Rising acute-care costs and some-more faith on specialists and evidence tests are a distant larger hazard to Canada’s health-care complement than a greying population, says a new study.
“Population aging is not going to means an unavoidable predicament in health care,” pronounced Dr. Steve Morgan, a health economist with a University of British Columbia’s Centre for Health Services and Policy Research and lead author of a study. “It is a rather medium motorist of complement costs.”
Projecting a outcome of demographic change