Literature DB >> 19377332

Parallel Lines Do Intersect: Interactions between the Workers' Compensation and Provincial Publicly Financed Healthcare Systems in Canada.

Jeremiah Hurley1, Dianna Pasic, John N Lavis, Cameron Mustard, Anthony J Culyer, William Gnam.   

Abstract

The authors of this paper use a case study approach to document and analyze the interactions that arise between two healthcare payers in Canada: the provincial public healthcare insurance plans and the provincial workers' compensation boards. Through a documentary review and semi-structured key-respondent interviews, the study identified a set of policy events and decisions undertaken by each payer that had consequences for the other. These events, which included changes to governance, funding and service delivery within each system, generated interactions transmitted through the political, institutional and economic environments (primarily through competition for the same resources) and cross-system learning. The two payers currently lack a formalized process by which to consider such spillover effects and to coordinate policy between them. These interactions, and their associated consequences for both payers, raise important policy challenges and, more generally, provide insight into the dynamics of parallel systems of healthcare financing.
Copyright © 2008 Longwoods Publishing.

Entities:  

Year:  2008        PMID: 19377332      PMCID: PMC2645160     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Healthc Policy        ISSN: 1715-6572


  3 in total

1.  Use of research to inform public policymaking.

Authors:  John N Lavis; Francisco Becerra Posada; Andy Haines; Eric Osei
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2004 Oct 30-Nov 5       Impact factor: 79.321

2.  Parallel payers and preferred access: how Canada's Workers' Compensation Boards expedite care for injured and ill workers.

Authors:  Jeremiah Hurley; Dianna Pasic; John N Lavis; Anthony J Culyer; Cameron Mustard; William Gnam
Journal:  Healthc Pap       Date:  2008

3.  Healthcare use of families of injured workers before and after a workplace injury in british columbia, Canada.

Authors:  Judy A Brown; Harry S Shannon; Peggy McDonough; Cameron A Mustard
Journal:  Healthc Policy       Date:  2007-02
  3 in total
  1 in total

1.  Costs of productivity loss due to occupational cancer in Canada: estimation using claims data from Workers' Compensation Boards.

Authors:  W Dominika Wranik; Adam Muir; Min Hu
Journal:  Health Econ Rev       Date:  2017-02-10
  1 in total

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