Funding Long-Term Care in Canada: Who Is Responsible for What?

Healthc Pap

Associate Professor of Health Economics, Institute for Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Director, Canadian Centre for Health Economics, Toronto, ON.

Published: June 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Different funding methods for long-term care (LTC) carry varying effects on policy, highlighting the complexity of finding the right balance between public and private funding.
  • Framing LTC in distinct ways—such as health care costs or essential living expenses—influences which funding strategies are considered and how population changes impact costs.
  • Fundamental ethical questions arise about social responsibility and community support, especially regarding our obligations to care for others.

Article Abstract

As Adams and Vanin (2016) have noted, different ways of funding long-term care (LTC) have different implications. Because health is not just healthcare, and LTC is not homogeneous, determining the appropriate public-private mix is complex. We suggest that how issues are framed helps influence policy choices, including who should pay for what, and how things should be financed. In addition, the distribution of expenditures for some services can be highly skewed, affecting the extent to which average cost data are useful in extrapolating their costs. We note that health expenditures fall into multiple categories, each presenting different policy issues. For example, framing LTC as health, as basic costs associated with living or as forced savings (like pensions) affects which funding approaches might be used, and the extent to which changes in the population distribution will affect cost structures. Underlying these discussions are questions of solidarity, and how much we believe that we are our brother's - or grandmother's - keeper.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.12927/hcpap.2016.24587DOI Listing

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