While health spending has increased substantially in the past few decades in 🇨🇦, social spending has stagnated or decreased. The consequences are now being felt and are bad for our health. https://t.co/wFXXn1PD8W https://t.co/p4VdlLRR40
@JohnBac59551831 @theJagmeetSingh .Study: Population-level health outcomes could benefit from a reallocation of government dollars from health to social spending, even if total government spending were left unchanged. #healthcare #cdnpoli https://t.co/hb
@aidanhollis Yes, indeed. I am willing to bet, though, that life expectancy would grow faster if some of those health dollars were directed toward housing affordable to people with low incomes. My point is that better results are available at the same or l
RT @twpiggott: Ref: https://t.co/wFXXn1PD8W
RT @DrsDefundPolice: And doctors were a key group fighting against it initially and we continue to do harm in many ways with our system con…
RT @DrsDefundPolice: And doctors were a key group fighting against it initially and we continue to do harm in many ways with our system con…
RT @DrsDefundPolice: And doctors were a key group fighting against it initially and we continue to do harm in many ways with our system con…
RT @DrsDefundPolice: And doctors were a key group fighting against it initially and we continue to do harm in many ways with our system con…
RT @DrsDefundPolice: And doctors were a key group fighting against it initially and we continue to do harm in many ways with our system con…
RT @DrsDefundPolice: And doctors were a key group fighting against it initially and we continue to do harm in many ways with our system con…
RT @DrsDefundPolice: And doctors were a key group fighting against it initially and we continue to do harm in many ways with our system con…
RT @DrsDefundPolice: And doctors were a key group fighting against it initially and we continue to do harm in many ways with our system con…
RT @DrsDefundPolice: And doctors were a key group fighting against it initially and we continue to do harm in many ways with our system con…
RT @DrsDefundPolice: And doctors were a key group fighting against it initially and we continue to do harm in many ways with our system con…
RT @DrsDefundPolice: And doctors were a key group fighting against it initially and we continue to do harm in many ways with our system con…
Thread!
And doctors were a key group fighting against it initially and we continue to do harm in many ways with our system constantly being reactive instead of proactive. “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.” https://t.co/zSAgr7qUMt
@robyndoolittle You mention privatization 13 x in these article instead of exploring the many ways that healthcare could be improved within the public sector. https://t.co/IqsXPeI5vv
Increasing access to family physicians and reducing surgery waits will not improve the health of people when so many are trying to access housing, food, education, social services. Now is the time for a comprehensive strategy to end poverty #NSpoli 4/6 htt
@TheAgenda @mattgurney The amount of social service spending also has an great impact on healthcare outcomes. Reallocation of govt spending rather than greater govt spending can make the difference. https://t.co/hb07Whwzm4
@JasonHe60997262 @kevinsky @ChuckCjmmn We spend more on healthcare than others for comparable outcomes. But in regards to the states, we are doing great especially financially. What we could do to improve health outcomes would be relocation of funds toward
RT @Alec_Strats: As Minister Thompson and @TimHoustonNS wrap up their frontline health care talks, they must recognize that the burden plac…
RT @Alec_Strats: As Minister Thompson and @TimHoustonNS wrap up their frontline health care talks, they must recognize that the burden plac…
RT @Alec_Strats: As Minister Thompson and @TimHoustonNS wrap up their frontline health care talks, they must recognize that the burden plac…
As Minister Thompson and @TimHoustonNS wrap up their frontline health care talks, they must recognize that the burden placed on the health care system is a direct result of underspending in social care and inequality. #NSpoli https://t.co/KOxZ78koBy https:
@geoffsal @David_Moscrop Yours is a valid point, but also; social spending (like a child care plan) has positive impacts on health outcomes (in fact, pretty substantial positive impacts). https://t.co/SZghCDEwyq
It's an extension of the analysis in this paper, longer dataset, more variables: https://t.co/NEB48eFFwT I'm very proud of the work @Tong___Liu did to turn this from a vague notion into a published piece. She did so much quality assurance work on this da
RT @RaeofSunshine79: Effect of provincial spending on social services and health care on health outcomes in Canada: an observational longit…
Effect of provincial spending on social services and health care on health outcomes in Canada: an observational longitudinal study https://t.co/yklIX9cHGT
RT @jdzwicker: Policy decisions have health impacts: increased provincial social spending was positively associated with population health…
RT @jdzwicker: Policy decisions have health impacts: increased provincial social spending was positively associated with population health…
RT @jdzwicker: Policy decisions have health impacts: increased provincial social spending was positively associated with population health…
RT @RonKneebone: @tim4hire Not all the tradeoffs are negative. Spending less on traditional health and more on supports for the very poor (…
@tim4hire Not all the tradeoffs are negative. Spending less on traditional health and more on supports for the very poor (including housing) would produce better health outcomes. We have too narrow a view of what constitutes an effective investment in heal
RT @jdzwicker: Policy decisions have health impacts: increased provincial social spending was positively associated with population health…
RT @jdzwicker: Policy decisions have health impacts: increased provincial social spending was positively associated with population health…
RT @jdzwicker: Policy decisions have health impacts: increased provincial social spending was positively associated with population health…
RT @jdzwicker: Policy decisions have health impacts: increased provincial social spending was positively associated with population health…
RT @jdzwicker: Policy decisions have health impacts: increased provincial social spending was positively associated with population health…
Policy decisions have health impacts: increased provincial social spending was positively associated with population health measures in Canada at the provincial level https://t.co/4ronUQh7oz. Key message: reducing social spending can adversely impact popul
RT @danduttonysj: There are literally thousands of papers on this topic and people intuitively get it. Less obvious: Spending on non-health…
There are literally thousands of papers on this topic and people intuitively get it. Less obvious: Spending on non-health portfolios by government can influence health to a greater extent than simply adding more health dollars, according to me and others.
