Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rcrh6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-21T21:06:16.620Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

International Comparisons of Long-Term Care: Canada, with Specific Reference to Manitoba*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 November 2010

Betty Havens
Affiliation:
University of Manitoba
David Bray
Affiliation:
Queen's University

Abstract

Long-term care in Canada is situated within a universally accessible publicly insured program. The Government of Canada establishes certain minimum standards for health care as the basis for the federal share in funding health programs, although the programs themselves are administered provincially. Examples are drawn from the Province of Manitoba. While the dependency ratio has been decreasing due to a slower increase in the number of persons under 17 years of age, the percent of the population over 65 years continues to increase. Population projections forecast that by the year 2031, one-quarter of the population of Canada will be over 65 years of age. Expenditures on health care doubled from 1981 to 1990 for both Manitoba and Canada. The policy response to ever-increasing costs of delivering health care to an aging population has been to seek alternative methods of delivery. Specifically, the long-term care bed-to-population ratio has been reduced and the authors anticipate continued modest increases in the use of community care.

Résumé

Les soins de longue durée au Canada sont donnés dans un contexte d'assurance publique universelle de soins médicaux. Le gouvernement fédéral établit des normes minimales en matière de soins de santé sur lesquelles il fonde sa part de financement des programmes de soins qui sont, par contre, administrés par les provinces. Les exemples cités sont tirés de situations prévalent au Manitoba. Bien que le taux de dépendence général diminue en raison du ralentissement de la croissance du nombre de personnes de moins de 17 ans, le pourcentage de la population âgée de plus de 65 ans continue de s'élever. Selon les projections démographiques, d'ici l'an 2031, le quart de la population aura franchi la barrière des 65 ans. Les coûts de soins de santé ont doublé de 1981 à 1990, tant au Manitoba que dans l'ensemble du Canada. La réaction politique à la croissance soutenue des coûts de prestation de soins de santé à une population vieillissante a été la recherche de nouvelles méthodes de prestation. Plus précisément, le rapport entre le nombre de lits de soins de longue durée et la population a été réduit, et les auteurs prévoient que le recours aux soins communautaires continuera d'augmenter.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Association on Gerontology 1996

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Berdes, C. (1987). Warmer in winter. Report to World Health Organization Fellow Program. Chicago, IL: Northwestern University.Google Scholar
Chappell, N.L. (1988). Long-term care in Canada. In Rathbone-McCuan, E. & Havens, B. (Eds.), North American elders: United States and Canadian perspectives (pp. 7388). Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.Google Scholar
Havens, B. (1985a). Statements of Betty Havens, Provincial Gerontologist, Manitoba, Canada. House of Representatives, Select committee on aging, Continuing care: International prototypes for America's aged. (Comm. Pub. No. 99–523) (pp. 1722, 81–188). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.Google Scholar
Havens, B. (1985b). A long-term care system: A Canadian perspective. In Kane, R.L. (Ed.), The feasibility of a long-term care system: Lessons from Canada (pp. 1927). Tampa, FL: University of South Florida.Google Scholar
Havens, B. (1986a). Boundary crossing: An organizational challenge for community-based long-term services agencies. In Pelham, A.O. & Clarke, W.F. (Eds.), Managing home care for the elderly: lessons from community-based agencies (pp. 7798). New York: Springer Publishing Co.Google Scholar
Havens, B. (1986b, August). Manitoba model of continuing care. Paper presented at National Conference of State Legislatures Annual Meeting, New Orleans.Google Scholar
Havens, B. (1987). Assessment for care: The Manitoba model. Provider, 13, 2629.Google ScholarPubMed
Interagency Committee for Support Services to Seniors. (1983). Policy paper on support services to seniors. Winnipeg, MB: Manitoba Health.Google Scholar
Interagency Committee for Support Services to Seniors. (1985). Policy paper on support services to seniors (rev. ed.). Winnipeg, MB: Manitoba Health.Google Scholar
Manitoba Health Services Commission. (1986). Personal care home annual statistics. Annual Report, Statistical Appendix. Winnipeg, MB: Manitoba Health.Google Scholar
Manitoba Health Services Commission. (1991). Personal care home annual statistics. Annual Report, Statistical Appendix. Winnipeg, MB: Manitoba Health.Google Scholar
Shapiro, E. (1986). Patterns and predictors of home care use of the elderly when need is the sole basis for admission. Home Health Care Services Quarterly, 7, 2944.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shapiro, E. (1987, May). Multidisciplinary health assessment of the elderly in Manitoba, Canada. Paper presented at International Work Group Meeting on Multidisciplinary Health Assessment of the Elderly, Goteborg, Sweden.Google Scholar
Statistics Canada. (1991a). Residential care database, Special Tabulations.Google Scholar
Statistics Canada. (1991b). Profile of persons with disabilities. Ottawa, ON: Ministry of Supply and Services.Google Scholar
Supply and Services. (1989). National Health Expenditures, 1975–87. Ottawa, ON: Ministry of Supply and Services #H21–99.Google Scholar
Van Nostrand, J.F. (1996). The focus of long-term care in the United States: Nursing home care. Canadian Journal on Aging, 15(suppl. 1), 7390.CrossRefGoogle Scholar