Canadians are healthier than ever before, but there are still large gaps between what we know to be high-quality health care and the care that many Canadians receive.
High-quality care is safe, timely, effective, efficient, equitable and patient centred.
There is opportunity for improvement in all of these dimensions.
Ways to improve the quality of care include expanding public funding for proven treatments, investing in primary care and embedding tools of improvement into practice.
Improving care is more likely with the involvement of both front-line clinicians and patients.
Canadians are healthier than ever before,1 and in many respects, the quality of health care provided to Canadians is also better than ever.2–4 However, there are still large gaps between what we know to be high-quality health care and the care that many Canadians receive. Many jurisdictions, including Ontario,5 have adopted the definition of “quality” in health care put forward by the Institute of Medicine (now the Health and Medicine Division of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine). This definition holds that high-quality care is safe, timely, effective, efficient, equitable and patient centred.6 Improving quality is a complex endeavour. Health care quality is often examined through the lens of the clinician–patient encounter, yet the quality of care that individual health care professionals provide is also strongly determined by the broader contexts in which they train and work. The Institute of Medicine settled on its definition because it is comprehensive and highlights opportunities for improvement, without restriction to a particular sector, profession or type of organization. The supporting report also clearly acknowledges that the quality of care provided to patients is the responsibility of not just individual clinicians but also other actors in the health care system.
We use the well-recognized framework of the Institute of Medicine6 to appraise the quality of health care in Canada, and also as a foundation for discussing strategies that can be used by system-level decision-makers who wish to improve health care.
How good is the care that Canadians receive?
In assessing the quality of health care provided to Canadians compared with that in other high-income countries, we rely primarily on two data sources: comparative data collated by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)7 and annual surveys conducted by the Commonwealth Fund.8 Although international comparisons are often subject to various biases (e.g., people in one country may interpret a survey question differently from people in another, data may be collected differently in one country than another, and so on) and are limited in scope (e.g., it is usually impossible to compare patient-reported outcomes after specific surgeries or illnesses across different countries), the data can still be used to generate insights and provide opportunity for reflection.
Canadians know that we do not have a single health care system in Canada; rather, each of our 10 provinces and three territories holds primary responsibility for health care. Although there are many similarities between the 13 provincial and territorial systems, there are also important differences, not only in the way the systems are designed but also in the quality of care they provide.
In this article, we generally focus our attention at the national level; inevitably, this obscures important differences within Canada, between provinces and territories, and also between groups (e.g., Indigenous peoples and non-Indigenous Canadians). Also, although we focus here on health care, this does not diminish the importance of income, housing, education, social networks and other social determinants of health.
In Table 1, we use the six dimensions in the Institute of Medicine’s framework to compare the quality of health care in Canada with that in other high-income countries.
How can we improve the quality of health care in Canada?
Health care quality can improve through changes in policy or behaviour at all levels (e.g., federal government, provincial and territorial governments, regional health authorities, health care delivery organizations, individual clinicians and patients). Here we focus primarily on a subset of evidence-based actions at the system level rather than on the actions that individual clinicians or patients can take. These actions would serve to improve care across all six of the dimensions described previously.
