Author: sitesuper

  • FHTs and their physicians among The Change Foundation’s 20 Faces of Change

    Mar. 11- AFHTO members were among the inaugural winners of The Change Foundation’s 20 Faces of Change Awards. The awards honour those who have inspired positive, patient-focused change in Ontario’s healthcare system. Dr. Ed Kucharski, Sherbourne Health Centre FHT Dr. Kucharski received the award for his “patient engagement in action” approach in his work with the Canadian Cancer Society and Rainbow Health Ontario to bring cancer screening and cancer screening awareness to some of Toronto’s hardest to reach populations. The South East Toronto FHT and Dr. Thuy-Nga Pham SETFHT and Dr. Pham received theirs for their Patient Advisory Council as well as being the first site in Ontario to implement a primary care Virtual Ward. Click on the links below for further details on:

  • Superior FHT participates in community initiative to reduce drug misuse

    Feb. 25- The Superior Family Health Team is collaborating with community partners to reduce the amount of drug misuse, drug-related crime and incidents of overdose in the Algoma region with the Fentanyl Patch 4 Patch Exchange Program. The program is a collaborative effort between area physicians, pharmacists, and agencies, including Algoma Public Health, Sault Ste. Marie Police Service, Group Health Centre, A New Link, Sault Area Hospital, the North East LHIN, and Dr. Alan McLean and the Superior FHT. Click here for the full article.

  • Governance training: Webinars now online // Register NOW for in-person workshop (hotel group rates expire in 3 days)

    It’s time to take advantage of governance education opportunities available just for you as an AFHTO member. These materials support primary care leaders with your capacity to guide your organization and impact the direction of our health system’s transformation. Register now for FREE workshops on March 25th and March 30th: Effective Governance for Quality in Primary Care Full day workshop is intended for AFHTO member board members, executive directors and lead clinicians. Hotel group rates expire Friday, March 13, 2015 so please confirm your registration as soon as possible.

    Material and recordings of recent “Governance Webinars” series now posted online You can now view our popular Governance Webinarsfor primary care leaders. All three webinars have been posted along with slide decks and Q&A:

    1. Session 1 (Feb 18 & 20): Getting Started
    2. Session 2 (Feb 23 & 27): The Board’s Responsibilities
    3. Session 3 (Mar 2 or 4): Looking Forward – using good governance to enhance organizational performance

    Please click on the links for further information on the workshops and webinars.

  • What’s ahead for FHTs + NPLCs: update from Mar. 5 PHC Branch meeting

    Topics discussed at AFHTO’s March 5, 2015 quarterly meeting with PHC Branch are listed below. Key points made by Deputy Minister in a March 9 speech are added.  Scroll down for details on each.

    1. What’s ahead for FHTs + NPLCs, in light of ministry’s plans for health system reform?
      1. “Comprehensive regionally governed, population-based primary health services for Ontarians.”
      2. Process for determining “high needs” areas / replacement of FHO+FHN physicians
      3. Review of primary care team models
      4. Development of new contract templates for FHTs
    2. More immediately, what can FHTs and NPLCs expect from this year’s operating plan and funding process?
      1. Outlook for funding approvals
      2. Data support for FHTs and NPLCs
      3. Premises costs
      4. Performance measures in the 2015-16 Service Plan (“Schedule A” or “Part B)
      5. Governance and Compliance Attestation
      6. Accountability Reform Initiative
      7. Reallocation and some inconsistency in decisions
      8. Telemedicine equipment
      9. Getting meaningful feedback from your consultant

    1. What’s ahead for FHTs + NPLCs?

    AFHTO members received an email summarizing Associate Deputy Minister Susan Fitzpatrick’s meeting with the AFHTO board on March 3.  AFHTO’s representatives met with PHC Branch on   March 5 to learn more about what’s ahead for primary care in Ontario and advocate for our members. On March 9 Deputy Minister Bob Bell delivered a speech which added further specificity to ministry priorities.

    “Comprehensive regionally governed, population-based primary health services for Ontarians.”

    This statement has appeared on slides used by both the Deputy and the Associate Deputy Ministers – the intent is clear, but not much more is known at this time.  In his March 9 speech, the Deputy emphasized the critical need for a strong foundation of primary care, and went further to speak of a “possible move to Accountable Care Organizations as our primary care system strengthens.”

