1 / 18

Community Taxonomies (CPHI, CIHI) Roger Pitblado Denis Heng Irene Koren

Canada’s Rural Communities: Understanding Rural Health and Its Determinants. Community Taxonomies (CPHI, CIHI) Roger Pitblado Denis Heng Irene Koren Mobility of Healthcare Providers (HHR, CIHI) Roger Pitblado CPHA Annual Conference Halifax, 2008. Determinants of Health. Health.

fabian
Download Presentation

Community Taxonomies (CPHI, CIHI) Roger Pitblado Denis Heng Irene Koren

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Canada’s Rural Communities: Understanding Rural Health and Its Determinants Community Taxonomies (CPHI, CIHI) Roger Pitblado Denis Heng Irene Koren Mobility of Healthcare Providers (HHR, CIHI) Roger Pitblado CPHA Annual Conference Halifax, 2008

  2. Determinants of Health Health

  3. Matches: Health Determinants vs Health Status Based on 138 health regions; ordered by % rural.

  4. Work based on 2,071 Census Subdivisions as Communities

  5. Healthcare Provider to Population Ratios, Canada 2001 (Bar figures indicate percentage changes in the ratios since 1991)

  6. “Compositional” Healthcare Provider to Population Ratios by Province/Territory and Canada, 2001

  7. “There has been, in fact, very little progress in the comprehensive measurement of the health workforce since the 1964 Hall report.”Haddad and Scully 2002 HealthcarePapers. “How many regulated and unregulated health care providers move each year and what is the impact of their migration on health care services?”CIHI 2001 Canada’s Health Care Providers. “Within Canada, inter-provincial migration is not a big concern, although the urban-rural balance is.”Priest, What’s Ailing Our Nurses? CHSRF 2006. “.. a majority of RNs whose migration is associated with going to school after their initial nursing education, do not return to the jurisdiction where they were first registered.”Pitblado et al. 2005 CJNR.

  8. “In the midst of one of Nova Scotia’s worst health-care labour disputes, disgruntled lab technologists flocked yesterday to the welcoming arms of an Alberta recruiter.”2001 Canadian Press article, The Globe and Mail. “Recruitment and retention strategies are being pursued by every province as they grapple with chronic shortages of physicians (both GPs and specialists), nurses, radiation technologists and other professionals. Provincial health ministers are openly complaining about bidding wars between provinces over a dwindling resource pool, with everyone trying to outdo the other with signing bonuses and other contractual bells-and-whistles.”July 28, 2000 Health Edition.

  9. Physician Rural-Urban Migration Counts and Rates All health occupations 0.3 -0.6 0.3

  10. Physician Rural-Urban Mobility Net-Migration Rates for Large Urban Centre (LUC) and Rural and Small Town (RST) Areas

  11. All healthcare occupational groups.

  12. Rural and Small Town Canada Net Migration Rates for Selected Healthcare Occupational Groups for Three 5-Year Mobility Periods

  13. Proportions of Healthcare Workforces Found in RST 2001 (Bar figures indicate absolute changes in the proportions since 1991)

  14. Canada’s Rural Communities: Understanding Rural Health and Its Determinants Component 4. Geographic Patterns of Healthcare Utilization “ .... You can’t use em if they aint there!!!”

More Related