Study
| EST. READ TIME 2 MIN.Health-care fees in Quebec added convenience and expanded access to services for patients
The Unintended Experiment with Accessory Fees in Quebec
Summary
- Overuse of low-value healthcare services, providing little or no benefit or even avoidable harm to patients, is a common problem in Canadian healthcare systems, and one that likely contributes to rising health care costs.
- Most countries with universal healthcare systems have introduced some form of cost-sharing initiatives to mitigate overuse, whether user fees, co-insurance, or deductibles, with exemptions for vulnerable populations. Among 29 OECD countries with universal health systems, only eight do not require patients to contribute partially to physician and hospital care costs at the point of service.
- Canada prohibits cost-sharing for medically required services under the Canada Health Act, and the federal government has mandatory penalties for offending provinces.
- Despite this, nearly half of Canadians (and 62% of Quebecers) support the idea of introducing user fees in our healthcare systems.
- Quebec previously allowed doctors to charge "accessory fees" to patients during medical consultations, when they considered that one of the services provided was not covered by the government’s fee schedule, or simply insufficiently reimbursed. These fees were abolished in January 2017.
- While these fees were not intended to discourage unnecessary healthcare use, they clearly provided additional convenience to a large number of Quebecers, as evidenced by the reduction in clinic-provided services following their abolition.
- Implementing cost-sharing initiatives along the lines of what is done in the best-performing OECD countries could help reduce the demand for low-value care and free up resources that could be used to finance other more pressing healthcare services for Canadians.
Share
-
Yanick Labrie
Senior Fellow, Fraser Institute
Yanick Labrie, Senior Fellow of the Fraser Institute, is a health economist and public-policy consultant living in Montreal. He currentlyserves as an adjunct economist at HEC Montreal’s Healthcare Management Hub. Mr. Labrie’s career in health policy spans more than fifteen years. He has worked as an economist at the Montreal Economic Institute, the Center for Interuniversity Research and Analysis on Organizations (CIRANO), and was a lecturer at HEC Montréal’s Institute of Applied Economics. He authored or co-authored more than 40 research papers and studies related to health care and pharmaceutical policies. Many of his articles have appeared in the Globe and Mail, National Post, Ottawa Citizen, Montreal Gazette, La Presse, and Le Devoir, among other newspapers. He is frequently invited to participate in conferences and debates, and to comment on economic affairs in the media. He has been invited to give testimonies at numerous parliamentary commissions and working groups on a wide range of topics and in court cases as an expert witness. Yanick Labrie holds a master’s degree in economics from the Université de Montréal.… Read more Read Less…
Related Topics
Related Articles
Philpott should act on instincts and promote Dutch-style health-care reform in Ontario
By: Bacchus Barua and Mackenzie Moir
Canadians want major health-care reform now
By: Mackenzie Moir
Other countries with universal health care don’t have Canada’s long wait times
By: Mackenzie Moir and Bacchus Barua
Alberta government should reform hospital funding to help shorten wait times
By: Mackenzie Moir and Alicia Kardos