    Process for determining “high needs” areas / replacement of FHO+FHN physicians

    This topic is clearly linked to the statement above.  The ministry has communicated changes to primary health care physician payments, such that, “effective June 1, 2015 and onwards, monthly registration into these models will be limited to 20 physicians per month in areas of high need.” By end of March, the ministry is aiming to have the criteria and process in place for determining “areas of high need”. LHINs will be playing a key role. The ministry’s new policy regarding entry into FHO and FHN models does allow for replacement of positions vacated by an existing member of that FHO or FHN, outside of the “managed entry” process. The PHC Branch reps confirmed this is on a one-to-one basis – it does not allow for two physicians to divide the roster. Key points for FHTs and NPLCs:

    • Future relationship between LHINs and primary care: Much is not yet known, but this clearly signals much greater involvement with LHINs going forward. This is already happening with Health Links. Many AFHTO members have already developed good relationships with their LHINs; it would be prudent to strengthen these, and keep the leadership in your LHIN aware of the needs and opportunities in your community.
    • FHT and NPLC leadership: AFHTO members have already developed the capacity to lead, govern and build strong collaborations with other partners. Of the 69 Health Links to date, 20 are led by AFHTO members. You are well-positioned to play important leadership roles within your region and more broadly across the province, to shape what “Comprehensive regionally governed, population-based primary health services” will look like.

    Review of primary care team models

    AFHTO’s March 3 email also reported the ministry will be reviewing the team-based models from the perspectives of performance and accountability, funding, and use of interprofessional teams (recruitment and retention, ratios of team members, opportunity to leverage these resources). The ministry is developing terms of reference for this review, and is considering the range of team-based models to be included. One of the ministry’s drivers is to ensure that Ontarians who could benefit most from team-based care have access to this. The review is still in early development but the PHC Branch confirmed that AFHTO and related associations will be involved to inform the review process. Key points for FHTs and NPLCs

    • “Programs” and “comprehensive team-based primary care”: AFHTO has been challenging PHC Branch to look beyond their focus on “programs” if the ministry is truly interested in reaping the full value of comprehensive team-based primary care. PHC Branch has acknowledged this need – see below regarding “Schedule A” of the FHT annual operating plans.
    • Value comes from team collaboration, not referral: AFHTO has been taking every opportunity, including this meeting, to stress this point. The pressure to broaden access to teams has led some in the ministry and elsewhere to look to enabling physicians outside of teams to refer patients to IHPs within teams. Research evidence to date in Ontario, including the FHT evaluation report, points to the value of team collaboration, with all providers, including family physicians, as active members of that team.  The question is how to strengthen teams and broaden their reach.
    • What does it mean to be a team? Following from this, we will all be thinking about the further evolution of these team-based models and how the various providers are connected to them.
    • Measuring the value of team-based care: AFHTO continually reminds the ministry that the cost of team-based care is NOT the question – it is the value delivered for system sustainability. Data to Decisions (D2D) 2.0 will include further refinements to the measure of “total cost of care”. Your participation is critical to making the case that the investment in team-based care pays off by, among other things, optimizing total health system costs for patients. Stay informed – sign up for the bi-weekly D2D ebulletin.

    Development of new contract templates for FHTs  

    Contracts between MOHLTC and FHTs expire on March 31, 2016. AFHTO is ready with clear direction from the leaders of our member-organizations on the necessary principles – for the governance of primary care organizations; for accountability and reporting to funders; for determining accountability measures; for funding allocation; and for the support teams need to deliver timely, high-quality, comprehensive team-based care. In his March 9 speech the Deputy emphasized several times over the need to improve performance measurement and performance management in primary and community care, as has been done in hospitals. No doubt this will be reflected in future contracts. AFHTO and PHC Branch will meet again in a few weeks for further discussion of the specific question of measurement and reporting. Key points for FHTs and NPLCs

    • AFHTO continues to work with and on behalf of members to advance manageable and meaningful measurement. Through the Quality Improvement Decision Support program AFHTO members are strengthening capacity to measure and leading the way to identify appropriate and meaningful measures.
    • Likewise, AFHTO members are guiding development of contract templates. The ED and Physician Leadership Councils will play key roles in advising the AFHTO board as these discussions move forward.

