New Poll Shows Strong Support for Health Reform
- Large majority support choice in health care – use the public system or pay privately;
- Majority support European-style policies currently moving forward in Quebec, Alberta that incentivize hospitals to help more patients
Canadian think tank SecondStreet.org released new public opinion research today that shows a majority of Canadians support more choice in health care and hiring non-government providers to deliver treatment to patients in the public system. The poll was conducted by Leger between October 31 and November 2, 2025.
“We can reduce patient suffering immensely if we move forward with health reform,” said SecondStreet.org President Colin Craig. “It’s encouraging to see the support for several European-style health reform options that have proven to deliver better results for patients. If more politicians get on board with change in Canada, then our public system could improve. Patients would have more choice and countless lives could be improved.”
Highlights from the poll include:
- 59% support governments paying non-government clinics to provide services to reduce wait times for patients in the public system. Many provincial governments embraced this type of collaboration to reduce COVID backlogs. Only 23% oppose the option;
- 56% support the idea of governments funding hospitals based on services provided (activity-based funding) rather than the current practice of providing them with annual cheques (global budgeting). Better-performing public systems in Europe use activity-based funding – a model Quebec and Alberta are moving towards;
- 59% support keeping the public system but allowing patients to pay for services at non-government clinics if they cannot get timely care within the public system. 28% oppose this option while 14% don’t know;
- 50% believe governments should offer financial incentives to reward those who live healthy lives. 31% oppose this idea while 19% don’t know;
- 30% support “small user fees” in the health system while 55% oppose the idea. Support remains similar (32%) when the fee is defined as $10 per appointment with a doctor (to a maximum of $100 per year).
“It was very encouraging to see strong support for a European-style policy that’s moving forward in Quebec and Alberta,” added SecondStreet.org Research Director Bacchus Barua. “Paying hospitals based on the type and volume of service provided makes a lot more sense than handing them a big cheque each year and hoping for the best. Alberta and Quebec are definitely on the right track with this change.”
To view the report – click here.
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