RT @MattGrossmann: Spending $ on social services & public health rather than medical care is associated with healthier US states: https://t…
Spending $ on social services & public health rather than medical care is associated with healthier US states: https://t.co/6S0mi08zi7 (& healthier Canadian provinces: https://t.co/zW7ICxmhOy)
RT @CBCFletch: @dgardner An interesting recent @policy_school paper on that topic -- https://t.co/r7CXGiMCTT -- looks at how much life-expe…
RT @CBCFletch: @dgardner An interesting recent @policy_school paper on that topic -- https://t.co/r7CXGiMCTT -- looks at how much life-expe…
RT @CBCFletch: @dgardner An interesting recent @policy_school paper on that topic -- https://t.co/r7CXGiMCTT -- looks at how much life-expe…
@dgardner An interesting recent @policy_school paper on that topic -- https://t.co/r7CXGiMCTT -- looks at how much life-expectancy gains are associated with social policy, rather than health policy: https://t.co/SHxR6qeg1f
Yes! Population health could benefit from reallocating health to social spending, even if total government spending were left unchanged. "...exclusive focus on health care expenditures in the discussion about health care reform has been misleading" htt
RT @RonKneebone: ... you can recognize that the highest rate of return on investments in good health actually come from spending on income…
RT @RonKneebone: ... you can recognize that the highest rate of return on investments in good health actually come from spending on income…
RT @RonKneebone: ... you can recognize that the highest rate of return on investments in good health actually come from spending on income…
RT @RonKneebone: ... you can recognize that the highest rate of return on investments in good health actually come from spending on income…
... you can recognize that the highest rate of return on investments in good health actually come from spending on income supports and affordable housing (https://t.co/dss485ZxIr).
@taimhuynh and the hard data (because it needed to be studied again) - for Canada https://t.co/1o71lzZ1cw
Investing in #SocialService has better return for #health than investing in #healthcare. #SDoH #PopulationHealth https://t.co/w6LWP6bR8A
This study looks at the association between spending on health care vs social programs and the net effect on health outcomes in Canada. https://t.co/IQmGBUxsxf
RT @drannehuang: Effect of provincial spending on #SocialServices and #healthcare on health #outcomes in Canada: an observational longitudi…
RT @drannehuang: Effect of provincial spending on #SocialServices and #healthcare on health #outcomes in Canada: an observational longitudi…
RT @drannehuang: Effect of provincial spending on #SocialServices and #healthcare on health #outcomes in Canada: an observational longitudi…
RT @drannehuang: Effect of provincial spending on #SocialServices and #healthcare on health #outcomes in Canada: an observational longitudi…
Effect of provincial spending on #SocialServices and #healthcare on health #outcomes in Canada: an observational longitudinal study. #SDoH @CMAJ 2018 https://t.co/HnckGiSuFO
Effect of provincial spending on social services and health care on health outcomes in Canada: an observational longitudinal study https://t.co/1Zy2aoJcGG @celliottability @fordnation @AMHOnt @CMHAOntario @CMHAToronto @CMHA_NTL @kidsmentalhlth @PCMHontario
As social sending increases, preventable mortality decreases, life expectancy increases https://t.co/TRVyxMNlFz
RT @DrEdwardX: @drbobbell @theresaboyle @TorontoStar @hayman_kate And we have evidence that properly funding social services can improve he…
RT @DrEdwardX: @drbobbell @theresaboyle @TorontoStar @hayman_kate And we have evidence that properly funding social services can improve he…
RT @DrEdwardX: We have evidence that properly funding social services can improve health and saves lives across Canada, but we haven't been…
RT @DrEdwardX: @drbobbell @theresaboyle @TorontoStar @hayman_kate And we have evidence that properly funding social services can improve he…
RT @DrEdwardX: @drbobbell @theresaboyle @TorontoStar @hayman_kate And we have evidence that properly funding social services can improve he…
RT @DrEdwardX: @drbobbell @theresaboyle @TorontoStar @hayman_kate And we have evidence that properly funding social services can improve he…
RT @DrEdwardX: @drbobbell @theresaboyle @TorontoStar @hayman_kate And we have evidence that properly funding social services can improve he…
