狐狸视频

Dean of U of T's Dalla Lana School of Public Health among experts advising Ontario on health-care policy

Photo of Adalsteinn Brown
Adalsteinn Brown, the dean of the Dalla Lana School of Public Health, has been named to Ontario's Council on Improving Health Care and Ending Hallway Medicine

A health-care advisory council struck by the Ontario government will draw on the expertise of the 狐狸视频's Adalsteinn Brown, the dean of the Dalla Lana School of Public Health. 

The province said today Brown is among the members of the council, first revealed back in June, that will recommend a strategic, long-term vision for health care in Ontario.

Led by U of T alumnus and former Humber River Hospital CEO Rueben Devlin, the council is made up of 11 health-system experts and is charged with tackling such hot button issues as hospital overcrowding and 鈥渉allway medicine,鈥 which refers to the practice of treating patients on stretchers in hospital hallways.

鈥淭his is an important opportunity to work collaboratively with government to make our health system better,鈥 said Brown. 鈥淏y exploring ways to improve efficiency, patient satisfaction and health outcomes, we can improve health at a population level and health services at a system level.鈥

Premier Doug Ford and Deputy Premier Christine Elliott, who is also minister of health and long-term care, revealed the makeup of the Council on Improving Health Care and Ending Hallway Medicine alongside a $90-million plan to add 640 new hospital beds and spaces in the province. They said the new spaces were an 鈥渋mmediate measure鈥 to help communities prepare for the upcoming flu season. The government said it was also planning to move foward with a plan to add 6,000 new long-term care beds across Ontario. 

鈥淥ne patient treated in a hallway is one patient too many,鈥 Ford said in a statement. 鈥淚t's unacceptable that people are still waiting hours before seeing a doctor, or are forced to lie on stretchers in hospital hallways when they do finally get care.鈥

He added his government plans to add more than 15,000 new long-term care beds over the next five years.

Other members on the province鈥檚 advisory council with U of T connections include: 

  • Connie Clerici, the founder and CEO of Closing the Gap Healthcare and an adjunct lecturer at U of T's Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation (IHPME)
  • Shirlee Sharkey, the CEO of Saint Elizabeth Health and an adjunct professor at IHPME
  • Richard Reznick, dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences at Queen鈥檚 University and the inaugural director of the U of T Wilson Centre for Research in Education 
  • Kimberly Moran, the CEO of Children鈥檚 Mental Health Ontario who was previously a special adviser to U of T鈥檚 dean in the Faculty of Medicine
  • Michael Decter, the CEO of investment firm LDIC and a former senior research scholar at U of T鈥檚 Joint Centre for Bioethics

Elliott said in a statement hallway health care was a 鈥渕ultifaceted problem that will require innovative solutions.鈥

 

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