Reference no: EM133587061
Discussion: Report Analysis
The Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI) generates a health indicators report (Health Indicators 2012(Opens PDF document)) that provides an excellent overview of some of the ways we might measure healthcare in Canada. There are many examples of indicators that are used, as well as an understanding of how these indicators can be used to facilitate change, create policy, and provide insight about our healthcare, its performance, and challenges.
This is a long report, so it's not expected that you read the whole thing (although you might find it useful). The intent is to help link the importance of informatics in our healthcare world - this is the information that is the byproduct of delivering care. We use technology to derive the data, analyze it, and draw conclusions.
After reviewing all or part of the report, comment on one of the following:
- How do you think Canada is performing?
- Are these indicators useful ways to measure the performance of our healthcare system, and why?
- Are there any key areas that are missing from this report when it comes to measuring our healthcare?
Post responses to this week's questions on the Discussion Board for Module 5. Feel free to ask each other questions, challenge each other, and learn from each other.
Health Indicators 2012
The Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI) and Statistics Canada are pleased to present you with Health Indicators 2012(Opens PDF document), the 13th release of this annual publication, along with the accompanying Health Indicators e-publication. Updated versions of these indicators are available in e-versions from the CIHI website. Indicators are similar year over year. The intent is to understand the concept of health indicators.
This year's report introduces a suite of new acute care re-admission indicators, as well as three new indicators focusing on avoidable mortality. Avoidable mortality refers to untimely deaths that should not occur in the presence of timely and effective healthcare, including prevention. The In Focus section of the report takes a closer look at the results of these indicators.
About Health Indicators
Since 1999, CIHI and Statistics Canada have collaborated on the Health Indicators project, developing and providing a broad range of indicators for health regions across the country. This project aims to answer two questions: "How healthy are Canadians?" and "How healthy is the Canadian health system?"he indicators are comparative health system measures for Canada's health regions, provinces, and territories to support evidence-based decision making and identify areas needing improvement. Health indicators play a key role in performance monitoring and management at both the health region and provincial/territorial levels.