Expand public funding for treatments proven to be cost-effective
The Canada Health Act has established a legal and regulatory foundation for the funding of “medically necessary” services provided by physicians or in hospitals. Some services, although proven to be effective and provide good value for money, are not publicly funded. One example is psychotherapy for patients with depression, which approximately doubles the response rate when added to medication.9 Accumulating evidence shows that when patients have to bear the cost of their own health care, they forgo important treatments.10 At the system level, decisions to increase public funding for treatments that are proven to be cost-effective would improve the quality of health care and likely the health of Canadians.11
Conversely, we should eliminate public funding for treatments that are ineffective, such as arthroscopic surgery for knee osteoarthritis.12 Federal and provincial decision-makers should also consider a recent recommendation to “put in place an ongoing mechanism to define standards for the modernization of the basket of publicly funded services in partnership with the provinces and territories.”13
Invest in primary care
Nearly 25 years ago, Starfield and colleagues showed that among high-income countries, the health care systems that were most oriented toward primary care tended to be those that had better outcomes, lower costs and greater patient satisfaction. They defined primary care as “first-contact, continuous, comprehensive and coordinated care provided to populations undifferentiated by gender, disease or organ system.”14
Although some Canadian provinces have, in recent years, begun to re-orient their primary care systems toward this vision,15 there is still a large gap between the primary care ideal and the quality of primary care received by most Canadians. Many efforts to reform primary care have focused on the methods used to pay family physicians, but payment reform alone is insufficient.16 We agree with Hutchison and Glazier that a “clearly articulated policy road map that commands the support of the public and key stakeholders [i.e., physicians]” is needed.15 We also suggest that a system-level road map be designed to support evidence-based, practice-level “building blocks” such as engaged leadership, data-driven improvement, empanelment (assigning patients to individual primary care clinicians) and team-based care.17
Use information systems that make it easier for clinicians to work together and with patients
Most physicians and hospitals in Canada have now transitioned from using paper-based health records to electronic health records.18 However, in most provinces and territories, the systems that physicians use in their own offices do not communicate seamlessly with systems used by other health care providers (e.g., paramedics, hospital-based physicians, laboratories and home and community care providers). We need standards for interoperability to ensure these systems work together. This is not an innovative idea,19,20 but it is one that requires innovative leadership, from both the public and private sectors. We also need a legislative and regulatory framework that maximizes information sharing while also recognizing privacy rights.
Accumulating evidence clearly shows that the benefits of “open notes” (health records that can be easily viewed, and sometimes edited, by patients) exceed the harms, and that they may facilitate a new era of shared decision-making.21 For example, at the end of one large study involving more than 10 000 patients, 99% of patients stated they wanted to continue having access to their health records.22 Physicians were more likely than patients to note both disadvantages as well as advantages, but at the conclusion of the study, more than 85% of physicians reported that “making visit notes available to patients online is a good idea.”22 When asked whether they wished to stop providing access to notes, not a single one of the more than 100 physicians in the study elected to stop.
Engage patients
Involving patients in decisions about their own health care is now expected within the context of the physician–patient relationship. However, involving patients at the system level in decisions about what services should be offered by a particular organization or the entire health care system,23 and how, is still the exception rather than the rule.
Involving patients, and the public, increases the legitimacy of decision-making24 and may improve the quality of the decisions made. Patients can be involved at the organizational level by actively participating in the design of strategic plans, operational plans or quality improvement plans.25 One large family practice in Ontario that engaged extensively with patients to improve their services found that doing so revealed improvement opportunities that had not occurred to clinicians and administrators.26 Also, encouragingly, they found this sort of engagement to be “inspiring and energizing” for patients and staff.
Patients can also be involved in improvement at the system level, either by inviting them to join decision-making committees that previously comprised only clinicians, researchers or administrators, 27,28 or by developing “citizens’ councils,” composed entirely of noninsiders.29–31
Standardize and embed quality improvement tools into practice
Variation in practice is highly desirable when it is consistent with the evidence and reflects the values and preferences of patients. For example, the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care has issued a weak recommendation in favour of screening mammography for women between the ages of 50 and 69.32 The weak recommendation implies that most women would want the recommended course of action, but some would not. In other words, it is a reasonable choice to forgo screening mammography.33
However, in many scenarios, variation appears to be related to differences in resource availability or in clinician preference or knowledge, rather than patient preferences. For example, some long-term care homes in Ontario are much more likely than others to transfer ill residents to emergency departments.34 The reasons for this are not completely understood, but it appears that factors unrelated to patient preference explain much of the variation.35