    2. What to expect in 2015/16 operating plan and funding process

    AFHTO probed into a number of issues and questions members have been asking. Following from this meeting with PHC Branch, we offer the following advice to members;

    Outlook for funding approvals

    In simple words – don’t expect new money. Government has not yet presented its 2015/16 Budget, so the size of the “pies” to be divided among FHTs and among NPLCs is not yet known. These “pies” have been fully stretched in the past year, and as is happening in the rest of government, they could shrink. FHTs/NPLCs that are seeking additional funds can expect the approval process will take at least 4 months. Those who are only requesting reallocations of their base funding can expect fairly quick turnarounds.

    Data support for FHTs and NPLCs

    All AFHTO members – NPLCs and FHTs — are welcome to take full advantage of AFHTO’s QIDS Provincial Program. Unfortunately about 25 FHTs and all 25 NPLCs have no access to direct support from a QIDSS Specialist. The ministry is considering a proposal from NPAO for the NPLCs, and will consider any others from FHTs, however the funding situation described above means additional positions may not be possible.

    Premises costs

    Following the same theme as above – the ministry will consider increases where premise costs have gone up, but will insist that you first look at funding from within your existing budget.

    Performance measures in the 2015-16 Service Plan (“Schedule A” or “Part B)

    The Annual Operating Plan for FHTs includes “Schedule A – FHT Service Plan”.  NPLCs report their Service Plan in “Part B: 2015-2016 Strategic Priorities and Vision”, which includes strategic priorities, program and service commitments. The “Schedule A Guidance Document” in the FHT AOP package also gives specific instructions to list each of the FHTs programs, target population, objectives and performance measures. Key points for FHTs and NPLCs:

    • Following from the “programs” versus “comprehensive team-based primary care” discussion above, the ministry welcomes seeing “comprehensive team-based primary care” listed as a program, with objectives and measures.
    • The examples in the FHT Guidance Document are “counts” rather than actual performance measures with numerators and denominators. PHC Branch confirmed performance measures are welcome. The need is to demonstrate the return on the public investment.
    • For FHTs, the three topics at the top of the Schedule A submission sheet are required – enrollment, same day/next day and house calls.
    • For all other measures your FHT or NPLC can choose what you believe is most appropriate for your organization.

    Governance and Compliance Attestation

    All FHTs and NPLCs must submit the Governance and Compliance Attestation. This form sets out the ministry’s expectations for appropriate governance practices. If a FHT or NPLC is lacking in any areas, the PHC Branch has said they will work with the entity to improve in these areas. It will also send the aggregate results to AFHTO to share with the membership and focus our Governance and Leadership programming. A number of EDs asked about the requirement that “FHT has a current Performance Measures document monitored by the Board on an ongoing basis”. In the Attestation the ministry is looking for a simple “yes/no” response, although the PHC Branch will do occasional audits. The Quality and Safety section of AFHTO’s Fundamentals of Governance guidebook and toolkit provides guidance for boards on their fiduciary duties for performance and how performance measures are used to fulfill this duty. Suggestions include using AFHTO’s Data to Decisions 1.0  measures. (For more information about the upcoming D2D 2.0 indicators, click here.)

    Accountability Reform Initiative (ARI)

    Once again FHTs have the option to apply for ARI, which would give the team greater flexibility in how it uses its budget. It will be granted to those who meet all the governance and compliance requirements. Those who come close but don’t quite make it can be reconsidered later in the year if they’ve taken all the necessary steps to comply. NPLCs may be able to apply for ARI in the 2016-17 Annual Operating Plan process. Since they are newer entities, the ministry is waiting another year before potentially extending ARI to them.

    Reallocation and some inconsistency in decisions

    Following from the ministry’s recent call for reallocation requests, member EDs had reported to AFHTO some situations where consultants had not allowed a budget reallocation. The common element in the issues in question appeared to be regarding what physicians should cover.  PHC Branch reported they received over 100 submissions and are working to improve the response process. There are budget guidelines regarding what should be covered by the physician group, and decisions can be reviewed to ensure they’re applied consistently.

    Telemedicine equipment

    Members have been faced with vendors declaring ‘end of service’ for their telemedicine equipment and financial challenges to replace equipment. Some have been able to find funds within their budgets to address this; others have made arrangements through their local hospitals.  AFHTO members have offered assistance to help the ministry develop a more sustainable and unified strategy for ongoing OTN support. Recognizing this issue involves OTN, its funder (eHealth Ontario), the Northern Health Travel Grant program and the Nursing Secretariat, PHC Branch has agreed to take the first step. Starting with FHTs and NPLCs in the NE/NW, they will look at the most valuable uses of OTN equipment, how much of OTN use falls into this category, and whether a sustainability policy can be developed.

