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list price: $21.95
edition:Paperback
also available: eBook
category: Medical
published: Nov 2002
ISBN:9780774810166
publisher: UBC Press

First Do No Harm

Making Sense of Canadian Health Reform

by Terrence Sullivan & Patricia M. Baranek

tagged: health care delivery, health policy
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.

About the Authors

Terrence Sullivan


Patricia M. Baranek

Contributor Notes

Terrence Sullivan has long been active in issues relating to health care policy. He has been the Executive Director of Ontario’s Premier’s Council on Health Strategy; the President of the Institute for Work and Health; Assistant Deputy Minister of Federal-Provincial Relations; and is currently Vice President of CancerCare Ontario, the provincial cancer agency. Dr. Sullivan is also an Associate Professor in the Departments of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, and Public Health Sciences at the University of Toronto. Patricia M. Baranek is an independent health services research consultant. She has had considerable research experience in a number of diverse fields which include health care and criminology. She has held management positions in health and social policy in the Ontario Ministries of Health, Intergovernmental Affairs, and Citizenship. In health care, her research has focussed on public/private financing and delivery, long-term care, home care, mental health, planning, and evaluation.

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