Johnston Sharon, Hogel Matthew
Associate Professor, University of Ottawa, Department of Family Medicine, C.T. Lamont Primary Health Care Research Centre, Ottawa, ON.
Research Associate, C.T. Lamont Primary Health Care Research Centre, Ottawa, ON.
Healthc Policy. 2016 May;11(4):95-110.
In 2004, Canada's First Ministers committed to reforms that would shape the future of the Canadian healthcare landscape. These agreements included commitments to improved performance reporting within the primary healthcare system. The aim of this paper was to review the state of primary healthcare performance reporting after the public reporting mandate agreed to a decade ago in the Action Plan for Health System Renewal of 2003 expired. A grey literature search was performed to identify reports released by the governmental and independent reporting bodies across Canada. No province, or the federal government, met their performance reporting obligations from the 2004 accords. Although the indicators required to report on in the 2004 Accord no longer reflect the priorities of patients, policy makers and physicians, provinces are also failing to report on these priorities. Canada needs better primary healthcare performance reporting to enable accountability and improvement within and across provinces. Despite the national mandate to improve public health system reporting, an opportunity to learn from the diverse primary healthcare reforms, underway across Canada for the past decade, has already been lost.
2004年,加拿大各省省长承诺进行改革,这些改革将塑造加拿大医疗保健领域的未来。这些协议包括在初级医疗保健系统内改进绩效报告的承诺。本文的目的是回顾在十年前《2003年卫生系统更新行动计划》中商定的公开报告任务到期后,初级医疗保健绩效报告的状况。进行了灰色文献检索,以确定加拿大各地政府和独立报告机构发布的报告。没有一个省份或联邦政府履行了2004年协议中的绩效报告义务。尽管2004年协议要求报告的指标不再反映患者、政策制定者和医生的优先事项,但各省也未能就这些优先事项进行报告。加拿大需要更好的初级医疗保健绩效报告,以实现各省内部和各省之间的问责制和改进。尽管有改善公共卫生系统报告的国家任务,但过去十年加拿大各地正在进行的各种初级医疗保健改革所带来的学习机会已经丧失。