    Getting meaningful feedback from your consultant

    The short answer is – phone your consultant. AFHTO members periodically send us examples of feedback letters from ministry that offers no insight into why a decision was made. FHTs and NPLCs want to improve – and need specific, constructive feedback to help them do so. PHC Branch reported that each letter must be reviewed and approved before going out, so content is limited.

    3.    Participants in the March 5, 2015 meeting

    AFHTO was represented by:

    • Randy Belair (AFHTO President and ED, Sunset Country FHT, Kenora)
    • Ross Kirkconnell (Secretary + QIDS Steering Committee Chair and ED, Guelph FHT)
    • Kavita Mehta (ED Advisory Council Chair and ED, South East Toronto FHT)
    • Angie Heydon (AFHTO Executive Director)
    • Carol Mulder ( AFHTO QIDS Provincial Lead)

    MOHLTC’s PHC Branch representatives were:

    • Phil Graham (Acting Director, PHC Branch and Manager, Interprofessional Programs Unit)
    • Fernando Tavares (Program Manager, Interprofessional Programs)
    • Alexa Pagel (Senior Program Consultant)
  • Data to Decisions eBulletin #6 – March 5, 2015

    Contributing to D2D 2.0 

    Indicator selection: The indicators for D2D 2.0 have been approved by the AFHTO Board. Please review to decide which indicators your team could and would submit to the report. You may want schedule meetings with your clinical lead(s) and/or Board of Directors to review the data and approve it for submission. The deadlines for data submission are projected for early April – dates will be confirmed shortly. Data submission tool: For D2D 2.0 teams will enter their data directly into a tool that is now being developed (instead of sending in an excel file). Teams participating in D2D 2.0 will be asked to designate one individual from their team with authority to submit data. Several QIDSS will be testing the tool for usability starting on March 19th. Contact Puja Ahluwalia or Greg Mitchell for more information.

    Using D2D 1.0 to improve data quality and care

    Hire a student to improve data quality in your EMR: The toolkit to assist members in hiring a student has been posted on the members-only website. The toolkit was developed with input from members that have successfully engaged students to improve data quality in their EMRs. If you are considering getting a student, particularly if it is for this summer, it is important to start the process now. See the toolkit for next steps. Build a COPD registry in Telus PSS and Accuro EMRs: A query will soon be available from the QIDSS to generate a list of COPD patients. The QIDSS have developed the query in collaboration with CPCSSN, EMRALD and the ALIVE project. It is not perfect – about 15% of the patients found might not actually have COPD – but this may be an easier way to start finding these patients than starting from scratch. The query and instructions will be released in the next eBulletin. In the meantime, contact Greg Mitchell for more information. Pilot project for a patient contact system (for patient experience surveys etc): Proposals are under review for a vendor to develop and implement a service to automate the process of contacting patients.We will be looking for 10 teams to pilot the service by March 31, 2015. If your team is interested in participating, please contact  Marg Leyland. A more detailed call for volunteers will be issued shortly. In the meantime, please see the Request For Quotes for more details. QIDSS attended learning sessions to improve quality of clinical data in EMRs: Cancer Care Ontario (CCO) hosted the third of five regional sessions this week with QIDSS and the CCO Regional Primary Care Leads in Sudbury. Among topics discussed were: strategies to make it easier for QIDSS to support physicians in accessing their SARs; the extent of similarity between EMR and SAR cancer screening rates; and information and resources available to QIDSS and AFHTO members from CCO’s Primary Care Leads. There are upcoming sessions scheduled for QIDSS in Toronto and Thunder Bay.

    Other news about manageable meaningful measurement

    Thanks for completing the EMR migration survey: Responses were received from about one quarter of AFHTO members and are now being compiled. Further details will be available over the next month. In the meantime, contact Marg Leyland for more information.

    What do you think?

    We hope you find value in the D2D eBulletin and will continue to subscribe to this newsletter. Other members of your team can sign up by clicking here. Once they complete the sign-up form a confirmation e-mail will be sent within 24 hours. In the meantime, if you have any comments or questions about the eBulletin, please let us know by e-mail to improve@afhto.ca. What is D2D? Data to Decisions (D2D) is a member-wide summary of performance on indicators that are both possible for members to measure and that are meaningful to members. See the D2D page on AFHTO’s web site for more information.

