yours deal with that, when you
obviously have drugs that are approved in some provinces and
then in other provinces - and I specifically look at Quebec and
Ontario, because I live in Ottawa, right on the Quebec border. I
think people assume, probably incorrectly, that when a drug is
approved coming into Canada, that they do not get into this
provincial approval.
|
| So how do you deal with that, other than having to pay
lobbyists, I guess? That must cause a company like yours
significant difficulty?
|
| Mr. McDole: It is a challenge. There is no question about it.
You try to circumvent that by doing good research in the first
place, to get good products that will meet medical needs and that
will become part of those percentages without a lot of debate.
|
| We do a lot of health economic studies and other backup
support to prove the benefit and the value-added of our medicines
to the system.
|
| It is a constant challenge. Fortunately, as you can see there, the
Province of Quebec - which is not a small province - is more
favourable to our industry. In some parts of the country you have
very little business and in other parts you get a lot of business.
|
| That is one of the reasons it strikes fear in your heart to have a
national formulary.
|
| Senator LeBreton: Yes, that is right.
|
| Mr. McDole: National formularies are great if you are going to
bring the best medicine to the patient at all times, regardless of his
or her ability to pay.
|
| Formularies, by nature of their implementation, tend to become
very quickly a measure to prevent the use and restrict the use.
They become cost-containment measures as opposed to providing
the best possible medicine to the patient at the right time and at
the right price.
|
| Senator LeBreton: What would be the ideal vis-Ã -vis the role
of the federal government in dealing with this?
|
| Mr. McDole: If I could believe that we would have a national
formulary that would bring the best possible medicine to all
patients at all times, I would not object.
|
| In the absence of that, I think we have to look at outcomes and
choose the best possible medicine for the patient on an individual
basis.
|
| Senator Morin: Mr. Goodhand, does your association
represent all companies, for example, Medtronic, Siemens and
Phillips? I wanted to address a question to those representing the
Canadians. Is there an organization that represents only the
Canadian medical device companies?
|
| Mr. Goodhand: No, our membership, and I can provide you
with some details on that, is about 50 per cent Canadian,50 per cent multinational.
|
| Senator Morin: As you know, there are several problems, but
one of the major problems of our health care delivery system is
that we are near the bottom of the OECD countries as far as the
medical technology. One reason for this is that our Canadian
medical device industry is so poor. There is very little going on.
|
| There has not been a lot of support from the government for
that industry. For example, Industry Canada has a technology
development program that supports everything, the environment
industry and everything, and gives low or interest-free loans to
various industries. However, for some reason the medical devices
are not part of that list.
|
| If you compare Canada to other countries such as Germany, the
U.S., or France, where the medical device industry is very strong,
you can see that is not the case in this country.
|
| Maybe we should address this differently. I think we should
address just the Canadian situation here. I do not feel that bad
about Siemens and Phillips and Medtronic. I do not think they
need our support as much as the Canadian industry here. I realize
that you will not agree with that because that comprises50 per cent of your membership, but I think that is one of the
answers to our problem here.
|
| Mr. McDole, I share your support and your concern about your
reference pricing, but one issue that affects all third payers around
the world, is the fact that drugs are prescribed by physicians.
Consumers do not buy them. That is, of course, an issue.
|
| We know that study after study has shown that physicians are
not terribly concerned about the cost of the drugs they prescribe.
They are very much influenced by marketing. That is a fact of
life. They are also unable to resist their patient's specific request
for a given drug. Many studies have shown this.
|
| I will pose this question to you. If two drugs are of equal value
in a given situation but one is much cheaper than the other, how
can we make sure that the cheaper drug is prescribed?
|
| The Chairman: I will also let Mr. Goodhand comment. I have
no doubt he is anxious to comment. Go ahead, Mr. McDole.
|
| Mr. McDole: I think that the mechanism we have for the
Patented Medicine Prices Review Board already takes that into
account. Drugs in a class, by and large, are almost all the same
price. There is a very small range of difference for drugs in the
same class.
|
| Where we have the difference is between the brand and the
generic. When a drug is off patent, then clearly the choice should
be the generic.
|
| The Chairman: If your logic is right or if your facts are right,
which is that all drugs in a class are essentially the same, then
why would you possibly argue about therapeutic substitutions? If
they are all essentially the same and they are all relatively the
same medically, what is your problem?
|
| Mr. McDole: They are all the same price, and that was my
point. You do not benefit much by limiting yourself to the one
choice. By limiting the choice, you put a tremendous
disadvantage for the patient and the physician, because they are
not all the same in terms of what works for one patient and what
works for another. So having the choice within a class gives the
physician a wider likelihood of getting the results but without any
real economic disadvantage to the payer.
|
| Senator Morin: I do not want to belabour the point, but I can
send you drugs in the same class where the price varies by a large
factor. I am sure we can find them - ACE inhibitors, for
example.
|
| In that situation, let us say it is a hypothetical situation, how
can we make sure that the cheaper drug is prescribed?
|
| Mr. McDole: I would like to clarify that we are in a transition
mode. Certainly anything post the introduction of the Patented
Medicine Prices Review Board, that sets the ceiling, the price and
the class.
|
| Since we already have the lowest prices in the world
practically, the likelihood of the price spread being much other
than being clustered around that maximum price is pretty small.
Where you see the greatest spread is where there is a drug that
was launched before the controls versus after. There you see a
greater spread.
|
| Mr. Goodhand: With respect, senator, I would suggest that it is
the other way around. It is not the absence of a strong Canadian
medical device technology industry, it is that Canadians do not
have access to the best in medical technology. It is an issue of the
way we deliver health care that really determines the penetration
or the availability of the best in the world of medical technology.
|
| Going one step further, it is the nature of the Canadian
marketplace for purchasing health care technology. That is why
we do not have a stronger device industry.
|
| Which of these two comes first? I am not sure. You are
absolutely right, they are linked. They are clearly linked, and that
is why, in my presentation, I was asking for not just a continued
investment in health care research, but linking that to an
innovative industry.
|
| We have a handful of companies that have proven that they can
compete with the very best in the world. Some of our major
multinationals have played a significant role in taking products
made in Canada, invented in Canada. I presented an award last
week to Dr. George Klein, an electrophysiologist from London, a
MEDEC award winner. His product had been taken and was
commercialized by Medtronic and was made in this country. The
question of access to that technology is a totally different issue.
|
| Following up on the point of who represents the Canadian
companies, there are regional associations; in the past, we were
not linked. In the last nine months we have made linkages with
those associations. We are also working with the Ministry of
Energy, Science and Technology in Ontario, with Industry
Canada, and we are starting a relationship with industry in
Quebec to actually do industry building and working with the
National Research Council.
|
| I spend 35 per cent of my time on trying to create that stronger
Canadian industry to capture the research that is done here in our
universities and not just let that value go off-shore.
|
| We are committed to doing that, but the absence of a strong
device industry is not why the technology is missing from
Canadian health care.
|
| Senator Cordy: My question is for Ms Dunlop, and it is
concerning the unpaid caregiver.
|
| We have heard testimony from witnesses. It is true that most of
the unpaid caregivers tend to be women. Also, in many situations,
it is not a decision that they planned to take on. No one says, "I or
the family will become the unpaid caregivers." In many cases, it
is thrust upon them.
|
| I am concerned about the support systems that we have in place
for unpaid caregivers - you know, whether or not you get a
break. We talked about respite care for the patient but almost a
respite type of care for, in fact, the unpaid caregiver.
|
| Also, in your documentation you talked about the tax system,
Employment Insurance and employment policies. I wonder if you
could expand on that for me just to clarify what you mean by all
of those things.
|
| Ms Dunlop: Sure. My thinking was around having a similar
dispensation as we have for things like maternity leave or our
compassionate leaves.
|
| It is almost always women, although we do certainly have men
who are thrown into the position, unprepared as well. However, if
people are forced to leave the work force, then I think that we
have to somehow support them. It is not always their choice.
|
| We are limited in what we can provide through public
programs to support them. People may or may not have additional
third-party insurance to help them with some of the costs. They
bear equipment costs, pharmaceuticals, the dressings and supplies
- they bear those costs once they are home.
|
| On one hand, it is very important to minimize the financial
impact for these families. Equally important is to give them
respite. One way to do that is, have a worker come into the home.
Some families feel too guilty to put their loved one in an
institution, even for a two-week respite. So they have to have that
choice.
|
| Senator Cordy: Not all family situations are the ideal
situations for anybody to be in - let alone somebody who is very
ill. Is there any mechanism in place to determine that this is just
not a good situation for a patient to be in? Would your
organization look at anything like that?
|
| Ms Dunlop: From an organization's risk perspective, I am
always saying, I am the first one to send someone somewhere else
if that person should not be at home. We also deal with people
who believe that they have a right to risk.
|
| We have one case right now in which we disagree that this
woman should be in her own home, but she is still competent and
she insists that that is her right. So we have put in place a service
agreement that states that someone has to be there before we
leave and so forth. We have gone outside our current thinking to
make sure that we can manage her successfully at home, but it has
taken a lot of creative work by a lot of different agencies to do
that.
|
| The last thing that I would want for our organization and for
our caregivers, is to have someone who is home, who should not
be.
|
| The Chairman: May I thank all of you for coming.
|
| Our next panel is Mr. Jeff Lozon, President and CEO of
St. Michael's Hospital; Gary O'Connor, the Executive Director of
the Association of Ontario Health Centres; and Dr. Ken Sky, the
President of the OMA.
|
| Dr. Kenneth Sky, President, Ontario Medical Association:
Thank you, Senator Kirby and committee members, for the
opportunity to speak this afternoon. I also want to thank the
committee for conducting these cross-country hearings and for
having the courage to tackle the difficult and complex issues
surrounding the future of health care in Canada.
|
| The committee will also hear from my colleagues from our
national body, the Canadian Medical Association, in the near
future. The OMA shares common concerns with the CMA about
the future of health care, and we hope that you benefit from both
our presentations.
|
| The Ontario Medical Association has been a leader in
advocating frank and open discussion on health care funding for
both this province and the country. Our projects are outlined in
the packages I have submitted.
|
| Throughout the process, our position on health care funding has
been consistent. It is not enough to simply look for better
management models for our health care system. We must be open
to other funding models that adhere to the principle of
universality. Our dialogue will move forward within that
framework. Detailed information regarding our work in this area
is available on the OMA Web site
|
| Chief among the many issues that are important to this
discussion is the current physician human resources crisis and
growing evidence that physician shortages will become even
more severe in the near future. The implications of these current
and projected shortages are clearly critical. The OMA has
provided Senator Kirby with useful statistics on this issue. I have
also enclosed in our package an article published in this month's
Ontario Medical Review entitled "Physician Human Resources in
Ontario: The Crisis Continues." I apologize for the late delivery
of that, but it was only published last week. I encourage every
member of this committee to read it.
|
| Another issue of importance to the current debate is the role in
the health care system of registered nurses in the extended class,
known as nurse practitioners. The OMA has recently struck a task
force to examine the working relationship between physicians and
nurse practitioners. We hope to have the final report completed by
the spring and we will forward a copy to the committee for your
review.
|
| I would briefly like to address the issue of physician
remuneration. A lot of debate has ensued surrounding the means
by which physicians should be compensated for the medical
services they provide. Let me state for the record that the OMA
strongly supports the physician choice of remuneration. No
one-payment model suits all physicians. The OMA is a leader in
exploring alternative payment mechanisms to support physicians
in their respective practice environments.
|
| We recognize the challenges governments have as payers in
providing care for all of their citizens. To this end, we continue to
work with the government to extend access to doctors in all areas.
