Sunday, December 14, 2025
ADVT 
National

Health-care costs will rise significantly as population ages, says new report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Dec, 2024 12:13 PM
  • Health-care costs will rise significantly as population ages, says new report

A new report says Canada needs to rethink its approach to health care to help manage rising costs as people age. 

CSA Group, an organization that helps policymakers develop standards around health and safety, says health care currentlycosts about $12,000 per year for each person 65 years and older, compared to $2,700 for each person younger than 65. 

Today's report says seniors make up about 18 per cent of Canada's population but account for about 45 per cent of health-care spending by provincial and territorial governments.

The group projects costs will continue to increase significantly, with seniors making up 22 per cent of the Canadian population by 2040.   

Jordann Thirgood, manager of CSA Group's public policy centre, says that will coincide with more retirees and therefore less income tax revenue to pay for health costs.

Thirgood says governments need to put more resources into illness prevention, including addressing factors such as housing, mental health and loneliness, which affect people's overall health as they age.  

"The Canadian health-care system is often described as a 'sickness treatment' or 'illness treatment' system, (where) our public health-care system is primarily focused on doctors and hospitals," she said in an interview Tuesday. 

That means "less focus on preventive care, wellness, and increasingly urgent needs in uninsured areas such as mental health," says the report, which is called Aging Canada 2040: Policy Implications of Demographic Change.

Thirgood said focusing on social determinants of health and addressing people's health needs over the course of their lives to help them age well is critical to reducing illness and the associated health-care costs.   

She said that can have a big impact on improving people's overall health as they age.  

”There's strong evidence that correlates social isolation and loneliness with serious health risk," Thirgood said. "Research shows that (it) is similar to or even exceeding risks such as smoking, obesity and physical inactivity."

Homelessness is another factor that puts people at higher risk of chronic illness, she said — and many seniors are affected.  

”We are increasingly seeing older adults that are unhoused as a result of increasing cost (and) financial insecurity," Thirgood said. 

"Given ... the context of the housing crisis, I think we can imagine that that's going to remain an urgent issue for the years to come.”

MORE National ARTICLES

Drug smuggling intercepted by CBSA

Drug smuggling intercepted by CBSA
The Canada Border Services Agency says officers intercepted 210 bricks of cocaine being smuggled into B-C in three separate incidents. It says the seizures amounted to a combined weight of 246 kilograms worth of drugs that have an estimated street value of more than 6.6 million dollars.

Drug smuggling intercepted by CBSA

Long-awaited carbon rebate for businesses being sent earlier than promised

Long-awaited carbon rebate for businesses being sent earlier than promised
About 600,000 small businesses will start receiving their long-awaited federal carbon rebates today. The federal government has promised to return about $2.5 billion collected from small and medium-sized businesses in carbon pricing since 2019.

Long-awaited carbon rebate for businesses being sent earlier than promised

Passerby stabbed during shoplifting at Vancouver liquor store

Passerby stabbed during shoplifting at Vancouver liquor store
A passerby has been seriously injured after he was stabbed by a shoplifter who was trying to flee a liquor store in Vancouver's Olympic Village neighbourhood. Vancouver police say the attack happened on Saturday at around 10:30 p.m., when a security guard was trying to stop a shoplifter from leaving the liquor store.

Passerby stabbed during shoplifting at Vancouver liquor store

B.C. health minister vows overdose revamp after addictions portfolio is scrapped

B.C. health minister vows overdose revamp after addictions portfolio is scrapped
British Columbia's new health minister says she's aiming for more treatment beds and fewer deaths in a revamped approach to the province's drug overdose crisis. It comes after David Eby's newly elected government eliminated the stand-alone Ministry of Mental Health and Addictions, which advocates say had no "teeth."

B.C. health minister vows overdose revamp after addictions portfolio is scrapped

Canada Post down eight million parcels amid strike as talk carry on over weekend

Canada Post down eight million parcels amid strike as talk carry on over weekend
Canada Post says it has seen a shortage of more than eight million parcels amid the ongoing strike that has effectively shut down the postal system for nine days compared with the same period of 2023. The Crown corporation said Saturday that customers have been forced to turn to competitors for their deliveries amid a work stoppage that began Nov. 15 when more than 55,000 workers across the country walked off the job.

Canada Post down eight million parcels amid strike as talk carry on over weekend

Is Outlook down? Thousands of Microsoft 365 users report outage issues

Is Outlook down? Thousands of Microsoft 365 users report outage issues
Thousands of Microsoft 365 customers worldwide reported having issues with services like Outlook and Teams on Monday. In social media posts and comments on platforms like outage tracker Downdetector, some impacted said that they were having trouble seeing their emails, loading calendars or opening other Microsoft 365 applications such as Powerpoint.

Is Outlook down? Thousands of Microsoft 365 users report outage issues