  • Governance Education Webinars for Primary Care Leaders – Video recordings and slide deck

    AFHTO offered free educational webinars for our members from February 18 to March 4, 2015 in order to:

    1. Help primary care leaders meet the requirements in the ministry’s Accountability Reform Initiative and the Governance and Compliance Attestation;
    2. Share best practice and strategies to improve governance;
    3. Identify and address common issues in FHT/NPLC governance.

    There were 3 separate 90 min webinars, each webinar offered twice. See below for links to webinar recordings, slide decks and Q & A. Presenters: Melodie Zarzeczny (The Osbourne Group) Susan Davey (The Osbourne Group) Peer Facilitators: Michelle Karker (East Wellington FHT) Shirley Borges (Minto-Mapleton FHT) Terry McCarthy (Hamilton FHT) Sue Griffis (North York FHT) For video recordings, slide decks and Q& A for each session, please click on the links below:

    For further details on the webinars, click here.

  • MOHLTC’s priorities and plans for primary care

    This message presents what the Deputy and Associate Deputy Ministers of Health and Long-Term Care said recently about the ministry’s key priorities for health system transformation, the role of primary care in this transformation, and some of the key steps ahead. While the media have asked if government “has pressed the pause button on team-based primary care” (Globe and Mail, TVOntario), the information below indicates significant movement ahead. The content of this email comes from Associate Deputy Minister Susan Fitzpatrick’s meeting with the AFHTO board on Feb. 25 (click here to access her slide presentation). Many of the same points were reiterated the next day in addresses made by Deputy Minister Bob Bell and by Susan Fitzpatrick at the Feb. 26 HealthLinks conference. Highlights:

    • “Primary care must be the strong foundation for our health system.” Both DM Bob Bell and Associate DM Susan Fitzpatrick clearly stated this view. The key question – what does this look like and how will we get there?
    • “Comprehensive regionally governed, population-based primary health services for Ontarians.” Slide 10 is a specific look at how the ministry sees primary care teams in advancing transformation, from 2005 and into the future. On several occasions the Deputy has called for movement toward “population-based risk-adjusted primary care”; this slide confirms the intent.
    • Ministry’s key priorities for primary care teams. Slide 12 lists them as follows:
      • Population health based programs and services with focus on access, integration and patient experience
      • Collect community-specific data to improve performance and quality of primary care for its population
      • Continue progress in expanding availability of same day/next day appointments and after-hours
      • Continue to provide access to integrated health care teams for Ontarians who need it
      • Establish policies to improve Quality Improvement indicators ( e.g. post-hospital discharge visits, readmission rates, ED visits)
      • Participation in HealthLinks and other local initiatives (e.g. Physiotherapy reform)
      • Leveraging full scope of practice and improving team functioning
      • Strengthening and expanding local partnerships and care coordination
    • “Sector Leadership and Excellence are Critical.” Slide 6 depicts the adoption curve; AFHTO members are clearly identified in the “Early Adopter” group. Our individual and collective work to engage patients, advance measurement, spread best practice and improve quality is recognized by the ministry, and in the results of the recent Conference Board of Canada FHT evaluation report. Team-based primary care is rich with strong leaders and champions to lead the way for this sector as the ministry and stakeholders work to transform the health system.
    • Review of interprofessional primary care models. On both occasions Susan Fitzpatrick stated it was time to review the team-based models from the perspectives of performance and accountability, funding, and use of interprofessional teams (recruitment and retention, ratios of team members, opportunity to leverage these resources). FHTs and CHCs will be included in the review. The ministry is developing terms of reference for this review, and is considering the range of team-based models to be included.

    AFHTO continues to work with and on behalf of members to show the way forward. We are ready with clear direction from the leaders of our member-organizations on the necessary principles – for the governance of primary care organizations; for accountability and reporting to funders; for determining accountability measures; for funding allocation; and for the support teams need to deliver timely, high-quality, comprehensive team-based care. Collectively we continue to advance measurement capacity to give solid evidence of the value of team-based care, and develop governance and leadership capacity to lead the way. We will ensure our members’ successes are seen and voices heard by the ministry and stakeholders. We look forward to showcasing and further invigorating this work at the AFHTO 2015 Conference in October — Team-Based Primary Care: The Foundation of a Sustainable Health System.