We are negotiating unique contracts to support doctors practising
in different sized communities, in remote and under serviced
areas.
|
| We also continue to make progress regarding primary care
reform in Ontario. The Ontario Medical Association has been
actively involved as a pioneer in this initiative, and we currently
have six pilot sites around the province in various stages of
development and evaluation.
|
| The OMA's governing body will meet on November 10 to
review documentation concerning the details of this voluntary
expansion. When I say "voluntary," I mean for both patients and
physicians. The key component to the success of primary care
reform is that it remains voluntary.
|
| While there are many subjects to address today, I would like to
take this opportunity to focus on a specific aspect of primary care
reform, the role of information technology, IT. The Ontario
Medical Association agrees with your committee's assertion that
information technology is the most important aspect in the
development of a fully integrated health care system. I have
special interest in this topic as I currently serve on the Province of
Ontario's e-health committee, which is studying the role of
information technology in health care. The OMA believes that the
development of an information technology system that provides
better access to health care information will assist physicians and
other health care providers in offering better care to our patients.
|
| I will address three specific aspects in my presentation: the role
of the provincial government, the role of the federal government
and the role of physicians and, ultimately, the doctor-patient
relationship.
|
| We firmly believe that each provincial and territorialgovernment must take the initiative and the financialresponsibility for moving forward on information technology.
Their role should be to drive this process. Health care is a
provincial jurisdiction. Each provincial government should take a
leadership role in developing the necessary technology to move
forward toward information sharing. We know that various
provincial IT initiatives are at different stages of development.
|
| Currently, in Ontario, the provincial government is developing
its own Smart System for Health. This initiative is putting in place
the secure IT infrastructure that will enable various stakeholders
to develop IT solutions based on connectivity and information
technology and sharing.
|
| At the same time, the OMA is working in co-operation with the
Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care. We are developing an
Internet-based system for the primary care providers, the
physicians of this province.
|
| This system will enable physicians to have connectivity by
building onto the Smart System for Health. This will create a
connected and integrated system that would function with other
parts of the health care system. We are calling this initiative the
Ontario e-physician project. We will provide more information on
this initiative in the near future. We foresee the medical office of
the future not only holding important personal health information,
but also providing a resource for data sharing for multiple
sources, including imaging, labs, hospitals, pharmacies, et cetera.
|
| I have only given you a snapshot of our current provincial IT
developments. While we firmly believe the provincial government
must take the lead on this initiative, the federal government also
has an essential role to play. In our view, the role of the federal
government is threefold.
|
| First, the federal government must develop national standards
that each province and territory should adhere to when developing
their own information technology systems. By establishing these
standards, each province and territory is provided with the road
map required to ultimately drive their own projects toward
producing a national framework.
|
| Second, the government must provide funding to each of the
provinces and territories to enable them to proceed with
developing the necessary technology. I acknowledge that this is a
very costly venture for all levels of government, but in theend, the benefits of a seamless and standardized information
technology system will certainly outweigh the high costs
associated with it. MRI technology and other diagnosticequipment have always been considered a cost driver in our
health care system. We consider the development of information
technology as a cost saver in the long run. While there will be
significant start-up costs, information technology will ultimately
result in greater efficiencies in the system.
|
| Third, and most important, the federal government must have
explicit policies and procedures with respect to personal health
information that are held and shared electronically.
|
| This leads me to my final point, the role of physicians and the
doctor-patient relationship. In our view, the key to the success
and, ultimately, the expansion of any IT implementation will be
largely determined by the physician-patient relationship. Patients
look to their physicians for assurance and direction. If we, as
physicians, can assure patients that their identifiable personal
health information is safe and secure, the patient will consent to
having it released into a shared network. I cannot stress this
enough to the committee. Patients must be able to speak openly
and freely and feel secure enough that any identifiable personal
health information they provide will be safeguarded. If this does
not occur, the future of IT in health care delivery will fail.
|
| IT can be as sophisticated and technologically advanced as you
wish, but the core component must be the built-in safeguards that
will protect the patient's personal health information. The greatest
challenge for those of us who want to move forward to a new way
of managing health information is to achieve buy in, support and,
ultimately, trust from our patients.
|
| Once this IT infrastructure is developed, who should control
and manage the medical records of the millions of patients whose
information will be electronically recorded and stored? The OMA
firmly believes that physicians should act as the gatekeepers for
this health care information. Physicians must continue to play a
key role in the governance of the storage and distribution of
personal health information. In fact, our own internal polling
indicates that far more Ontarians want physicians, notgovernment, to control and manage any computerized system of
medical records.
|
| The OMA represents 24,000 physicians, but we also advocate
on behalf of the people of Ontario. We know that two-thirds of
the public has concerns that personal health information will end
up in the hands of the government, insurance companies and
employers. There is also concern that international pharmaceutical
companies could access personal health information. We must
ensure that these concerns will be unfounded.
|
| I have raised a number of issues concerning information
technology with you today. As you can see, it is essential to the
success of any IT implementation that we all work together to
create a seamless, standardized and secure system that will
ultimately provide better care for our patients.
|
| I again want to thank the committee for the difficult and vitally
important work it is doing. I sincerely hope that the debate you
are stimulating will be ongoing and that the government will
extend your mandate to address future challenges that we, as a
nation, have not yet even begun to understand. The OMA looks
forward to contributing to the debate on the future of health care
on an ongoing basis.
|
| The Chairman: Our next speaker is Jeff Lozon, who is the
President and CEO of St. Michael's Hospital. He is also a former
Deputy Minister of Health in Ontario and, maybe even more
importantly, a terrific golfer.
|
| Mr. Jeffrey Lozon, President and CEO, St. Michael's
Hospital: Honourable senators, as some of you may be aware, I
have been involved in the health care system in various leadership
capacities for more than 20 years. I am currently the President of
St. Michael's Hospital. I was fortunate enough to serve the
Province of Ontario as Deputy Minister of Health and Long-Term
Care from 1999 to 2000. However, I am not here to represent
either of those organizations. My comments are based on my
combined experience in various roles throughout the system in
four provinces and under governments of all stripes.
|
| Let me begin by congratulating you on the work you have done
to date. Your report should be required reading for all students
and health administration and for health care policy-makers. You
provided an excellent history of how we have arrived at this place
and time, in health care terms. You have provided an interesting
international context from which our system can be viewed. You
have also been wise enough, however, to acknowledge that the
Swedish, American or Australian systems could not be replicated
in Canada Health care systems are endemic to each country and
society, and they reflect the values of the society they serve,
explicitly and implicitly.
|
| Most importantly, your last volume raises fundamental
questions about the financing and organization options that must
be considered in shaping the future system. I have no doubt that
you raise questions and proposed directions that virtually every
elected jurisdiction has considered in the privacy of its own
deliberations, but does not speak about openly for fear of losing
the next election.
|
| It is one of the real tragedies of this debate that because the
current system has reached iconic status, as you point out, we
cannot speak openly about the profound changes that are required.
|
| You have created an enormous contribution by opening up
room in the policy debate. I note that you join the chorus of
others, such as the Conference Board of Canada and the
C.D. Howe Institute, in suggesting that profound, deep and
perhaps sometimes painful change are required.
|
| You should know that the system is very resilient, and we have
seen many reports come and go. The distance you have travelled
to get an honest discussion of options is only a fraction of what
must be done if the system is to endure and to serve Canadians
into the future. A deep and enduring political courage, a clear,
thoughtful and wise policy and, finally, focussed and determined
execution are necessary into the future.
|
| In the five minutes allotted to me, I cannot comment on the full
range of the review that you have undertaken. Suffice it to say, I
agree with your directions, quality and ethics. I do, however, want
to reflect upon four aspects of your report.
|
| First, I want to present another barrier to the system change that
you have proposed. In my view, this particular barrier may be
more important than any that you have raised to date, and, based
upon my experience, real change would not be possible without
addressing this barrier.
|
| Second, I want to provide options on specific matters related to
organization of the system, specifically, primary care reform and
regionalization. If time permits, I will comment on the federal
role as offered in the Interim Report, Volume Four, and comment
on certain aspects of the financing option.
|
| My first point is based on the urgent need for predictability and
stability in the direction of our health care system, and it is driven
by the need to shelter the system from the daily parry and thrust
of elected politics. One of the least desirable, most difficult and
important jobs in our society is the leadership of the health care
system at the provincial level. Without more stability and
certainty, the best reform options and best reform policies will
fail. Consider the following: in Ontario there have been seven
Ministers of Health in the last 10 years and seven Deputy
Ministers of Health.
|
| Three months as a Deputy Minister gives you seniority over
half your colleagues, and going beyond one year constitutes long
service. The job expectancy of a Minister of Health is 15 months,
and a Deputy Minister is about the same. Although Ontario may
be an extreme example, it is by no means atypical.
|
| It is impossible to take the system forward with that type of
turnover, and long range planning is impractical. Moreover, often
the greatest expertise in the system does not reside in federal or
provincial ministries, and as such, governments cannot effectively
carry out the tasks assigned them.
|
| In place of the current arrangements, I urge the committee to
consider the recommendation to create independent,
provincial-public, non-profit bodies to run the health care system.
These bodies would consist of boards of directors appointed by
the government with defined terms of service. They would be
supported by a staff of experts and compensated commensurate
with the challenge, capabilities, and direction of this system.
These corporations would be charged with service delivery,
financing and organization. They would be accountable for
achieving provincial goals such as may be embodied in a
"guarantee of care" approach. The development of such goals
would continue to be done by the elected officials. In short, the
bodies would exist at arm's length from the political process, but
would be accountable for the delivery of a first class health care
system now and into the future.
|
| Other activities, such as health human resources planning,
could continue to reside at the federal or provincial level.
However, the bulk of the current departments of health would be
replaced by independent expert agencies. In this way, stability and
direction could emerge, distanced from the day-to-day pressures
of electoral politics, while continuing to try to guarantee high
levels of care. Without greater predictability, and insulation from
daily headlines, even the best reforms will not be implementable
and some of the major changes that you are thinking about will
just not come to fruition.
|
| Let me turn my attention now to the matter of organization. I
will focus my remarks on two aspects of organization, primary
care reform and regionalization.
|
| Primary care reform has been a prominent part of every major
system review conducted in the last 20 years. Every health care
practitioner that has studied this area knows that as long as the
current system remains, real reform will be very hard.
|
| Why then, despite this knowledge, is the system still a cottage
industry based on a piecework financing arrangement with little
or no characteristics of a modern service industry? The answer to
the riddle is complex. In part, it is because such a reform is an
insider ball game; considerable interests are at stake. The reform
must take place over many years and the public is more likely to
support the professionals who may object to this change, as
opposed to the planners who propose it. Still, as a health care
professional, I can only support active movement toward a
reformed primary care system.
|
| The second matter I want to comment on with regard to
organization is regionalization. It is absolutely remarkable that so
many consider this as an essential element of successful reform,
given that it has never been evaluated and there is no evidence to
suggest that it works any better than any predecessor arrangement.
