HealthcarePapers
Abstract
Over the last several decades, Alberta has led Canadian provinces in waves of healthcare system reform: first to regionalize, first to replace regions with a province-wide health authority and, in 2024, first to blow up such an authority for a new combination of functionally based organizations. Yet behind the flux in organizational forms lies a consistent set of storylines. On the surface, reforms have continually tried to find ways to facilitate the transfer of resources from the acute care sector to other components of the health system. Less openly, changes from the Klein government onward appear to be intended to facilitate greater political control over health bureaucrats and professionals, and to pave the way for an expanded private sector role.
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