ADVISORY: OHC 2016 Pre-Budget Briefing
Posted: February 25, 2016
(February 25, 2016)
2016 Pre-Budget Briefing
Where We Stand: Ontario’s Ranking in Public Service and Health Care Expenditures & Cuts
Ontario’s government is making budget choices that cut and privatize public services and health care. These are choices, not necessities. Here’s how we compare relative to other provinces and jurisdictions on some key measures.
The Notable Trends Are:
- Ontario ranks at the bottom of the country for hospital beds per 1000 population (Chart 1).
- Ontario ranks near the bottom of the entire OECD for hospital beds per 1000 population (Chart 2).
- Ontario is at the bottom of the country for nurse to patient ratios (Chart 3).
- Ontario and Quebec continue to compete for last place in hospital funding per person (Chart 4).
- Ontario is second last in the country for public hospital funding as a percentage of provincial GDP (Chart 5).
- Ontario is near the bottom of the country for public hospital funding as a percentage of all provincial program funding (Chart 6).
- Ontario’s hospitals are running over capacity. In many instances bed occupancy rates exceed 100% (Chart 7).
Priority Recommendation: Stop Devastating Hospital Cuts & Restore Funding to Average of Other Provinces
Hospital global funding increases have been set below the rate of inflation since at least 2008. Since 2012/13 global hospital budget funding levels have been frozen. In sum, this means that global hospital budgets have been cut in real dollar terms (inflation-adjusted dollars) for 9 years in a row. This is the longest period of hospital cuts in Ontario’s history and there is no end in sight. The evidence shows that the hospital funding formula and austerity measures that have cut global hospital budgets in real dollar terms for almost a decade, have resulted in a dramatic reduction in needed services. By key measures, Ontario now ranks at the bottom of comparable jurisdictions in key measures of hospital care levels.
As a result, hospitals large and small in every geographic region of Ontario are cutting needed services. Hospitals are now at dangerous levels of overcrowding; staffing levels have dropped precipitously; and patients are suffering as they are forced to wait longer and drive further to access care and are discharged before they are stable.
A sampling of recent cuts:
- North Bay – 30 – 40 beds closing and 140 staff positions to be cut.
- Brockville – 17 Registered Nurses cut affecting departments across the hospital.
- London – up to 500 surgeries including hip, knee, gall bladder and others cancelled until next fiscal year due to inadequate funding of surgery budgets.
- Woodstock – hip, knee and other surgeries cancelled until next fiscal year.
- Trenton – virtually all surgeries cut and closed down along with half the remaining acute care beds.
- Minden – the hospital CEO is speculating openly about closing the Minden hospital.
- Niagara – five entire hospitals to be closed and replaced with one.
- Windsor — >45 nurses and staff positions to be cut affecting departments across the hospital.
- Kitchener-Waterloo – 68 staff positions to be cut affecting departments across the hospital.
- Midland – at risk: birthing, cafeteria, OR closure 2 days per week, ICU beds to be cut, along with beds and other services.
The Ontario Health Coalition is deeply concerned about the cuts to our province’s public hospitals and has focused on one key recommendation for the 2016 Ontario Budget:
Recommendation: The hospital cuts must be stopped immediately. Hospital funding must be restored to the average of the other provinces in Canada and funding must go to restoring and improving service levels to meet population need.
Chart 1: Ontario ranks at the bottom of the country – Hospital beds per population
Hospital Beds Per 1000 (population)By Province2013-14 | |
Newfoundland & Labrador | 4.6 |
New Brunswick | 3.8 |
Saskatchewan | 3.6 |
Nova Scotia | 3.4 |
Manitoba | 3.3 |
PEI | 3.3 |
British Columbia | 3 |
Alberta | 2.8 |
Ontario | 2.3 |
Average other provinces | 3.5 |
Source: Canadian Institute for Health Information, Data Table: Hospital Beds Staffed and in Operation 2013-14. Population statistics from Canadian Institute for Health Information, National Health Expenditures Database 2015.