There is no real health care evidence that patients benefit in a
regional system. There is no system benefit as evidenced by lower
costs. In an environment where evidence-based medicine is in
vogue, this is one of the least studied and most touted changes
currently extant.
|
| However, we do know some features of regionalization as
practised in this country. It is incomplete as practised anywhere in
Canada since no regional system, that I am aware of, includes
physician payments in the defined regional envelope.Furthermore, regional systems have not worked in large urban
settings where patient mobility is high and consumer choice is at
play. I urge caution on the introduction of further regionalization.
The jury is still out.
|
| Let me reflect for a moment on the federal role. The committee
has described a renewed and expanded role for the federal
government in the health care system of this country. In general, I
am in agreement with that role. However, health care is not
known for its ease of federal-provincial relations, and it is
probable that the role will meet with stern opposition.
|
| Did the committee consider either of the two extremes in this
regard? One being, having the federal government get completely
out of the health care process, transferring its current limited role
to the provinces in return for further tax point transfers and
abandoning the current Canada Health Act. The other would beto ask the provinces to upload their current health care
responsibilities to the federal government and create a truly
national system. These options are cleaner, more easily
understood and may curtail the endless jurisdictional debates that
now characterize our health care system.
|
| While no doubt dramatic, they are no less likely to emerge than
the renewed roles proposed by the committee, particularly in the
areas of infrastructure, evaluation and population health, all of
which I think will cause fairly substantial federal-provincial
debate. Your suggestions here would help generate vigorous
debate.
|
| In any event, a greater federal role must be supported by amore knowledgeable federal public service and a long-term
commitment. One of the greatest fears of provincial health
ministries is that the federal government will support the system
in a time of surplus, only to remove that support in a time of
scarcity. A greater federal role, if it is envisioned, must be
negotiated and understood to be permanent.
|
| In addition, the current federal Department of Health needs
substantial bolstering in the real world of health care to play the
role contemplated in your report.
|
| I look forward to your questions.
|
| Mr. Gary O'Connor, Executive Director, Association of
Ontario Health Centres: Thank you, Senator Kirby and
committee members.
|
| As a whole, Canadians are proud of our health care system. In
comparison with other countries, Canada's commitment to a
universal, accessible, portable, comprehensive and publicly
managed health care system exemplifies the values of equity,
fairness and justice that symbolize Canada.
|
| Its future is an issue of great importance to all Canadians. We
commend the Standing Senate Committee on Social Affairs,
Science and Technology for taking on this task of examining
Canada's health care system. As part of this work, we recommend
that the committee also closely examine community health
centres. I work for the Association of Ontario Health Centres, and
I represent 68 such community health centres in the Province of
Ontario.
|
| In commenting on the interim report that the committee has
created, I want to comment on four specific issues: first, financing
and refocussing of Canada's health care system; second, primary
care reform; third, expansion of health care services, and fourth,
the population health role.
|
| On financing, we support a comprehensive, publicly funded
health care system that is accessible to all Canadians. We do not
agree that user fees will enhance health care delivery or control
costs. We also believe, as shown in the Australian experience, that
user charges or any greater reliance on for-profit insurance
systems will end up being more costly.
|
| In Quebec when elderly people and people on welfare had to
pay user fees for prescription drugs, they took less medicine,
which resulted in sicker patients and more visits to hospital
emergency departments. User fees help reduce costs in the short
term, but eventually lead to more spending because more people
neglect getting treatment earlier.
|
| For-profit organizations, by their nature, are motivated mainly
by profit and not necessarily by the best interests of patients.
Studies have shown that their administrative costs are higher than
those of their not-for-profit counterparts, without necessarily
providing better care. In a two-tiered system, waiting lists for
public patients become longer, as physicians work more hours in
the private sector.
|
| We believe that there are other ways to achieve the objective of
a more reasonable use of resources by both providers and users,
for example, providing integrated interdisciplinary primary care.
|
| Not all patients must be seen by a doctor. This was shown by a
recent review of service events by providers in 20 community
health centres in Ontario, where 32 per cent of the services were
given by physicians, 43 per cent by nurses or nurse practitioners,
9 per cent by social workers, 4 per cent by chiropodists and
12 per cent by others.
|
| Before considering a two-tiered system, we recommend the
committee thoroughly explore the research, showing how
two-tiered systems increase waiting times and cost more. Publicly
funded health care systems can be made more effective and
efficient, and reports such as the Clair Commission and the Fyke
committee point the way.
|
| Under refocussing, we commend the Senate committee for
recognizing that we must change the focus of our health care
system from an illness-based model to a more holistic model of
supporting the health of Canadians. The National Forum on
Health revealed that Canadians broadly endorse this redefinition
and redesign.
|
| Central to this redefinition is the reform of primary health care.
We commend the federal government's agreement with the
provinces to contribute $800 million to primary health care
reform and this committee's support for health care delivered by
interdisciplinary teams of professionals.
|
| Community health centres in Ontario have been providing
precisely this kind of care for 30 years. We strongly recommend
that the federal government promote the community health centre
model as described in our paper. I will not go through the list of
elements, but they are there for you to read.
|
| Although the community health centre model is mentioned in
your interim report, the committee does not appear to have
considered that in its discussion of cost-effective options. We
suggest the committee should investigate this aspect.
|
| Community health centres are demonstrably more economical
than fee-for-service models and practice. In the early 1980s,
Saskatchewan Health researched the public cost of 200
fee-for-service urban doctors compared to those at community
clinics. Clinics, on average, cost 17 per cent less than the private
physicians in terms of lower prescription costs, lower use of
services and lower levels of hospitalization of patients.
|
| In Ontario, the Ministry of Health has just completed a strategic
review of the community health centre program. Though it is not
yet a public document, some details have been released. Key
findings presented to the public so far show that community
health centres, CHCs, exhibit desired primary care reform features
such as alternate payments, interdisciplinary teams, community
involvement, 24/7 service and availability, et cetera.
|
| CHCs are accountable through community board governance,
service agreements and accreditation. They meet ministry goals
and deliver on ministry strategies. They have a strategic role to
play in primary health care, particularly in serving thedisadvantaged populations and populations facing access barriers.
|
| Family health networks will not reduce the need for community
health centres because family health networks are not designed to
improve access for disadvantaged groups. CHCs are one way to
meet the needs of under serviced areas.
|
| We strongly recommend that the federal and provincial
governments recognize, support and foster the community health
centre model as an ideal model for provision of community-based
primary care.
|
| On the expansion of health care services, we believe in the
need to incorporate home care, palliative care and the cost of
prescription drugs under the principles of comprehensiveness in
the Canada Health Act. We support the national pharmacare
initiative and the national home care program. Both of these
programs would reduce costs and pressures on the acute system
and on institutional long-term care services.
|
| In the population health role, Ontario's community health
centres have devoted their services to community partnerships and
to community development as a means of dealing with social
determinants of health for the last 30 years. We are strong
advocates for communities and many health care services and
issues within those communities.
|
| We agree with the Senate committee's assertion that the
population health role of the federal government should focus on
illness prevention rather than treating people once they are sick.
However, we believe that there is a further role for the federal
government in population health.
|
| In your report, you reference the determinants of health, but
you have not taken the body of work to heart. Canadians enjoy a
high standard of health due to many factors that are outside what
we traditionally call health care. Over the past century, the most
dramatic increases in health and wellness have come from sources
other than the curative arts. They have come from safe drinking
water, housing, income supports and the use of seat belts, to name
a few.
|
| We urge the committee to have the courage to consider its
mandate as broader than commenting on things that can be
achieved by Health Canada. True health care comes from an
integrated approach, which would be achieved by partnerships
with other ministries within the government and with other
governments.
|
| Canadians need affordable housing, adequate incomes, food
security, social supports and education. Attention to these issues
on the federal level will help to sustain the health care system by
helping to keep people healthier longer.
|
| Finally, our last three recommendations are based on these
facts. We recommend that the Senate committee should advocate
expansion of the federal government's role in population health to
include attention to affordable housing, income security programs,
social supports and education. These issues cross ministerial and
government boundaries, therefore they require that thegovernment think outside the box.
|
| In addition, we strongly recommend that the federal
government re-enter the field of social housing for the general
population through strong federal social housing programs. Safe,
affordable, sustainable housing is one of the most significant
factors contributing to healthy individuals, families and
communities.
|
| Finally, we recommend that the Senate committee advocate
that the federal government must reaffirm its role in the provision
of health services to Aboriginal peoples.
|
| The Chairman: I would like to ask Mr. Lozon one question,
partly because he said he might get into the funding issues and
then did not, and partly to ask about an option that has been raised
with us by various people across the country, which was
originally started with the National Forum on Health. That is the
question of whether funding ought to follow the patient rather
than the institution.
|
| The net effect of that is to separate the payer function from the
provider function so that patients would go to any institution they
wanted to be treated and the payment would still come from the
government. The patient, in that sense, is independent. If you do
that, you obviously have to separate the evaluator function as
well.
|
| Have you ever thought about that model? What do you think of
the idea? You might want to use that as an entree into
commenting on some of the other funding options that we
outlined as options.
|
| Mr. Lozon: A number of jurisdictions, most notably Great
Britain, have moved into a purchaser-provider sort of split, which
is the euphemism for what you are talking about, whereby a group
of individuals deals with the purchasing of the function and a
number of providers provide that function. It has some merit
because it introduces a certain amount of accountability into the
system and an alignment of incentives that we do not really have.
|
| We are not set up to do that right now. We are not set up in the
integrated fashion that we must be set up in, to actually make it
work.
|
| I thought you would ask me more questions related to
individual participation in the system from a financingperspective. I did have some comments on that, relative to your
report.
|
| I actually support greater individual involvement in the
financing of the health care system predicated on the assumption
that the most vulnerable in our society will continue to receive
care and service without financial barriers. Your report could be
stronger in this particular regard when you lay out the options.
|
| I support more personal payment into the system because,
generally, a free good is seen to have no value. Through a series
of technological breakthroughs and successive political promises,
we have created a sense of entitlement that the system cannot
satisfy.
|
| The purpose of greater personal payment through mechanisms
laid out in the report would not only be to provide additional
resources but, more important, to create an understanding that the
system is not free and should not be treated as a renewable
resource.
|
| Senator Morin: Dr. Sky, you feel very strongly about privacy
of health information. Would you consider an exception for
research?
|
| Dr. Sky: No, Senator. The information belongs to the patient. It
does not belong to the greater good of other people.
|
| If you separate that ownership, then you will interfere with the
doctor-patient relationship in a very serious way. It is very
difficult for me, as a physician, to obtain trust from my patients
and to get them to give me all of the details that I need to treat
them properly. If, for any reason, they should suspect that
identifiable information about themselves was going to be
transferred, for whatever good purpose, to a third party without
their consent, they might hold back vital information.
|
| Senator Morin: You say the epidemiological research outcome
studies for the improvement of the health care delivery system -
report cards on given institutions - the outcomes of Dr. Keon's
heart surgery as compared to the outcomes of some other hospital,
would be impossible.
|
| Dr. Sky: Not at all. Many of the epidemiological studies can be
done without identifiable information, and that is the purpose of
keeping the health information with the physician. Allow the
identifiers to be scrubbed clean so that most of the information
can be used without that. If the patient consents to the use of that
information, identifiers can be added, but there should never be an
implied consent. There should always be an absolute, identified
consent.
|
| Senator Morin: Mr. Lozon, as usual, you are very clear and
very provocative.
|
| As you know, the Claire Report has suggested a health care
agency that would administer the health care program in Quebec,
and surprisingly enough, the minister did not put it into
application yet, and I doubt very much if he will. This is an idea
that has been going around for a little while.
|
| Coming back to the federal role, of course we have a mosaic of
health care systems as it is already, and as time goes, each
provincial system becomes quite different. That is a fact.
|
| All studies have shown that Canadians support, by a very
strong majority, a federal role in the health care delivery system,
and they believe in national standards, whatever that means.