We have evidence that properly funding social services can improve health and saves lives across Canada, but we haven't been investing in them. #sdoh #cdnhealth #onhealth from @CMAJ @danduttonysj and others at @UCalgary https://t.co/etoe3AUGeE https://t.co
@drbobbell @theresaboyle @TorontoStar @hayman_kate And we have evidence that properly funding social services can improve health and saves lives in Ontario, but we haven't been investing in #sdoh. From @CMAJ @danduttonysj and others at @UCalgary https://t
RT @drbobbell: Consider in terms of CMAJ article showing a minor improvement in social spending results in dramatic improvement in preventa…
RT @drbobbell: Consider in terms of CMAJ article showing a minor improvement in social spending results in dramatic improvement in preventa…
@fordnation @MacLeodLisa @celliottability
RT @drbobbell: Consider in terms of CMAJ article showing a minor improvement in social spending results in dramatic improvement in preventa…
RT @drbobbell: Consider in terms of CMAJ article showing a minor improvement in social spending results in dramatic improvement in preventa…
RT @drbobbell: Consider in terms of CMAJ article showing a minor improvement in social spending results in dramatic improvement in preventa…
RT @drbobbell: Consider in terms of CMAJ article showing a minor improvement in social spending results in dramatic improvement in preventa…
RT @drbobbell: Consider in terms of CMAJ article showing a minor improvement in social spending results in dramatic improvement in preventa…
Consider in terms of CMAJ article showing a minor improvement in social spending results in dramatic improvement in preventable death and other health outcomes. https://t.co/zaE4h6QqMN
@trevortombe Hopefully the performance review will be broad enough to compare the returns to health outcomes from more spending by AH as opposed to shifting some revenue to investments in social determinants of health. https://t.co/dss485ZxIr
RT @upstreamlab: "Effect of provincial spending on social services and health care on health outcomes in Canada: an observational longitudi…
RT @upstreamlab: "Effect of provincial spending on social services and health care on health outcomes in Canada: an observational longitudi…
RT @upstreamlab: "Effect of provincial spending on social services and health care on health outcomes in Canada: an observational longitudi…
RT @upstreamlab: "Effect of provincial spending on social services and health care on health outcomes in Canada: an observational longitudi…
The content of this article (https://t.co/Xb6QjgsFkJ) got the attention of @CBCNews who interviewed co-author @danduttonysj for their morning show --> https://t.co/RXvjmez1mL #NewBrunswick #SDOH 2/2
"Effect of provincial spending on social services and health care on health outcomes in Canada: an observational longitudinal study" by @danduttonysj @pgfor, RD Kneebone, and JD Zwicker for @CMAJ -->https://t.co/Xb6QjgsFkJ #SDOH #Canada #socialspending
https://t.co/UWUoIDqwwK @pgfor
@sacjai There’s evidence to suggest that we should move money from the health sector to the social services sectors to actually shift health outcomes - https://t.co/8fpubYZ34e
RT @Policies4Action: "Population health is the end result of a complicated system that includes the lifelong influence of the #sdoh." New i…
"Population health is the end result of a complicated system that includes the lifelong influence of the #sdoh." New insights on social spending & health from our neighbors to the north https://t.co/1MSHAA4PkW
RT @laudyaron: “The socioeconomic environment is the most powerful of the determinants of health.” #SDoH https://t.co/GtBNIcnEdU
“The socioeconomic environment is the most powerful of the determinants of health.” #SDoH https://t.co/GtBNIcnEdU
"Effect of provincial spending on social services and health care on health outcomes in Canada: an observational longitudinal study" https://t.co/oYSrj8uUyO PLUS: NIC webinar on this topic: https://t.co/y0dM1UPDkP @NICnetworks #SDwebinar18 #SDoH
"Effect of provincial spending on social services and health care on health outcomes in Canada: an observational longitudinal study" https://t.co/oYSrj8uUyO PLUS: NIC webinar on this topic: https://t.co/y0dM1UPDkP @NICnetworks #SDwebinar18 #SDoH
https://t.co/BB5NBFwpDH SOCIAL spending more effective than health spending to improve health outcomes for all Poverty reduction is #morelikepeople