First Do No Harm

Making Sense of Canadian Health Reform

By Terrence Sullivan & Patricia M. Baranek
Categories: Political Science, Canadian Political Science, Health, Social Work & Psychology, Health & Medicine, Public & Social Policy
Publisher: UBC Press
Paperback : 9780774810166, 120 pages, November 2002
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774844161, 120 pages, November 2011
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774852005, 120 pages, October 2007

Table of contents

Foreword

Preface

1 Declining Public Confidence in Canada’s Health Care System

2 What is Public and What is Private?

3 Memes and Myths

4 Canaries in the Mine: Waiting for Care

5 Closer to Home and Out of Pocket: Shifting Sites of Care

6 The Future: Rigid, Resilient, or Retail Reform Choices

Endnotes

Index

Is there a crisis in Canadian health care? This book provides a concise introduction to the fundamentals of health care in Canada and examine various ideas for reforming the system sensibly.

Description

Is there a crisis in Canadian health care? While the establishment of the Canadian health care system is widely considered a triumph of citizenship, after four decades the national program is in a fragile state marked by declining public confidence. In First Do No Harm, Sullivan and Baranek provide a concise introduction to the fundamentals of health care in Canada and examine various ideas for reforming the system sensibly. Arguing that administrators and policymakers should follow Hippocrates’ dictum “first do no harm” when evaluating and reforming the Canadian health care system, the authors discuss health care financing, popular Canadian health care myths, waiting lists and emergency room overcrowding, and home- and community-based health care. This book is an invaluable invitation to Canadians to think carefully and creatively about the present and future of our health care system.