There is also the matter of the poorer provinces having a
presence. Health care for Canadians is not treated equally by the
health care system. That is a major issue, and it will be difficult to
get around that. The easier way out - and I thought about this -
is to just let each province have its own system, as long as we
have certain guidelines.
|
| The provinces would be more prepared to go about that if we
had stable funding at the national level. That is one element. How
we get that is another issue, but if we had the possibility of
insuring stable funding to the provinces, it would be easier.
|
| I agree with you on the regionalization of health care. All that
does, in my experience, is add an extra layer of bureaucracy. That
is about all it does.
|
| You say there is no evidence for that. Do we have evidence for
primary care reform? Do we have the same type of questions
concerning regionalization?
|
| Mr. O'Connor, I do not know if you listened to the previous
witness, Ms Dunlop. I was struck by a good paragraph in her
report: "We believe that private for profit organizations are an
essential partner in the future of Canadian health care." She goes
on to say:
|
We have proven ourselves as valued stakeholderorganizations providing excellent health care within a
context of economic discipline. We do focus on efficiency
and effectiveness. Profitability means reinvestment in our
health care system...
|
| That is in the form of capital spending.
|
| We were told that capital spending is one of the problems of
our system. I notice, in your own report, that recommendation
number one is not-for-profit, as though that were something you
were very much against.
|
| Mr. O'Connor: I can only speak from my experience. I was
not here for Ms Dunlop's presentation. I was only here for
questions and answers.
|
| Arguments can be made for profit and not-for-profit. When you
compare studies in the United States between for-profit
organizations and not-for-profit organizations, the outcomes are
not dramatically different.
|
| Senator Morin: I can bring you evidence for the opposite. You
have quoted studies that show that, but there is recent evidence
showing that for-profit is better. You just quote what you want,
really.
|
| Mr. O'Connor: That is fine. We could have an argument on
quotations. My point is that when you consider needs, you have to
examine what the needs of the patient are. My experience is the
needs of patients are better served in a not-for-profit system.
|
| Mr. Lozon: I have a couple of comments to Senator Morin's
views.
|
| I understand that Canadians would like a national system. At
the same time, my question is, what do the provinces want? The
simple reality is that there is a certain amount of
federal-provincial wrangling and a debate that goes on. The
creation of a national system requires not only that Canadians and
the federal government want it, but that the provinces also want it.
That would be more likely in an environment of stable federal
funding. That has to be knowledgeable and expert funding as
well, and not just in selected areas.
|
| I will give you an example. Although we applaud the
introduction of $1 billion for health technology, you should be
aware that generates additional operating costs that will ultimately
be borne by the provinces, or the institutions that are supported by
the province.
|
| Senator, I was not aware that the Clair Commission had
proposed an independent agency, but I think that addresses the
fundamental question. The fundamental question is we have
created - and I will use Ontario as an example - a health care
system of $23 billion. We asked the system to fund institutions,
individuals. We ask it to plan thoughtfully. We ask it to provide
effective capital resources. We ask it to conduct research. We ask
the system, the Ministry of Health, to do effective human
resources planning, and I think you have probably heard enough
in your cross-country travels to indicate that that is not well done
in any particular jurisdiction. We have simply asked too much of
the particular system, particularly in an environment where the
turnover of the leadership is so rapid. There is a very big gap
between good ideas, helpful intentions and execution. That is the
point I was trying to address.
|
| The Chairman: On that score, does your model separate
planning from implementation? In other words, would you leave
the planning function in the department and the actualimplementation and overseeing management function in the
agency, or would you put the planning function into the agency as
well?
|
| Mr. Lozon: I would put the planning function into the agency.
I would keep certain elements of the current responsibilities
within the ministries separate and apart from that. A good case in
point would be human resources. Human resource planning at a
federal-provincial level is not well done, and in part, it is not well
done because it always gets confused with, or does not get the
attention that is required, given the enormous operational issues
that exist.
|
| I think that your group has considered human resources
planning as potentially federal-provincial work. That it would be
something that would stay with elected officials, as would the
establishment of high level goals: X amount of time for waiting
lists for cancer, X number for cardiac surgical wait times, access
to primary care physicians, as in the "care guarantee" notion
which you have outlined in one of your option papers.
Establishment of goals would continue to rest with a government.
|
| The Chairman: The overall system performance measures
would rest with the ultimate party responsible, which is the
government.
|
| Mr. Lozon: Right.
|
| Senator LeBreton: I was thinking, rather "tongue-in-cheek"
when I heard Mr. Lozon talk about keeping this away from
elected politics, that we have very much appreciated your indirect
support for an unelected Senate.
|
| In any event, my question is for Dr. Kenneth Sky, on the whole
notion of information technology. While I certainly concur that it
should not be in the hands of government, I would like to know
why you think it should be in the hands of the physician and not
the individual patient. If I have my own passport and my own
Social Insurance Number, is it not something that I, as the patient,
should have control over, rather than the physician? I am curious
as to why you think a system of having it in the physicians' hands
rather than the patients' would be better.
|
| Dr. Sky: Senator, I must point out that I am a real doctor and I
actually do take care of patients. In my real life, what I find is that
about 20 per cent of patients in Ontario show up, at least in my
office, without their health card. When it comes to children,
probably 50 per cent who show up, and the other parent has their
card.
|
| You made some allusions with the previous presenters to
having a "smart card." Our experience with that so far has been
that smart cards are really quite dumb. They are very fragile.
They are easy to destroy or break or manipulate, and all in all,
patients just do not have the wherewithal to keep all of that. You
could not store enough information on a card in a strong enough
form to keep it portable.
|
| We feel that if you kept information in a central repository,
usually with the safeguards that most of the information is
actually in the hands of the treating physician, you can perform
very much better with the information and in making sure that it
flows to the point of service in a timely fashion. That means
bringing in all of the rest of the health care information.
|
| In Ontario we have insured with our new system that we will
be able to interface with our Community Care Access Centres,
CCACs, with hospitals, labs, and even with imaging centres so
that everything will be brought together.
|
| Senator LeBreton: Would a patient who, for whatever reason,
keeps jumping from one doctor to another or trying different
pharmaceuticals and different pharmacies be caught by that
system?
|
| Dr. Sky: I would not want to refer to that as "caught," but such
an individual would be identified. Certainly that will be part of
the savings and the efficiencies that we will have. It will also
allow us to prevent duplication of costly diagnostic testing.
|
| Senator LeBreton: Do you means testing, such as blood tests?
|
| Dr. Sky: I refer to imaging tests, in particular, which are
expensive.
|
| Senator LeBreton: How does that impact on a patient's right
to choice? If you, as a doctor, have a person's file and he or she,
for whatever reason, wants to go to a different physician, how are
the records transferred out of your system? Is that all on a central
system?
|
| Dr. Sky: It will be transferred in the blink of an eye. It certainly
can be quickly identified.
|
| We will have a few things in place. For security of the whole
system, there will be a 128-bit SSL encryption, which is as good
as the banks use, and that should prevent anything short of very
sophisticated hackers from getting in.
|
| Certification of the users and of the patients is the next critical
step. We think we have the public key infrastructure, PKI, for
certification of the users. How to identify patients is still a very
critical issue. We have not yet ascertained whether we will use
biometrics or some other form of identifier.
|
| Senator Keon: I thoroughly enjoyed all three of your
presentations.
|
| I would like to discuss a concept, if I may I will start with you,
Jeff, and I ask Dr. Sky and Mr. O'Connor to comment as well.
|
| It is ironic that I wrote a brief when the restructuring
commission was struck in Ontario recommending that the hospital
system not be touched until we had a concept of regionalization
or we would be into a disaster. I am afraid that article, or that
brief, will surface tomorrow in the Ottawa Citizen.
|
| I have heard of your ideas about the independent, provincial,
non-profit bodies even when you were Deputy Minister, and it is a
truly interesting concept. In fact, it is just a much bigger concept
of regionalization.
|
| One of the conundrums we have run into is, we are trying to
apply models and we are trying to find models that will fit
everywhere. Certainly, trying to design a regional model for
Toronto would be a nightmare. However, a regional model in
Ottawa-Carleton would work very well, but it would not be
necessary if you had the independent, provincial, non-profit body
fundamentally doing the same thing on a provincial-wide basis.
|
| Let me drill down for a minute. Can you envision this body
dealing with the panacea of health on a population health basis; in
other words, dealing with the effect of change of the population
health of Ontario? To do that, it would have to engage people like
Mr. O'Connor. We would have to solve the primary care piece,
Dr. Sky, and in my opinion, that cannot be solved until there is an
alternate payment plan for primary care physicians. That is just
my opinion, but I want to hear you refute that opinion. I think the
big barrier to primary care reform is that we do not have a
remuneration plan for primary care physicians.
|
| Mr. Lozon: Senator, one of the reasons I made therecommendation that I did was not only because of the issue
around stability - which I think is quite real and quite profound
- or the lack of stability, but simply that the changes you have
even alluded to in your question are difficult to make in the
current environment for a Minister of Health, whether he or she is
in Regina, Winnipeg, Queen's Park or Halifax. The changes that
are required are so profound and so dangerous and they take so
long to get through the system. It does take a long time because
this is a very major system overhaul - and they often just do not
get done.
|
| The notion behind this is not only to create greater stability, but
also to create the platform where those types of activities can get
done.
|
| Absent a burning platform such as occurred early in the 1990s
around provincial finances and federal finances, many of the
things that have occurred - perhaps regionalization in other
provinces, the Health Services Restructuring Commission in our
province - may not have gotten done, in part because the system
requires so many trade-offs that the way forward is very difficult
to achieve.
|
| I recommended that as a means of separating that out, I often
used to wonder, "Is the Minister of Energy responsible for the
lights that go on or off in the Royal York Hotel?" The answer to
that is no one ever asked the Minister of Health why the lights go
off in the Royal York Hotel. However, it is quite possible that the
Minister of Health could be asked why a mother was transferred
from Taber, Alberta to Montana for service, and for the minister
to be able to take either the political credit or the political damage
for that particular activity. It is an impractical system that we have
set up, in that way.
|
| Senator Keon: Gary, would you comment on what you would
think of regionalization as it affects the population of, say, 1 and
one-half million people or 2 million people? Would it be a good
thing or a bad thing for your concept?
|
| Mr. O'Connor: One of the issues with regionalization is scale.