Developing and using guidelines and standards to help patients and clinicians make evidence-based decisions together, in a consistent way, will reduce variations in care and improve the quality of care we provide to Canadians.36 Using guidelines and standards will be easier for clinicians if system-level decision-makers also facilitate the development of tools, such as standardized order sets, that make it easy for patients and clinicians to pursue an evidence-based course of action. System-level decision-makers can also support initiatives that provide clinicians with data about the quality of care they provide. Doing so is proven to improve care; typically, the effects are modest,37 but sometimes they are dramatic.38
Improve transparency for patients and the public
Over the past few decades, there has been a revolution in transparency in many spheres of life, driven in part by improvements in computing power and ease of access to the Internet, and in part by changing societal norms. Although the evidence that transparency improves health outcomes remains limited, transparency is at minimum an important mechanism to ensure confidence.39
Transparency can also help identify “hot spots” for improvement. For example, the use of relatively simple statistical techniques40 can identify hospitals where mortality after a specific procedure is consistently higher than expected.41 It is important that these analyses be used primarily to offer support and guide improvement, and for punishment only when individuals have acted “wilfully, recklessly, or with a ‘couldn’t care less’ attitude.”42
Where data can be used to make valid comparisons, decision-makers at the system level should publicly report on the quality of care provided by individual organizations in a manner that can be readily understood by the public. Where the potential harms of public reporting outweigh the potential benefits, comparative data that can be used to focus quality improvement efforts should be provided confidentially to individual organizations and clinicians, as described above.38
Carefully conducted studies have shown that the harms of public reporting sometimes exceed the benefits,43 and predicting when this might happen is not always easy. However, as one observer has noted, we do not stop using effective medications just because some people have adverse effects. Instead, we continue to generate evidence so we can “make thoughtful clinical decisions about whether [a treatment is] worth it or not and in whom.”44 For some situations, we may need similar evidence to make thoughtful policy decisions about when it is appropriate to share data publicly.
Involve physicians
The quality improvement “agenda” should reinforce the natural desire of clinicians to provide the best care for their patients and not be seen as a burden or running counter to their daily efforts. Ensuring this is the case requires physician involvement.45 Many efforts to improve health care involve physicians too late in the development of the initiative, or superficially, or sometimes not at all. This is true with respect to other health care professionals as well, but physicians have a unique role in the Canadian health care system, given the legal, organizational and financial arrangements that influence physician practice. For example, in most Canadian hospitals, physicians are not employees and bill provincial health insurance plans directly for the services they provide. Decision-makers at the system level should pay more attention to the relationship between these arrangements and the likelihood that physicians will be involved in improvement efforts.46,47
Ensure health education supports high-quality care
Health education curricula in Canada at the undergraduate and postgraduate level receive substantial public funding and most health professions have nationally coordinated curriculum content. National and provincial education bodies and those that fund health education should support the delivery of high-quality care. This would include training all health care professionals to be capable in a set of core competencies in quality improvement.48 This competency development should extend throughout the professional career into continuing professional development programs.
The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, the College of Family Physicians of Canada and other organizations have recognized and responded to this need through the most recent revision of the CanMEDS framework,49 by creating a new “leader” role. One of the four key competencies for this new role is that physicians “contribute to the improvement of health care delivery in teams, organizations and systems.” Health care professionals must learn not only how to provide care but also how to make systematic improvements to the care they provide.
Ensure the well-being and positive experience of health professionals
It is impossible to provide high-quality care in an environment where those at the front line of service delivery feel unwell, unsafe or have consistently negative experiences in their work environment.
For this reason, the Institute for Healthcare Improvement in the United States recently emphasized the concept of “joy in work,”50 and others have similarly articulated a need to expand the Triple Aim —which has included patient experience, population health and costs — to the Quadruple Aim, which would also include the experience of health care providers.51
Conclusion
The quality of health care in Canada is good, but arguably not great. Several key actions at the health-system level could go a long way to improving the quality of health care that Canadians receive. With thoughtful change, we could all benefit from a health care system that provides safe, timely, effective, efficient, equitable and patient-centred care at every opportunity.
Acknowledgements
The authors are grateful to Richard Alvarez, Adalsteinn Brown, Dennis Kendel, Tara Kiran, Andreas Laupacis, Angela Morin, Pat Rich and Brian Wong for providing thoughtful feedback on earlier versions of this article, and to Susan Harrison for both thoughtful feedback and editorial assistance.
Footnotes
Competing interests: Irfan Dhalla and Joshua Tepper both report that they are salaried employees of Health Quality Ontario.
This article was solicited and has been peer reviewed.
Contributors: Both authors contributed to the conception and design of the work, drafted the manuscript, revised it critically for important intellectual content, gave final approval of the version to be published and agreed to be accountable for all aspects of the work.