Introduction to the Special Issue: Precarious Solidarity-Preferential Access in Canadian Health Care.
Lynette ReidPublished in: Health care analysis : HCA : journal of health philosophy and policy (2018)
Systems of universal health coverage may aspire to provide care based on need and not ability to pay; the complexities of this aspiration (conceptual, practical, and ethical) call for normative analysis. This special issue arises in the wake of a judicial inquiry into preferential access in the Canadian province of Alberta, the Vertes Commission. I describe this inquiry and set out a taxonomy of forms of differential and preferential access. Papers in this special issue focus on the conceptual specification of health system boundaries (the concept of medical need) and on the normative questions raised by complex models of funding and delivery of care, where patients, providers, and services cross system boundaries.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- affordable care act
- end stage renal disease
- health insurance
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- palliative care
- newly diagnosed
- public health
- quality improvement
- mental health
- prognostic factors
- south africa
- peritoneal dialysis
- pain management
- risk assessment
- climate change
- patient reported outcomes
- human health