In P.E.I., regionalization makes sense. In Toronto, it does not. It is
hard to comment on your question with that overlay.
|
| A lot of planning is now turning to community level planning
and examining what makes sense for communities. Community
health centres have been doing this for 30 years, helping to create
vibrant, strong communities and, through that, vibrant strong
regions and provinces and countries.
|
| Regionalization, if it is done in a way that serves patient and
community needs, is effective and helpful. If it is done in a way
that serves provincial and political needs, it is often done in a way
that is not helpful to individuals and communities.
|
| I echo what Jeff said. We have to take the politics out of health
care, and we have to find a way to make health care certain of a
long-term process, that is longer than the electoral process.
|
| Senator Keon: Ken, would you comment on how you could
implement an APP for family physicians?
|
| The Chairman: What is an APP?
|
| Senator Keon: That is an alternate payment plan. Could you
comment on a way to put family physicians on salary for a region
that would fit with the community resources in the region, the
community clinics, the primary care piece and so forth, so they
could work as part of these teams? Can you do that without
regionalization?
|
| Dr. Sky: Let me first say that as well as being President of the
Ontario Medical Association, I am a director on the board of the
Canadian Medical Association and I speak frequently to my
colleagues right across Canada. It has been their impression that
regionalization has been a disaster wherever it has been
implemented. It is a system by which governments off-load
responsibilities for the shortcomings in the system and tend to just
cultivate all the good parts of it. I am not sure that regionalization
is necessary for our system, as we have it now.
|
| When it comes to primary care reform, or any other name that
goes by - in Ontario it is called the Ontario Family Health
Network - let me say, in response first to Senator Morin's
question, there is no proof that this works. That is why we have
insisted that there be constant evaluation of the system. We have
had the first report of that in Ontario. It is an iterative process. We
keep changing the model to deal with the shortcomings that we
find.
|
| As to the payment model itself, with regard to primary care
reform, we are using two or three different models now in our
pilot sites. We have a blended form. We have an alternate
payment form, which is essentially equivalent to a salary, and we
have a reform fee-for-service model. We are using all three
systems. We are testing all three of them to determine which one
works.
|
| What we have found is that no one system works for
everybody, that what patients want and what the doctors want
varies from area to area. We must examine them to determine if
we can work within three or four models. In fact, that is exactly
what the Council of the Ontario Medical Association will
contemplate on November 10 when it examines various payment
models to determine whether they make sense for the physicians
of Ontario.
|
| Senator Keon: Jeff, you were, more than anybody else,
successful in getting the $1 billion out of the federal government
for changing technology. I recall talking to you when that was
coming up.
|
| I am of the impression that if we are to have real change, we
must have some real money behind it. I go back to the change that
occurred in the 1960s when the health resources money came on
stream and medical schools and medical centres such as
McMaster got built at tremendous cost. When you think of
it, $100 million in 1965 dollars was a huge amount of money.
|
| What do you think of advocating to the federal government -
with the same federal-provincial understandings that it had for the
health resources money so that provinces can cope with what
comes after - that it provide a huge block of funding for change
to permit the system to adapt to the times we are in, instead of
having everybody limp along from day to day just trying to cope
with what they have?
|
| Mr. Lozon: Senator, I use a quote from time to time by Senator
Dirksen, who said, "A billion here and a billion there - pretty
soon you are starting to talk about real money."
|
| In one of my volunteer capacities, I am President of the
Association of Canadian Academic Health Care Organizations,
which is the national organization representing teaching hospitals
and teaching regions across the country. I ask the committee to
consider whether these organizations and the medical schools
with which they are affiliated should not be seen as national
resources.
|
| People who train at the University of Toronto or the University
of Saskatchewan end up practising everywhere in this country,
and there has been an enormous commitment by the federal
government to the innovation of research agenda through the
Canada Research Chairs, the Canadian Foundation for Innovation
and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. That is taxing the
resources of teaching organizations and faculties of medicine.
|
| I was reading carefully through your expanded federal role to
see whether the committee would consider moving these
organizations into more of a national role because, in fact, the
activity that we perform, not our service activity, but our
education and research activity, really does embrace Canada from
coast to coast.
|
| Senator Robertson: Mr. Lozon, it is refreshing to have an
ex-senior civil servant speak honestly about the system.
|
| I want to talk for a minute about the independent non-profit
boards throughout the system. There have been various references
to something like that over the years.
|
| My concern, sir, is that someone has to appoint members to
these boards - and never underestimate the ability of politicians
to get certain people on boards. Understandably, the public is
always suspicious of board appointments by the government of
the day, sometimes with good cause and sometimes not with good
cause.
|
| If we could figure out a way of having a totally independent,
non-profit board, that would be a major step forward. I am
suspicious that it would take the good. Lord himself coming down
to earth and picking appropriate people to do so without
interference by politicians. What keeps running through my mind
is how would we get those people there. I believe, regardless of
what this board did, that people would say, "Well, that board was
appointed by so and so, and they are at fault and out they go,"
which is often very reasonable.
|
| Have you thought that through? How you would get an
independent board?
|
| Mr. Lozon: Senator, I want to make an observation before I
comment on your question.
|
| I have enormous and deep respect for the people who are
elected and who end up in the positions running our health care
system. The colleagues with whom I worked in the Ministry of
Health and Long-Term Care were extraordinarily talented, very
hard-working and committed. Like most things in life, things do
not fail to work because there is human error; they fail to work
because we have created a system that does not work.
|
| I have thought a little about the notion of independence and
how to achieve independence. One suggestion would be to have
the board appointed by an all-party committee of the legislature. I
am not sure anyone would ever go for that. We are talking in
abstract and theoretical terms, of course. That would be one
notion.
|
| I would have to leave that to people who are more
knowledgeable about public policy direction. I am more familiar
with the health care circumstance. Big change is required, which
is tough to make. It takes a long time to work issues through, and
we do not have the structures and the processes that allow those
things to happen.
|
| Senator Robertson: I agree with you totally in your
observations.
|
| Dr. Sky: Senator, we have been suggesting for a long time, at
the Ontario Medical Association, that there be an examination of
other systems around the world, in particular, those of the OECD
countries. We do not believe that all the answers to health care are
found here in Canada. There is no one perfect system. There must
be consideration of all the others to try to tease out the best parts
from each.
|
| If you were to subscribe to Mr. Lozon's theory that what we
need is an overseeing matter, I would recommend that you look at
the French system. In France the people who run the health care
system are at arm's length from the politicians. They still have to
report to the politicians, and the politicians still set the policy.
There is a way to do that It is difficult to compare our countries
because we are a confederation and France is a single country that
is run differently. By examining different models around the
world, we can come up with ideas that would be appropriate for
Canada in the 21st century.
|
| Senator Robertson: Thank you for that. As you probably
know, the committee has held video-conferenced meetings with a
number of countries to discuss their health systems. Perhaps we
should determine if something there might help us with the
independent development. However, I am still a little suspicious.
|
| Let me move on, I shall not be too long.
|
| Dr. Sky, on page 1 of your presentation, down toward the
bottom of the page, you say:
|
There are many issues that are important to this discussion.
Chief among them is the current physician human resources
crisis - and the growing evidence that physician shortages
will become even more severe in the near future.
|
| We had a witness this morning, Dr. Rachlis, who does not
believe we need more medically trained people and that there is a
misuse of those that we have. I do not know whether he is right or
wrong or half right. There is a complaint, or a feeling among the
medical communities that physicians do not use or encourage the
use of other medically trained professionals or paraprofessionals.
We have had that reference from time to time. I would like to
know how you feel.
|
| Before I ask you to reply, I noted, on page 3, there were three
specific aspects to your presentation: the role of the provincial
government, the role of the federal government, the role of
physicians and, ultimately, the doctor-patient relationship.
|
| I am surprised that what was not added there was the role of
256 physicians with other health providers, the interdisciplinary
practices that we have heard so much about that gets the best
juice from all the medical professionals or paraprofessionals that
we have in the system. Would you comment, please?
|
| Dr. Sky: There seems to be two issues involved there, Senator.
The first is the physician shortage itself, whether it is real or
imagined, and the second is the issue of other providers in
association with physicians. I did allude to the nurse practitioner
issue.
|
| Let me deal with the issue of physician shortages. In 1999
Professor McKendry issued a report in Ontario that showed that
there was a minimum shortage of 1,000 doctors. The next year
Professor George followed that up and said, "No, he was wrong,
he is short by about 250 to 300." We now have the government of
Ontario agreeing that we have a shortage of at least 1,300 doctors
in this province. I would challenge Dr. Rachlis to go to any of the
109 communities across Ontario that are designated as being short
of physicians and tell them that they have enough doctors.
|
| That issue has been laid to rest by enough scientific debate that
it should not be an issue.
|
| On the issue of physician extenders, nurse practitioners in
particular, we have set up a committee. At this point it has not
reported on how we will use physician extenders.
|
| From our point of view, the main issue is that there should not
be multiple points of entry into the health care system. We
consider nurse practitioners as part of a team, working with
physicians to see as many patients as possible, but under the
supervision of a physician. Most patients in Ontario - by survey,
over 90 per cent - wish to see a family practitioner first. We
think that need has to be met.
|
| The issue then turns on how to fund nurse practitioners. At the
moment, those we have are being funded to a great degree by
direct contract with the government, or out of the doctor's
resources. Neither of those are very good ways of funding them,
and we must consider better ways.
|
| Senator Robertson: Thank you for that. I appreciate your
comment on the need for more physicians, especially since you
come from a small province, like some of us. My constituents
have advised me that they drive 60 kilometres these days to get a
family physician. The system is breaking down.
|
| I have a quick observation that applies, Dr. Sky, to what we
have been talking about.
|
| Mr. O'Connor, I like health centres. They are good, in my
humble opinion. Of course, I say that from the perspective of one
who comes from a small province. I think it was you who said
that, on prevention, we have to work with the environment,
housing and all the factors that impact poverty, and these areas all
must work together.
|
| That discourages me somewhat, sir. One problem is that we
have silos in the system and nobody speaks to anyone else. We
have vertical funding from the Department of Health, up and
down, and nobody can see into the other person's silo. This is a
wasteful process. I believe that horizontal movement of funding
for a particular block of citizens would be better used, but if we
cannot get the silos torn down in the health system, how will we
get the larger silos torn down for departmental co-operation? I
appreciate your comment, but I would like to see the silos first
torn down in the health system.
|
| Mr. O'Connor: I will give you a couple of examples. From a
community perspective, silos tear down quite easily.
|
| In the South Riverdale Community Health Centre in Toronto, a
number of years ago, physicians encountered a high incidence of
lead poisoning in their patients. Had this happened in solo
practices, physicians would have treated lead poisoning and
continued to treat lead poisoning. In this case, the venue was a
community organization, which had community outreach workers
and a board. The physicians reported the incidence. The outreach
workers searched for reasons. The organization lobbied the
government to examine sources of pollution in that community.
