Back to Search Start Over

Primary care reform in Manitoba, Canada, 2011–15: Balancing accountability and acceptability

Authors :
Sunita Bayyavarapu Bapuji
Ashley Struthers
Karen Harlos
Shauna Zinnick
Paul Beaudin
Ingrid Botting
Colleen J. Metge
Alan Katz
Catherine Charette
Sara A. Kreindler
Source :
Health Policy. 123:532-537
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

Primary care reform cannot succeed without substantive change on the part of providers. In Canada, these are mostly fee-for-service physicians, who tend to regard themselves as independent professionals and not under managerial sway. Hence, policymakers must balance two conflicting imperatives: ensuring the acceptability of renewal efforts to these physicians while enforcing their accountability for defined actions or outcomes. In its 2011–15 strategy to improve access to primary care, the province of Manitoba introduced several linked initiatives, each striving to blend acceptability- and accountability-promoting elements. Clearly delimited initiatives that directly promoted a specific observable behaviour (accountability) through financial or non-financial support (acceptability) were most successfully implemented. System-wide initiatives with complicated designs (notably a primary care network model that established formal partnership among clinics and regional health authorities) encountered greater difficulties in recruiting and sustaining physician participation. Although such initiatives offered physicians considerable decision-making latitude (acceptability), many physicians questioned the meaningfulness of opportunities for voice within a predetermined structure (accountability). Moreover, policymakers struggled to enhance the acceptability of such initiatives without sacrificing strong accountability mechanisms. Policymakers must carefully consider how acceptability and accountability elements may interact, and design them in such a way as to minimize the risk of mutual interference.

Details

ISSN :
01688510
Volume :
123
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Health Policy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2191d864a68ac90bf97fda44f0eeb6b6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthpol.2019.03.014