Chart 2: Ontario ranks near bottom of the entire OECD – Hospital beds per population
OECD Hospital Beds Per 1000 Population2013 | |
Japan | 13.3 |
Korea | 11.0 |
Germany | 8.3 |
Austria | 7.7 |
Hungary | 7.0 |
Poland | 6.6 |
Czech Republic | 6.5 |
France | 6.3 |
Belgium | 6.3 |
Slovak Republic | 5.8 |
Luxembourg | 5.1 |
Estonia | 5.0 |
Finland | 4.9 |
Greece | 4.8 |
Switzerland | 4.7 |
Slovenia | 4.6 |
Norway | 3.9 |
Australia | 3.8 |
Italy | 3.4 |
Portugal | 3.4 |
Iceland | 3.2 |
Israel | 3.1 |
Denmark | 3.1 |
Spain | 3.0 |
United States | 2.9 |
Ireland | 2.8 |
New Zealand | 2.8 |
United Kingdom | 2.8 |
Canada | 2.7 |
Turkey | 2.7 |
Sweden | 2.6 |
Ontario | 2.3 |
Chile | 2.2 |
Mexico | 1.6 |
OECD Average | 4.8 |
Source: OECD, Health Statistics 2015 at http://stats.oecd.org/Index.aspx?DataSetCode=HEALTH_REAC
Chart 3: Ontario ranks at bottom of the country – Nurse to patient ratios
Nursing Inpatient ServicesTotal Worked Hours per Weighted Case | |||||
2007-2008 | 2008-2009 | 2009-2010 | 2010-2011 | 2011-2012 | |
NFLD | 52.2 | 53.26 | 54.48 | 55.9 | 52.9 |
PEI | 83.48 | N/R | 62.19 | 62.46 | 61.66 |
|
56.79 | 57.34 | U | U | 54.95 |
N.B. | 54.98 | 55.46 | 56.26 | 57.29 | 58.13 |
Quebec | 49.73 | 50.06 | 50.82 | 50.73 | 52.47 |
Ontario | 44.98 | 44.76 | 43.71 | 42.81 | 42.88 |
Manitoba | 54.41 | 54.27 | 53.87 | 53.06 | 53.97 |
Sask. | 49.37 | 51.42 | 51.28 | 52.95 | 54.18 |
Alberta | 54.12 | 54.65 | 54.52 | 54.24 | 54.36 |
B.C. | 44.24 | 45.27 | 45.03 | 45.87 | 46.27 |
NWT | U | 83.05 | 88.51 | 69.48 | N/R |
Yukon | 48.84 | 48.97 | 50.25 | 56.31 | 54.51 |
Weighted Average | 48.59 | 48.8 | 48.36 | 48.2 | 48.98 |
Source: Canadian Institute for Health Information, 2013.
Chart 4: Ontario and Quebec compete for last place in hospital funding
Public Hospital FundingPer Person, 2015Current $ | |
Newfoundland & Labrador | $2,406 |
Alberta | $2,245 |
Prince Edward Island | $1,995 |
New Brunswick | $1,971 |
Nova Scotia | $1,907 |
Manitoba | $1,818 |
British Columbia | $1,797 |
Saskatchewan | $1,761 |
Ontario | $1,419 |
Quebec | $1,382 |
Average of the other provinces | $1,920 |
Difference between Ontario and the average of the other provinces | Ontario funds hospitals at $501 per person less |
Source: Author’s calculations from CIHI, National Health Expenditures Database 2015
Chart 5: Ontario 2nd to last in the country – Public hospital spending as a percentage of provincial GDP
Public Hospital Funding as % of Provincial GDP2015 | |
PEI | 4.73 % |
New Brunswick | 4.45 % |
Nova Scotia | 4.31 % |
Newfoundland & Labrador | 3.82 % |
Manitoba | 3.59 % |
British Columbia | 3.35 % |
Quebec | 2.97 % |
Alberta | 2.67 % |
Ontario | 2.64 % |
Saskatchewan | 2.38 % |
Average of the other provinces | 3.59 % |
Source: Author’s calculations from CIHI, National Health Expenditures Database 2015
Chart 6: Ontario at bottom of the country – Public hospital funding as percentage of all provincial program funding
Public Hospital Fundingas % of All Provincial Program Funding2014 | |
Nova Scotia | 20.72 % |
British Columbia | 19.44 % |
New Brunswick | 18.95 % |
Alberta | 18.91 % |
Newfoundland & Labrador | 18.61 % |
Manitoba | 17.94 % |
PEI | 17.56 % |
Ontario | 15.34 % |
Saskatchewan | 14.73 % |
Quebec | 11.16 % |
Average of other provinces | 17.56 % |
Source: Author’s calculations from CIHI, National Health Expenditures Database 2015
Chart 7: Ontario’s hospitals over capacity – Hospital bed occupancy rates
Sampling of hospital bed occupancy rates (final quarter 2013)
From Ministry of Health data accessed by Jonathan Sher, London Free Press. |
Chart 8: The consequences of emergency department overcrowding
The Consequences
Source: Physician Hospital Care Committee Report to the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, Ontario Medical Association and Ontario Hospital Association Tripartite Committee, Improving Access to Emergency Care: Addressing System Issues, August 2006. |
OHC 2016 Pre-Budget Briefing (PDF)