There was a battery factory, which ended up closing down and
moving on. The soil is being remediated in the community.
|
| In Windsor, the fire department noticed a great incidence of fire
deaths and arsons in the community. It worked with the Sandwich
Community Health Centre, which is in a low-income community
without much fire prevention or suppression equipment in the
homes. They got donations of fire extinguishers and fire detection
equipment and put that into the homes. Now there is the lowest
incidence of fire deaths in that region, and the fire department
credits the community health centre with solving the problem.
|
| There are ways, when you take an integrated approach to care
that is more than just the provision of episodic care, to create
more wellness, to help the whole community become well.
|
| Senator Robertson: Thank you. I appreciate that. I can give
you lots of examples of this in small communities as well.
|
| Chair, we have heard many of the witnesses over the last weeks
speak about these silos, where people almost work against each
other.
|
| The Chairman: Senators, we have one last panel before we
adjourn.
|
| I will begin with Mr. Jeff Wilbee, who is the Executive
Director of the Alcohol and Drug Recovery Association of
Ontario and the Addiction Intervention Association.
|
| Mr. Jeff Wilbee, Executive Director, Alcohol and Drug
Recovery Association of Ontario and Addiction Intervention
Association: Mr. Chairman, I would like to express our
appreciation to you and the committee for the opportunity to
address you today.
|
| Given the limited time for our presentation, I will primarily
confine my remarks to Chapter 12 of the "Issues and Options"
report, on the population health role, but first, I have just a few
comments on the other roles.
|
| On finance, it seems to me, as a citizen of this country, that the
most difficult challenge before us is the type of funding
mechanisms we develop.
|
| We suggest that a continuing combination of public and private
funding must be given in-depth consideration. However, in doing
so, full provision for those at the lower strata of the social and
economic scale - many of whom are present at our clinic doors
- must be ensured.
|
| Another point we strongly wish to make on this role is that the
government must maintain, in our view, its current ban on
advertising of prescription drugs.
|
| Under research and evaluation, we strongly support enhanced
resources for research. However, a large portion of that research
should have input and involvement by front line health workers.
|
| Not only should research knowledge be disseminated, there
should be greater emphasis and resource allocation to education
and training, particularly for health care providers. Health care is
about equipment and systems, but it is primarily about people
assisting people. The higher the knowledge and skills of both the
practitioner and the patient, we suggest, the higher is the
effectiveness of all of our efforts.
|
| On infrastructure, we fully support the objectives ofevidence-based decision making and accountability in the system.
That can be done, in part, through technology and information
systems. Accountability should not just be about costs and
administrative efficiencies; it should focus on clinical outcomes.
Greater integration of information systems should produce better
outcomes, both clinically and administratively. For example,
many times the addiction treatment system is in a silo and is not
seen as a core service.
|
| Under the service delivery role for Aboriginal health, the report
states that programs leading to healthier outcomes are those based
on significant input from the members of the involved
community. We applaud that statement. We also think it is a
principle that should apply right across every community in this
great land.
|
| Our major contribution to this discussion is that a larger
percentage of our attention and resources must be focussed on
health promotion, early intervention and population health
measures.
|
| Our client population, substance abusers, costs our health
system an enormous amount of time, human resources and
dollars. It burdens the health system in a direct way through
traumas such as impaired driving, falls, acts of violence, and
infectious diseases like AIDS and hepatitis.
|
| Substance abuse is also a contributing factor to other more
primary diagnoses, such as kidney and liver ailments, and
certainly it does not assist in recovery from cancer and heart
pathology. Although I have not referenced this, it might be of
interest that a particular study estimated that 20 per cent or30 per cent of general hospital beds are occupied by people with
alcohol and drug related problems, and 80 per cent of those
patients, according to this report, are not identified as such.
|
| Also of major concern is usage among our youth. Recent, 2001,
research on substance abuse among Manitoba high school
students reported that the average age of first use of alcohol is a
shocking 13.3 years of age. By the fourth year of high school, 33
per cent use alcohol once a week or more. In the survey, 17.8 per
cent of the students stated that one of the problems faced as a
result of this usage is unwanted pregnancy.
|
| Another concern we have recognized in Ontario is the havoc
caused by inebriates arriving at our already overburdened hospital
emergency departments, and we are already exploring strategies
to divert this client group into other more appropriate
interventions.
|
| We contend that these costs to the health care system can be
radically reduced by implementing appropriate strategies. An
Ontario Auditor General's report stated that there is a $6.00 return
for every $1.00 invested in addiction treatment. This estimate is
considered conservative. Other reports indicate even higher
returns. Therefore, we recommend that substance abuse awareness
and treatment be integrated into the mainstream system and that it
be adequately funded, which, at the moment, it is not.
|
| As your report indicates, our health care system's contribution
to keeping people healthy may only be 25 per cent. It makes
eminent sense to concentrate a on the other 75 per cent. To this
end, Canada should show world leadership, through a health
commissioner, in measuring and improving our population health
status.
|
| How do we do that? Experience has shown that just
disseminating information may not go far enough. In the
addiction field, many millions of dollars have been spent on
warning people about the dangers of tobacco and drug use, only
to find that we are back to the late 1970s usage rates among youth
when it comes to drugs.
|
| We must concentrate on the quality of our programs and our
practitioners. For example, the Addiction InterventionAssociation, which markets a certification process for addiction
treatment professionals, is about to implement a certification
process for prevention specialists.
|
| In closing, the one word that we want to emphasize is
"accountability." We must ensure that in spending our limited
resources we are achieving the optimal results. We believe that, in
general, the suggestions in the report are heading in the right
direction. However, we would caution that while we are changing
larger sectors of the system we should not overlook the
contribution of less visible sectors such as addiction.
|
| We thank you for involving us in this dialogue.
|
| Mr. Denis Morrice, President and CEO, The Arthritis
Society: Thank you very much for this opportunity. As citizens, I
thank you for all the personal time you have put into this. You are
absorbing a large amount of material.
|
| In the report, we examine fairness as really being the issue.
Certainly, it is the issue for people with arthritis because, clearly,
it is just not fair.
|
| I am speaking on behalf of people with arthritis and my
colleague will speak on cancer. My father, brother, mother and
older sister all died of cancer and my younger sister has just
finished chemo and is starting radiation, yet I am here to speak on
arthritis. I cannot help thinking it is time for researchers to stop
researching what they want to research and start researching what
citizens want to have researched.
|
| I thought Jeffrey Lozon's introduction was beautifully done.
|
| Musculoskeletal arthritis conditions are number one in the
nation in terms of doctor visits, and among diseases in terms of
disability. Arthritis is the single largest cause of long-term
disability, yet we never talk about it. Please just think about the
magnitude of that.
|
| We talk about arthritis in terms of aches and pains. Doctors tell
arthritis patients, "It is aches and pains. We all get arthritis one
day. Go home and live with it," without the appreciation that
rheumatoid arthritis, lupus and some other forms are autoimmune
diseases and should be treated very seriously.
|
| Of the 4 million people who have arthritis, 2 million take
medications every single day to relieve pain and inflammation.
Right now in Canada, we are talking about 38,000 hip and knee
replacements. Considering 9.8 million baby boomers started
turning 50 just a few years ago, we can foresee what is to come.
|
| I will just address a few points that were in your report.
|
| I ask you to recognize arthritis in terms of its magnitude and
the impact that it has on the health care system and on society.
|
| In terms of research, those of us with disease want to get rid of
the damned disease. We can only do that through research, and
that is why we fully support the Canadian Institutes for Health
Research, CIHR. It is not just a matter of doubling that budget. It
has to be more than doubled because the mandate has been
broadened so much. How many real dollars are there now
available for the kind of research that was being done?
|
| We are very fortunate in the area of arthritis to have the
Institute of Musculoskeletal Health and Arthritis, which is one of
13 institutes. The nice thing about that was we were able to bring
together dentists, osteoporosis people, orthopaedic surgeons,
rheumatologists and skin people to, finally, begin to truly break
down those silos. We made them come together.
|
| On network centres of excellence, we are very fortunate to
have the first disease-specific network centres of excellence, the
Canadian Arthritis Network. Attached to that is a consumer
advisory board of citizens with arthritis who help to set that
agenda. We know the system can work when you involve the
citizens.
|
| By interfacing with one another, researchers have come to
appreciate who we are and to appreciate our problems, as we have
come to appreciate the research that scientists are doing. They
became the ambassadors. We feel that the silos can be broken
down.
|
| I would like to touch on specialist training. We heard it in the
last discussion about the shortage of doctors and so on. This is not
calculus, this is arithmetic that we are talking about. We do not
even have a rheumatologist, which is an arthritis specialist, in
P.E.I. There is not one. In Kitchener there are three, but two will
retire this year, which will leave one to treat people. There are
4 million people who have arthritis.
|
| One of the things that we are considering, along with the nurse
practitioners, is physiotherapist practitioners. I guess this comes
back to the community care concept, where the answers really lie
in the community. We are now talking about new biologics in
terms of infusions and needles that have to be taken. The nurse
practitioner is there. What about the physiotherapist practitioner?
These are the kinds of things that we are considering and trying to
introduce.
|
| The Arthritis Society is a little not-for-profit organization. We
fund clinical fellows and doctors who want to become specialists
in rheumatology. We literally pay for half of that, and we match
the Ministry of Health. We should not have to do that, but in fact,
that is what we are doing because there is an unbelievable
shortage.
|
| In terms of drug approvals with which you have been dealing, I
know you have heard many discussions on it with Therapeutic
Products Directorate. Health Canada cannot handle all the new
drugs and the biologics. Why are we not using our network
centres of excellence? Why are we not using our institutes?
Health Canada still plays a major role and has the final say, but let
us take our brightest minds and people and put them to work. We
are funding them anyway.
|
| On provincial formularies, we all know it is nonsense. How can
we have a drug fully approved in one province and the province
right next door has a restricted listing and, in the province next to
that, it is not even listed? We are all Canadians. This is just not
fair.
|
| People with arthritis really suffer in that respect. For the first
time there are new medications that do not cause the same kinds
of side effects. Better stuff has happened in the last couple of
years than in the last hundred years. Side effects are the major
issue. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatories cause side effects.
|
| To get down to statistics, more people die from the side effects
of arthritis medications than from AIDS in this country.
Considering the magnitude and the numbers, something should
happen here. That is why we support a national pharmacare
program.
|
| Another thing that we support and that has to be introduced, is
not just post-marketing but also post-approval surveillance. We
have enough medical schools. We have 16 medical schools in this
country. Why not use them, with all the doctors that they have, to
do the studies and reporting and have that kind of surveillance?
We do not have it right now. We can debate for hours about
clinical trials. Having surveillance is really the answer for all the
people that I have talked to.
|
| I will leave primary care reform because many other people
addressed it well.
|
| Citizens and patients must be involved to help set agendas.
When doctors, scientists, researchers and patients get together, we
come up with the proper kinds of solutions.
|
| Concerning the Health Charities Council, certainly, we are
trying to play our part. We run arthritis self-management
programs. We have patient partners in 12 of the 16 medical
schools, and so on. We have the peer review system. We have
citizens involved. Use us to listen to the patients and we will all
be better off.
|
| Dr. Barbara Whylie, Director, Cancer Control Policy,
Canadian Cancer Society: Thank you very much indeed for
allowing the Cancer Society to participate in these consultations.
|
| I guess we are all going to quote statistics to you. Cancer is the
leading cause of premature death among Canadians, and the
statistics tell us that cancer will affect one in three Canadians in
his or her lifetime. It is a major health risk for Canadians.
|
| It is a growing health risk because cancer is largely a disease of
the elderly. We project that the number of new cases each year
will double over the next 15 or 20 years.
|
| The Canadian Cancer Society is a volunteer-based
organization. It has been around for over 50 years. We raise funds
for cancer research. We give information to Canadians and people
living with cancer about cancer and about its risk factors. We
provide direct support services to people living with cancer, and
we undertake public policy advocacy to support cancer control.
|
| We are very much concerned about the increasing burden and
the increasing challenge that cancer brings to our health care
system, and as such, we are one of the key partners in an effort
that has been going on for the last couple of years to develop a
Canadian strategy for cancer control. That strategy development
involved about 200 experts and consumers from all parts of the
country to review our current knowledge in all aspects of cancer
control. These individuals developed a set of 94
recommendations, which we will not table for your consideration,
but these have been refined through a series of consultations into
five action priorities.
|
| The five action priorities are: development of standards;
development of a research strategy; rebalancing the focus in our
system to ensure attention to the less developed aspects of care; in
particular, support of rehabilitative and palliative care; human
resources planning, which is an issue in the cancer system as well
as in the health care system at large; and attention to prevention.
