advertisement

b.c. will spend $8,800 per person on health care in 2022: report

health care spending is expected to grow again in 2022, but not like the double-digit growth seen during the covid-19 years

health care spending in b.c. is expected to grow 3.4 per cent in 2022, a significant drop from double-digit growth during the height of covid-19, according to the canadian institute for health information.
nationally, the unprecedented rise in health care costs due to covid is expected to slow as the pandemic threat recedes. in 2020, health care spending jumped by 13 per cent followed by a 7.6 per cent increase in 2021. this year, growth in spending is projected to slow to 0.8 per cent. before the pandemic, growth averaged about four per cent annually.
b.c.’s projected growth rate of 3.4 per cent is higher than the national average.
chris kuchciak, manager of health expenditures at cihi, said variations across provinces are normal as many factors including delivery of care, compensation of the workforce, demographics and covid responses varied between provinces and territories.
but b.c. mirrors the overall trend of a dramatic decrease in spending this year compared with the previous years. in 2020, health care spending in b.c. rose by 11 per cent, then increased by 10 per cent in 2021.
“there’s a flattening out of health care spending, but we are not seeing a return to pre-pandemic levels of spending,” said kuchciak, noting that many jurisdictions are catching up on care that were halted or scaled back during the pandemic.
powered by
canadian centre for caregiving excellence

advertisement

advertisement

“deferred care or care that didn’t happen during the pandemic is happening now. you see hospitals with backlogs of elective surgery catching up on that, and the return of routine care for chronic conditions.”
canada’s health care system will also continue to require more spending due to an aging population and population growth, he said.
the cihi projects b.c. will spend $8,800 per person on health care this year, higher than the national figure of $8,563 per canadian.
nationally, total health care spending is expected to reach $331 billion in 2022, representing 12.2 per cent of gdp following a high of nearly 14 per cent of gdp in 2020.
health funding to deal with covid is projected at $14.5 billion in 2022, about four per cent of total health-care spending. in comparison, covid costs made up nearly 10 per cent of the total health care budget in 2021, at $32.5 billion.
on a per-person basis, covid costs will decline to $376 per person in 2022, less than half of the $770 per person cost in 2020.
hospitals, physicians and drugs make up the three highest categories of spending. hospital costs make up nearly a quarter of health spending, at 24.3 per cent, followed by physicians and drugs, both at 13.6 per cent.
powered by
obesity matters

advertisement

advertisement


more news, fewer ads: our in-depth journalism is possible thanks to the support of our subscribers. for just $3.50 per week, you can get unlimited, ad-lite access to the vancouver sun, the province, national post and 13 other canadian news sites. support us by subscribing today: the vancouver sun | the province.

comments

postmedia is committed to maintaining a lively but civil forum for discussion and encourage all readers to share their views on our articles. comments may take up to an hour for moderation before appearing on the site. we ask you to keep your comments relevant and respectful. we have enabled email notifications—you will now receive an email if you receive a reply to your comment, there is an update to a comment thread you follow or if a user you follow comments. visit our community guidelines for more information and details on how to adjust your email settings.