Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Canada's Health Spending Increase in 2014 Smallest in 17 Years; Up Only $61 Per Person

The Canadian Press , 30 Oct, 2014 03:20 PM
    TORONTO — The cost of health care in Canada will go up this year, but the increase is expected to be the smallest in the past 17 years, a new report suggests.
     
    The report on health-care spending in Canada estimates that total health expenditures will rise by only 2.1 per cent, or $61 more per person compared to last year's health costs.
     
    Spending on drugs has flattened out. And concerns about the cost of a greying population on the health system aren't currently driving costs up in a significant way, according to the report from the Canadian Institute for Health Information.
     
    At this point, the institute says, population aging is only increasing costs by just under one per cent per year — 0.9 per cent. The trend is expected to change incrementally over the next two decades, the CIHI report says.
     
    "While concerns regarding demographics are understandable — Canadians over the age of 65 account for less than 15 per cent of the population but consume more than 45 per cent of provinces’ and territories’ health-care dollars — the share of public-sector health dollars spent on Canadian seniors has not changed significantly over the past decade," Brent Diverty, CIHI's vice-president for programs, said in a press release.
     
    The report notes that in 2012, per person spending for seniors ranged broadly, from $6,368 per person for those aged 65 to 69 to $21,054 per person per year for those aged 80 or older. 
     
    The low end of that scale isn't far off what the report says Canada will pay per person in general in 2014, $6,045.
     
    Canada is expected to spend just under $215 billion this year on health care, which equates to 11 per cent of the country's gross domestic product.
     
    That spending level puts Canada tied for seventh with Denmark among the countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, the OECD. Canadian spending trails that of the United States, the Netherlands, France, Switzerland, Germany and Austria.
     
    The public purse picks up about 70 per cent of the cost of health care in Canada. The remaining 30 per cent comes from out-of-pocket payments by individuals and private health insurance. That 70-30 cost breakdown has been relatively constant over the past 20 years, the report says.
     
    Hospitals make up about 30 per cent of health-care spending, $63.5 billion. Drugs and doctors come next, at 16 and 15 per cent respectively, or $33.9 billion and $33.3 billion.
     
    Drug costs, once a major driver of expenditure increases, have stabilized, growing by only 0.8 per cent in 2014, the report says.
     
    "Drug expenditures are slowing down," Diverty says. "With generic pricing control policies for the pharmaceutical industry, the expiration of patents on prevalent medications and fewer new drugs entering the market, we are seeing what amounts to flattened growth."
     
    The three territories, which often have to fly residents south for medical care, spend substantially more per person than provinces do. Nunavut will spend the most, at just over $13,160 a person, while Quebec is expected to spend the least, at $5,616.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    6,000 steps a day keeps knee problems at bay

    6,000 steps a day keeps knee problems at bay
    Walking 6,000 or more steps per day may protect people with or at risk of knee osteoarthritis (OA) from developing mobility issues such as difficulty in getting up from a chair and climbing stairs, a study shows.

    6,000 steps a day keeps knee problems at bay

    'Cool' teenagers not so cool when they grow up

    'Cool' teenagers not so cool when they grow up
    Teenagers who tried to act "cool" in early adolescence are more likely to experience a range of problems in early adulthood than their peers who did not act "cool", a decade-long study shows.

    'Cool' teenagers not so cool when they grow up

    Don't hide truth from kids, they'll know it anyway

    Don't hide truth from kids, they'll know it anyway
    If you do not reveal the complete picture in front of your kids while explaining an event, the children not only know that you are hiding something, they are also likely to find out on their own the complete truth.

    Don't hide truth from kids, they'll know it anyway

    When male dolphin fell in love with female researcher

    When male dolphin fell in love with female researcher
    Can animals fall in love with humans? They do, but in the case of a female animal researcher the chemistry between her and a male dolphin was well beyond just love.

    When male dolphin fell in love with female researcher

    Why stress, fear trigger heart attacks

    Why stress, fear trigger heart attacks
    In a first, scientists have come up with an explanation to why a sudden shock, stress and fear may trigger heart attack and they found that multiple bacterial species living as biofilms on arterial walls could hold the key to such attacks.

    Why stress, fear trigger heart attacks

    When sperm bundle up to win fertility race

    When sperm bundle up to win fertility race
    It takes two to tango. But here, a bundle of sperm beat out other sperm in race to fertilisation!

    When sperm bundle up to win fertility race