Our comments, with respect to your work, are grounded in this
strategy. If people are interested in having more information about
the strategy, I can give you a reference. There are reams of
material available through the Internet.
|
| We recognize and support all of the federal government roles
and objectives that you have identified in your "Issues and
Options" report, but we particularly would like to focus on two
areas. Those are the areas of population health and reform of
primary care.
|
| With respect to population health, we know from research, or it
has been estimated from research studies, that up to 70 per cent of
cancer cases can be avoided by people avoiding exposure to
known risk factors, which include tobacco use, diet, physical
activity, exposure to the sun and occupational and environmental
carcinogens.
|
| One of the interesting things is that many of these major
modifiable risk factors for cancer prevention, in particular,
tobacco use, healthy diet and physical activity, are also important
prevention measures for other chronic diseases, such as diabetes
and cardiovascular diseases, both also major health concerns for
Canadians. Therefore, an integrated chronic disease prevention
strategy for the country should be developed and implemented.
Work in this area has recently begun collaboratively through the
NGOs related to cancer, diabetes and cardiovascular diseases in
collaboration with Health Canada.
|
| The Canadian Cancer Society recommends the development
and support of a nation-wide health promotion and disease
prevention strategy, and that the federal role in health promotion
should be strengthened to enable the achievement of this goal.
|
| Studies that have shown that for every $1.00 spent in
prevention, we can save $3.00 in treatment costs, so shifting more
financial resources to health promotion and chronic disease
prevention will defer illness until later in life. That, obviously,
will not eliminate those illnesses altogether, but it can be
anticipated that it will generate substantial long-term benefits both
by reducing costs to the system and - more important maybe -
by improving the quality of life for Canadians.
|
| More research into risk factors and into how to modify risk
factors is needed. The Canadian Cancer Society urges your
committee to recommend that a specific percentage of health
research dollars be dedicated for research into risk factors and into
socio-behavioural research.
|
| On primary care, more services are being delivered in the home
by health professionals, including doctors. Under the Canada
Health Act, we would like to see the definition of "insured health
services" to be expanded to include services in the home and in
the community, particularly for drugs, rehabilitation and palliative
care.
|
| Canadians need access to excellent quality care, both in and out
of the hospital setting, so the Canadian Cancer Society therefore
endorses the suggestion of the National Forum on Health that
public coverage should be refocused to cover the care, and not the
site.
|
| There is also a need for a nationwide, coordinated system for
hospital, home and community care so that all patients in Canada
can receive an equitable level of treatment and care regardless of
place of residence, and so that the transition between levels of
care is invisible. In our case, we are particularly concerned about
individuals who are experiencing cancer. A seamless access to
cancer treatment and care is essential to reducing the suffering
that goes with the cancer experience.
|
| Equally, as much as possible, treatment and care must be
evidence-based. Many current treatments for illness are not
grounded in research and do not reflect best practices. We would
like to see the establishment of interprovincial mechanisms to
develop evidence-based standards and guidelines for the full
spectrum of cancer treatment and care.
|
| Finally, our current system of primary care lacks incentives for
physicians to practice health promotion and health maintenance,
whether by themselves or in collaboration with other health
providers. We would like primary care reform to specifically
address these aspects of health services.
|
| As a member of the voluntary sector representing Canadians at
the grass roots level, the Canadian Cancer Society looks forward
to working in partnership with governments and other key
partners to ensure that health care reform occurs in a timely way
and benefits all Canadians.
|
| Health care is a major challenge to our systems. It is not
feasible for any one organization or any one jurisdiction to effect
change on its own, so we believe very strongly in a collaborative
approach to health care reform.
|
| Dr. Robert Conn, President and CEO, SMARTRISK: Good
afternoon to all the members of the standing committee. I would
like to join the other members of the panel in applauding the
important work that you are doing on behalf of Canadians.
|
| I am here this afternoon, on behalf of SMARTRISK, to amplify
an issue that was touched on briefly in your September 2001
"Issues and Options" report and what really is a silent epidemic in
our country, the issue of unintentional injury.
|
| What I would like to do in the few minutes that have been
allotted is to give you a sense of the magnitude of the problem
and to talk a little bit about why this is a silent epidemic.
|
| My training is far removed from injury prevention. I am
actually trained as a cardiac surgeon. I had the opportunity to do
some of my training with one of the fathers of modern day heart
surgery, a fellow by the name of Dr. John Kirklin at the
University of Alabama in Birmingham.
|
| His program was a little different in terms of transplantation
work in that he insisted that we spend the first three months of our
program, even though we were very keen to do transplantation
work, on what is called the "harvest team," which is the team that
actually procures the donor hearts.
|
| It is very embarrassing in retrospect, but I had never stopped to
think where donors come from. I had always focussed on the
miracle of transplantation. In doing that work, day in and day out
for three months, what I quickly began to appreciate was that our
donors are like the majority of people in this room, in fact, the
majority of people that have testified to you, people who are very
healthy one moment, with very active and challenging lives and
then, as a result of being hurt, are brain dead the next. That made
a huge impression on me.
|
| When I returned to Canada and began my training in children's
heart surgery at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, I began
to examine the whole issue of unintentional injury. What I found
absolutely astounded me.
|
| If you were to ask most Canadians what the number one cause
of death was for Canadians in their prime, they would probably
say cancer. If you told them they were wrong, they would
probably tell you heart disease. If you told them they were wrong,
they would tell you other things that they had heard of. In fact, the
number one cause of death for Canadians up to age 44, is injury.
|
| If we consider children between the ages of 1 and 20, you can
consider every cause of death that you have ever heard of, AIDS,
meningitis, leukemia, cystic fibrosis, name them, add them all
together, and we have more children in this country dying of
injury than everything else combined. In fact, in Canada, last year
7 out of every 10 teenage deaths were a result of a predictable,
preventable injury.
|
| About 10 years ago, the Head of Cardiac Surgery at Sick Kids
was tired of me bringing in these statistics every day, and he
grabbed my arm and said, "If you feel very strongly about this, do
something about it." I have come to appreciate in retrospect, now
that I am a little older and a little wiser, what he was actually
saying to me was "Shut up!" The challenge then became: what
can you do? Upon examining the world of safety, I began to
realize that traditionally we talk about safety in the form of rules.
We talk about safety in the form of "don't" messages. What we
have failed to recognize is that life is about taking risks. The
challenge is getting people to appreciate and understand those
risks in a way that they can then manage them and benefit from
that.
|
| In terms of the magnitude of the problem, the numbers are
astounding. Every hour, of every day, 220 Canadians go to
hospital as a result of being injured. In fact, 21 Canadians die, on
average, every day from injury and about 47,000 people are
disabled every year.
|
| In situations where people do not die, the most serious injuries
are to the brain and the spinal cord. It is estimated that we spend
about $3 million on each serious head injury in lifetime costs. Just
in the province of Ontario, we average about four serious head
injuries a day. We spend about $12 million a day to treat the four
people in Ontario who are seriously head-injured.
|
| We commissioned a study in partnership with Health Canada
two years ago to examine the economic burden of unintentional
injury in this country. We thought the numbers would be large,
but we had no idea how large. It is the third highest economic
burden in our entire health care system. We are spending about$8.7 billion a year to treat people who are seriously injured. What
is most compelling about injury prevention is that over 90 per
cent of all of the injuries that come into the hospital are
preventable. They are predictable and preventable.
|
| Other countries have recognized the magnitude of the problem.
In the United States, the Centre for Disease Control has actually
created an institute for injury prevention and control. Great
Britain has identified four major health priorities for its
population: cancer, heart disease, mental health and injuries. In
Canada, we do not have a national strategy or a national plan for
tackling the issue of injury prevention.
|
| In terms of research, less than 1 per cent of all of our research
dollars in health care are spent on injury prevention research. It is
crucial, if we are going to have good programming, that we have
evidence upon which that programming can be based.
|
| In your "Issues and Options" report, in Chapter 12, you said
that disease issues are complex, but many chronic and infectious
diseases and most injuries can be prevented. However, there has
been a tendency to focus on curing diseases rather than on
preventing them, largely because of a lack of political will.
|
| What I would like to suggest this afternoon is that it is actually
more than a lack of political will, and here I would like to share
some insight as to why this issue, even though it is so large, is
totally unrecognized in our society.
|
| We know that a lot of our thinking in life, a lot of the way in
which we behave as humans, is shaped by the language we use.
There is a particular word that we use to describe all of these
things that I wish we could eradicate from the human vocabulary,
and that is the word "accident."
|
| In the dictionary "accident" is defined as "an unavoidable act
of fate." We know from human behaviour studies that if we
believe something is fate, most people respond by coping with
that through denial.
|
| For example, if I were to suggest that three people around this
table were going to die in the next hour as a result of fate, in the
next hour we would observe a variety of coping mechanisms.
Some people might be very angry with me for having suggested
that, some people might get agitated, some people might actually
feel physically unwell and the more sophisticated "copers" would
spend the next hour looking around the room and picking out the
three people that they thought were going to die - and you can
bet that they would not be among them. Denial is a very
sophisticated coping mechanism.
|
| We live in a society where, if tonight in any city -
Charlottetown, Kitimat, British Columbia, or Red Deer - six
children were to die in a car crash, we would call it a terrible
tragic accident and not much more would happen. Yet, if
anywhere in this country six children were to die of meningitis, it
would be a national story and there would be an outpouring of
resources into the community unlike any that have been seen.
|
| We believe that in order to move forward on this issue, there
are three concrete things that can happen which can be led by the
federal government.
|
| The first is in the area of surveillance. We know very little
about how people actually get hurt, and in fact, it is very
interesting to find, when you start examining the data we have,
that we do not even have a uniform way of coding deaths related
to injury in this country. If you die of a heart attack anywhere in
this county, you will be counted once. If you die of pneumonia
anywhere in this country, you will be counted once. If you are
from Ontario and you are visiting British Columbia and you are
killed in a car crash, you will not be counted. If you are from
Alberta and you are visiting Saskatchewan, you will be counted
twice. This is such an unrecognized issue that even at the level of
coding our injuries we do not have a uniform system.
|
| We know that, in the economic burden of $8.7 billion, 28 per
cent of the injuries that account for that $8.7 billion are coded as
"other" and we cannot tell you anything beyond that. We do not
have a good surveillance system, and that is certainly a role that
the federal government can play. A good surveillance system is
akin to turning on the lights. If we do not know who is getting
hurt and how they are getting hurt, it is impossible to design
programming.
|
| The second thing that we need is comprehensive research, and I
think all of the other members of the panel would echo that. We
need good evidence upon which we can base our programming.
|
| The third component is comprehensive programming of a
multidisciplinary nature. There is probably no other health care
issue that can bring in as many different disciplines into the
research of an issue as can injury.