  • Governance Education Webinar #3: Looking Forward

    Session 3:  Looking Forward – using good governance to enhance organizational performance

    • Monday, March 2 from 12:15 – 1:45pm &
    • Wednesday, March 4 from 8:00 – 9:30am

    Learning Objectives Understanding some of the more advanced elements of good governance and how they impact organizational performance Topics Covered

    • Strategic planning
    • Strategic plans, operational plans, and KPIs
    • Partnerships and community linkages
    • Board evaluation
    • Public complaints and resolution policy
    • Governing for safety and quality
    • Generative governance

    Resources

      • Monday, March 2 recording

     

    • Wednesday, March 4 recording
  • Register now for FREE Governance Education Opportunities- hotel discount rates end this week!

    Dear Members, The Governance for Quality in Primary Care workshops are now accredited by the College of Family Physicians of Canada and the Ontario Chapter for up to 5 Mainpro-M1 credits. Reminder to register in advance for Governance education opportunities available through AFHTO: 1. “Effective Governance for Quality in Primary Care Workshops”: being offered free of charge to AFHTO member board members, executive directors and lead clinicians on March 25th and March 30th in Toronto. a. Register for workshop #1 on Wednesday, March 25th from 10:30am to 4:30pm at the Sheraton Gateway Hotel (Toronto Airport). Wednesday, March 18th -deadline for guest room rates for AFHTO members attending this workshop. Register using this link: AFHTO RESERVATIONS OR contact the Reservation’s Centre: 1-888-627-7092 and use the group name ‘AFHTO’ or group code ‘AC21AA’. Availability is limited so book now! b. Register for workshop #2 on Monday, March 30th from 10:30am to 4:30pm at the Eaton Chelsea Hotel (downtown Toronto). Friday, March 20th -deadline for guest room rates for AFHTO members attending this workshop. Register using this link: AFHTO RESERVATIONS. Availability is limited so book now! 2. “Governance Webinarsfor primary care leaders. Two of the three webinars focused on the Fundamentals of Governance in support of the Accountability Reform Initiative have been completed and posted on the AFHTO members only website. The third session takes place on Mar 2 and 4. Please register in advance – space is limited.

    The content covered in the Governance Webinars is separate from the information provided in the Governance for Quality Workshops – please read the details for each to determine which education session(s) best meet your needs! Please click on the links for further information on the workshops and the webinars respectively.

  • Valuing comprehensive primary care: The Starfield Principles

    There is a compelling association between comprehensive primary care and system efficiency and effectiveness. The lifelong work of the late Barbara Starfield observed that an investment in primary care was associated with improved system quality, equity and efficiency (reduced cost)[i],[ii],[iii] ,[iv]. In British Columbia this efficiency was quantified by Marcus Hollander. The total cost of care was measured for the sickest patients. Patients without close alignment to primary care had a system cost of $30,000/patients/year. Patients with close alignment to primary care had a system cost of $12,000/patients/year[v]. The value of comprehensive primary care comes from the focus on the whole person, in their family and community context, over their lifetime. It is based on long-term, trusting relationships. This must be reflected when measuring performance in comprehensive primary care. In collaboration with members and research partners, AFHTO has been developing a system of measurement, based on the principles revealed through Dr. Starfield’s work.  Its objective is to enable teams delivering comprehensive primary care to optimize their performance and to evaluate the benefits over time. Using indicators from Health Quality Ontario’s Primary Care Performance Measurement Framework, it measures quality, capacity and total health system cost of care for patients. Click to read more about:

      References: [i] Shi L, Starfield B, Kennedy BP, Kawachi I. Income inequality, primary care, and health indicators. J Fam Pract. 48 (1999), 275–84. [ii] Starfield B. Family medicine should shape reform, not vice versa. Fam Pract Man. May 28, 2009; Global health, equity, and primary care. J Am Board Fam Med. 20(6) (2007), 511–13; Is US health really the best in the world? JAMA. 284(4) (2000), 483–4; Research in general practice: co-morbidity, referrals, and the roles of general practitioners and specialists. SEMERGEN.  29(Suppl 1) (2003), 7–16, Appendix D. [iii] Starfield B, Shi L. Policy relevant determinants of health: an international perspective. Health Policy. 60 (2002), 201–18. [iv] Starfield B, Shi L, Macinko J. Contribution of primary care to health systems and health. Milbank Quarterly. 83(3) (2005), 457–502. [v] Increasing Value for Money in the Canadian Healthcare System, Hollander et al. Healthcare Quarterly Vol 12 No. 4 2009