This is a cost comparison of the Health PEI units at
Four Neighbourhoods Community Health Center (4NCHC) and Hunter River compared with the Phoenix Medical Practice.
4NCHC and Central Queens are Health PEI-run Community Health Centres. Like Phoenix Medical Practice, they were set up to run as modern collaborative medical practice providing family health services through a team of health care professionals.
The 4NCHC and Central Queens figures are
our estimates, but we'd be happy for Health PEI to provide corrections from their own figures.
| Health PEI
Four Neighbourhoods
(Charlottetown) | Health PEI
Central Queens Community Health Centre
(Hunter River) | Phoenix Medical Practice |
Year Opened | around 2002 | around 2002 | 2009 |
# Patients | 1,750 | 1900 | 4,500 |
# Doctors | 2.2 full time equivalents | 2 full time equivalents | 1 full time equivalent |
Status | Never functional.
Nursing services never developed.
All the doctors left 4NCHC in 2010
but staff remain in post. | Limited success
via Nurse Practitioner | Fully functional
Collaborative service
Extended opening hours.
Wide range of services. |
Funding / year
| $1 million estimate | $765,000 estimate | $600,000 |
Cost/yr/patient
| $535 (in 2010) | $403 | $133 |
One of the figures is the 'cost per patient per year'. That's one of the two key things you need to look at to work out if you are getting value for money in health care: the cost. Phoenix Medical Practice was $133 per patient per year. I estimate Health PEI's centres were around 3 to 4 times that amount: up to $535 per patient per year.
The second key thing you need to look at to see if you are getting value for your health care dollars is quality. Health PEI's 4NCHC was never really functional. After around 10 years of trying to get the collaborative system working properly, the last doctor left 4NCHC in 2010. The Phoenix Medical Practice, on the other hand, was fully functional. This functionality included quality systems to keep people healthy longer (great for patients, but also keeps the hospital bill down for taxpayers), and systems to measure that quality.
This enabled the Phoenix Medical Practice were able to provide evidence of quality care and low cost per patient.