|
| I would like to conclude by thanking the members of the
Standing Senate committee. I applaud you for the work that you
are doing.
|
| The Chairman: I thank all of you for your comments
|
| Dr. Conn, thank you for explaining that to me. Other people
have used the term "unintentional injury," which implies there
must be something called an "intentional injury," and, that, I
always had great difficulty with. I wondered why we did not use
the word "accident" and now I know why we do not use it.
|
| Dr. Conn: Actually, the World Health Organization has defined
"injury prevention" as encompassing three areas: unintentional
injuries, suicide and violence. We encourage Health Canada to
ultimately take a similar approach and to consider those three
areas in unison. We, at SMARTRISK, believe that the unifying
link is really the appreciation of risk.
|
| The Chairman: That makes sense.
|
| Senator Cordy: Mr. Wilbee, you talked about the millions of
dollars that have been spent warning people about the dangers of
tobacco and drug use. In my other life, I was an elementary
school teacher, so I am aware of the numbers of programs that
were put out by provincial and federal departments to discourage
such behaviour in young children. You told us that starts at a very
young age.
|
| What did we do wrong? Are the tobacco companies spending
more money than we are spending?
|
| Mr. Wilbee: The answer to the last one is yes. At least in the
area that we are concerned with, and despite that we spend
millions of dollars, my view would be that we do not take
prevention seriously enough. I take it I have agreement of the
panellists.
|
| We have not done anything wrong; we have gone far enough,
and it is not that the "don't" messages do not work. My 10 year
old granddaughter has decided that she is neither going to take
drugs nor get a tattoo, the former pleasing her grandmother a
great deal. However, that does not guarantee that she will not
experiment three or four years from now.
|
| In terms of prevention we are saying, "we need to involve." I
think we have talked a lot about involvement, about involving the
community in planning and implementing our system, but, gosh,
we must involve the children themselves.
|
| The late Dr. Paul Steinhauer, who was an expert in child
development, talked about resiliency and how to develop that
kind of resiliency.
|
| I would like comment on the quality of the prevention
practitioner. For example, many times, in elementary school or
high school, we bring in either a former addict, or maybe an
athlete to tell horrible stories. That affects me for a short while. It
does not involve me, but it affects me.
|
| The best example I can give is that I tend to slow down when I
see a car accident for maybe the next 20 kilometres. Then I find I
am speeding up again because it has not really involved me.
|
| The answer is that this is complex, but we can do a better job.
Part of that is training, and is evidence-based. What really works?
What are the outcomes?
|
| I just would suggest - and research would back me up - that
if you advise, "Just say no," a kid will respond, "But how do I say
no?" How do we build that resiliency in?
|
| There must be more research, which cannot be done without
resources. That goes to your first question. If the "competing
people" are out there, not only for tobacco, but for the lifestyle
advertising that is hanging around the pool about having a cold
one, there must be a counter to that which involves people really
thinking that through. It is complex.
|
| Senator Cordy: Children will all nod appropriately and say all
the things that the teacher or whoever happens to be in the room
says, but we have to develop decision-making skills within the
students as well.
|
| Mr. Wilbee: I am not sure, Mr. Chair, if I have enough time to
share a very quick story.
|
| Last year we went into a school in Kitchener that is known as a
"problem school." It has two combined classes of young ladies in
grades 9 and 10. We did a kind of four-point process with them.
We did the traditional bringing in of a person who is a clinician,
who was very highly regarded among the youth, to do the story
and give the information on the dangers and the risks.
|
| We have developed a journal, in which we asked those
28 young ladies over a 30-day period to record their thoughts. We
were involving them. We came back in a month or so later and
four of those 28 came forward and said, "I have a problem. Can
you help me?"
|
| The real value in the exercise is that we had a clinician who
could assist them and get them into the right programs. One of the
greatest dangers is to open somebody up and then not have the
solutions.
|
| We, like everybody else, would argue that we get what we pay
for. It would be interesting to see the data - I am sure it is there,
or if it is not, we should get it - on injuries, particularly among
youth where substance abuse may be a contributing factor there as
well.
|
| Senator Cordy: You have made an excellent point. The
resources have to be there for follow-up. I remember also doing a
program, "Feeling Yes, Feeling No" many years ago about sexual
abuse, and children were disclosing to the teacher or to a trusted
adult and then being told, "You have to wait six months to get
help." So much for trusting the adult, right?
|
| Mr. Wilbee: What are those kinds of messages? That is when
you get into the suicide or continued increased drug use because
you think there is no answer.
|
| We have to have those kinds of resources and programs.
|
| Senator Cordy: My next question is for Mr. Morrice. You said
that people were frustrated by the lack of standards, and I was just
a bit confused. Do you mean, in terms of drugs that are available,
there are disparities among the provinces? Is that what you meant,
or is there more to it?
|
| Mr. Morrice: There is a lot more to it, in terms of overall
standards, but I was referring to what is happening with drugs
concerning the federal approval process and also the provincial
formularies. Why should we wait for over two years in Canada?
Remicade, a biologic for people with arthritis, was just approved
a couple of weeks ago, despite that it was approved in the United
States and Europe two years ago. Why are we sitting back? Why
are people still in wheelchairs when other people who were in
wheelchairs are out walking around and playing with their
children? It is like a game. This is just not fair.
|
| Senator Callbeck: Thank you all very much for your
presentations.
|
| I just have one question, and it is for Mr. Morrice.
|
| Regarding drugs for arthritis, I was struck when you said that
more people die from the side effects of taking drugs from
arthritis than from AIDS. Is that statistic for Canada?
|
| Mr. Morrice: Yes.
|
| Senator Callbeck: You spoke about the clinical trials and that
there is no surveillance. How are these trials conducted?
|
| Mr. Morrice: Dr. Whylie could answer the clinical trial part
and I will answer the last part of the question.
|
| Dr. Whylie: How are the clinical trials organized?
|
| Senator Callbeck: Yes, are there clinical trials before a drug is
approved by Health Canada?
|
| Dr. Whylie: Yes. Clinical trials are basically large-scale
experiments to identify which new medications are effective and
which are not.
|
| Basically, people with a certain condition are recruited by their
physicians into these trials, and there are different levels of trials
depending on what you are actually trying to find out. In the
simplest form, you give patients either a new drug or the old drug
and they are monitored to identify which one is more effective
than the other.
|
| That type of very technical and very detailed information has to
be provided to Health Canada or any other regulating body to
determine whether drugs will be approved.
|
| One consideration is what and how dangerous the side effects
are, and whether new drugs are more dangerous or less dangerous
than the other drugs that may be almost as effective, which we
currently have in place. It is complex.
|
| Senator Callbeck: How many people are on these trials? Does
it vary with the drug?
|
| Dr. Whylie: I do not know how to answer that question. In the
cancer field, we would like almost everybody being treated for
cancer to have access to clinical trials. In fact, in Canada just now,
approximately 4 to 5 per cent of cancer patients have access to
clinical trials.
|
| Senator Callbeck: Would that drug be free to the patient?
|
| Dr. Whylie: Yes.
|
| Mr. Morrice: Once a drug is approved it is not free any longer.
Then you are relying on the provincial formularies.
|
| Clinical trials involve a kind of a "bandwidth." Once medicine
is approved for an indication, it is available to the broader public,
and later on we hear of more side effects and so on. That is why I
say surveillance is really the issue here. If we can get on top of
the surveillance on a regular basis, we will solve all of that. It
really shakes itself out. We need good surveillance, which we do
not have right now. That would solve many other problems.
|
| We are part of the Cochrane Collaboration, where citizens are
involved. The Cochrane Collaboration was really for specialists
doing world studies on what is best evidence in terms of therapies
and their medication.
|
| The Cochrane Collaboration in Canada was given the area of
musculoskeletal and arthritis. We said, "We will partner with you
if you promise to put all the medical stuff, the gobbledy-gook,
into lay language and that we have citizens right at the table who
have arthritis to help write it."
|
| I have a very quick story. I know, Senator Kirby, you are in a
rush here. Citizens were sitting around a table with doctors and
researchers, who were from Australia and so forth. I watched a
woman with arthritis write something down, fold it up and put it
in her purse. That was interesting, but I did not comment. Three
months later we were at another Cochrane meeting, and I said to
her, "I saw you at the last meeting. I am not challenging you, but I
am just wondering, what did you do with that note?" She said, "It
had the names of the international researchers at the bottom. I
gave it to my doctor and asked why I was not on that drug." She
said that he read it and said, "Why not?" Now it is in lay
language, with documentation on who did the research. She said,
"We then sat and talked for over 20 minutes about my disease.
We are now partners in my disease."
|
| If there is anything more telling than that, I do not know what it
is, in terms of partnership and people understanding.
|
| Senator Callbeck: You talked about surveillance. I was
surprised that there is not any. I am on a new drug, Enbrel, and I
have to report for tests all the time. I have to see my
rheumatologist at certain times. I thought that was what was
happening.
|
| Mr. Morrice: Enbrel is one of the newest biologics, as is
Remicade, for people with arthritis. It is heavy-duty, and I am
sure you will benefit tremendously.
|
| The Chairman: Last question.
|
| Senator Morin: I have a short question for Dr. Whylie. I share
your support for research on the risk factors of cancer. Your
organization, of course, represents Canadians who suffer from
cancer.
|
| What is your position on waiting times for cancer treatment?
Especially with the recent evidence in the Canadian Medical
Association Journal that waiting times adversely affect various
forms of cancer, especially cancer of the breast, what is the
position of your society concerning the fact that we are still
sending Canadians to be treated for cancer in the U.S.?
|
| Dr. Whylie: Our position is very simple. We would like to see
all Canadians with cancer have access to expert cancer care
within the appropriate time frame.
|
| Senator Morin: If you had additional resources to put into the
system, would you put them into research on the risk factors or
into reducing the waiting lines and having efficient treatment in
our country - if you had a choice here?
|
| Dr. Whylie: We have been thinking about these issues for
some time. Our answer was to approach the Canadian Association
of Provincial Cancer Agencies, which is responsible for providing
treatment to cancer patients across the country, the federal
government and other major partners to suggest that we all come
together to examine the total challenge around cancer in this
country and develop a strategy that would solve both of those
problems. That is the objective.
|
| Senator Morin: You are not answering my question.
|
| Dr. Whylie: No, I know that I am not. I do not really have an
answer to your question. My answer is that I think it is not simple.
We believe, for example, that there are options within the cancer
treatment system that perhaps can make the system more efficient.
We also believe, in the long term, if we pay enough attention to
prevention that will relieve some of the pressure on the system.
|
| I am sorry, I do not have an either/or answer to that particular
question.
|
| Mr. Morrice: That gets back to citizens and patients being
involved. We did a bill of rights, which involved patients, all the
professionals, rheumatologists, orthopaedic surgeons, chiropractors,
occupational therapists, physiotherapists and so on. It was the
patients who said they wanted a bill of rights and responsibilities.
I will happily give you a copy of that.
|
| It was a pleasure to watch that kind of thing happen. That is
how you can start to address those choices and very hard issues.
|
| The Chairman: Thank you. Could you leave us a copy of the
bill of rights?
|
| Mr. Morrice: Certainly.
|
| The Chairman: May I thank all of you for coming. We really
appreciate it. Senators, we are adjourned until 9:00 tomorrow
morning.
|
| The committee adjourned.
|