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The Health Services Review was established under terms of reference, or guidelines, that were set out by the federal and provincial ministers of Health on September 17, 1979. These terms, which refer to the national health policy, direct the Special Commissioner to:
The Review was chaired by Mr. Justice Emmett M. Hall, with assistance in Québec from Dr. Alice Girard. The terms of reference included consultation with federal and provincial ministers of Health and Social Services, and their officials, health workers, users of health services and health institutions, and associations that represented any of them. Mr. Justice Hall held public hearings in every province and in the Northwest Territories, and received 450 submissions.
The final report of the Review, Canada's National-Provincial Health Program for the 1980's: A Commitment for Renewal, was published in August 29, 1980. Recommendations include: ending user fees and extra-billing; changing mechanisms for physicians' fees; and setting national standards for portability, comprehensiveness, accessibility, public administration and universal coverage.
The Health Services Review report is only available in print form at some
public libraries,
depository libraries throughout Canada, and some university libraries.