-6.7 C
Ottawa
Monday, December 1, 2025

Alberta Shifts to ‘Activity-Based’ Health-Care Funding, Paying for Services Rather Than Targets

Date:

The Alberta government plans to change its acute care funding model, moving from a system that allocates funds based on surgery targets, which the province says are not always met, to an “activity-based” approach that would pay health-care facilities for the services they deliver.

The new “activity-based” model, also called “patient-focused funding,” would encourage competition among medical centres, including chartered surgical facilities and hospitals, offering built-in incentives to increase surgeries while decreasing wait times, Alberta Premier Danielle Smith said in a video posted on April 7.

Under the current model, Alberta Health Services (AHS), the provinces health agency, allocates provincial health funding to hospitals based on expected outcomes. The premier said the system lacks accountability, as hospitals miss their targets and “often stall on surgical procedures so they can use their global funding in another way.”

“The current global budgeting model has no incentives to increase volume, no accountability and no cost predictability for taxpayers,” Smith said in an April 7 press release.

“By switching to an activity-based funding model, our health care system will have built-in incentives to increase volume with high quality, cost predictability for taxpayers and accountability for all providers.”

The province expects the new funding model to pay hospitals based on the number of patients they treat and the complexity of their care, ensuring that “money follows patients.”

Related Stories

Alberta Dismisses Health Services Board for Second Time
Alberta Takes First Steps to Create Its Own Provincial Police Force

Sarah Hoffman, Opposition NDP health critic, said the new funding model “isn’t about better patient care.”

“It’s about creating more privatization–more private hospitals and more private surgical centres,” Hoffman said in an April 7 social media post. “Albertans deserve better. Patients should be the priority, not profits for corporations.”

The move to a new funding model is part of an overhaul of the health system the province has been working on since 2023 that will establish four agencies, each focused on a specific health sector: primary care, acute care, assisted living, and recovery.

The new system will also see AHS transition from a provincial health authority to a hospital service provider.

Acute Care Alberta will be responsible for overseeing and arranging the delivery of surgeries and other acute care services typically managed by AHS.

By adopting an “activity-based” funding model, Alberta is following the example of other countries, such as Australia, Sweden, and Norway, where wait times have been reduced and access to health care increased, officials said.

The province funded 304,595 surgeries in the 2023-24 year, and expects 310,000 surgeries to be performed in 2024-25.

This year’s provincial budget earmarked $28 billion in operating expenses to health care, including $4.6 billion to improve access to acute care services.

An Alberta health ministry and Acute Care Alberta working group will evaluate the model and provide final recommendations to Health Minister Adriana LaGrange later this year, according to the province. The group will also run a pilot project to determine how the new approach could be implemented this fiscal year.

The new funding model will be adopted for select procedures across the system in 2026.

spot_imgspot_imgspot_img

Share post:

Subscribe

Popular

Help This Hero That Gave His Life For Your Freedom – David Romlewski’s Widow Continue His Supreme Court Battle

You need to watch this !!! https://thealliancepress.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/179K-views-·-6K-reactions-_-Help-David-Romlewskis-Widow-Continue-His.mp4 Help David Romlewski’s Widow Continue His Supreme Court Battle Fundraiser: https://fundrazr.com/92Z3S6 On March 11, 2025, David Romlewski, a peaceful participant in the...

Reiner Fuellmich – A Courageous Voice for Justice

  Reiner Fuellmich – A Courageous Voice for Justice in the Aftermath of COVID‑19 Introduction In times of upheaval, history often remembers those who dared to question...

More like this
Related

Hong Kong Arrests 13 Suspects Over Deadly High-Rise Blaze, as Death Toll Hits 151

Birds fly next to burned buildings of the Wang...

What Are the Cash-for-Votes Allegations Facing the Quebec Liberal Party?

Quebec Liberal Leader Pablo Rodriguez walks in a news...

Russia Calls NATO Comments on Preemptive Strike Extremely Irresponsible

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova accused NATO of...

CFIA Advises Canadians to Check Pantry as More Pistachio Products Are Recalled

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) has issued a...