Health Canada's Population and Public Health Branch uses no formal process for making “rational, evidence-based decisions” on program priorities and it often breaks its own rules in granting funds, Canada's auditor general says.
In her report on federal spending released in December, Sheila Fraser said the branch has few mechanisms for determining whether programs work, let alone improve the health of Canadians. “We found that [it] has a good process in place for managing grant and contribution programs. Unfortunately, management does not always follow its own established process, especially in some of the larger projects … and funding decisions have not always respected the branch's own objectives.”
Fraser audited 38 projects culled from 3 of the branch's 12 preventive health programs (the Canada Prenatal Nutrition Program, the HIV/AIDS Strategy and the Population Health Fund); all projects receiving more than $2 million were audited, along with 30 selected at random. The 3 programs dispense about $70 million of the $225 million the branch pays for health-promotion projects undertaken by community groups, organizations and individuals.
The branch “did not subject high-value projects to a rigorous selection process, nor did it monitor those projects annually,” reported Fraser, who also surmised that the weaknesses are “broadly applicable” to the branch's entire $350-million budget.
Among the serious transgressions:
· The branch funnelled $15 million from its Population Health Fund into prostate cancer research even though the fund is expressly prohibited from spending on pure research or overhead costs. The department also disregarded its selection process in awarding $2 million per year to the Vancouver Centre of Excellence in Prostate Cancer Research and $1 million annually to the Canadian Prostate Cancer Research Initiative.
· The Community AIDS Treatment Information Exchange received $8.75-million over 5 years despite 2 unfavourable external peer reviews.
· The Canadian Public Health Association/Canadian HIV/AIDS Clearinghouse received $2.5 million for a 33-month funding extension although an audit had found “noncompliance with the terms” of its previous agreement and said $350 000 should be recovered. (The branch subsequently settled for $100 000.)
Fraser also identified a major problem in determining spending priorities. “We expected that the branch would have such a process that would enable it to set priorities on the basis of good, evidence-based information such as surveillance data and evaluations of population health programs.”
No such luck, Fraser noted. Although a “Wellness Framework” for setting priorities was developed, it “has never been approved and there is no plan or timetable for implementing it.”
That has led to delays in addressing pressing national health needs. Fraser said both the Wellness Framework and a 1999 departmental exercise concluded that depression and distress cost Canadians $14.4 billion per year in treatment, medication, lost productivity and premature death. But no program has emerged.
Health Canada says it has now implemented the Wellness Framework and staff are “ensuring that clear indicators of success are set out for all projects.”
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