InterHealth Canada Limited,
Transcription
InterHealth Canada Limited,
Interheath_DPS.qxp 01/05/2008 11:32 Page 1 InterHealth Canada Limited, based in Toronto, provides the full spectrum of healthcare services to the international market. Understanding the needs of and “partnering” with government clients. InterHealth Canada is unusual among international healthcare providers; having been established as a private and “for profit” company, its shareholders include both private sector companies and leading public sector institutions from across Canada – major teaching hospitals, leading universities and large hospital groups covering all aspects of modern healthcare. The company was incorporated in 1994 on the initiative of the then Provincial Government of Ontario, in partnership with a number of large public hospitals and private companies, as a vehicle for the export of Canadian healthcare expertise; that objective and structure is maintained to this day. The company is now considered by many to be the leading Canadian provider of healthcare internationally. That combination of private and public sector interests among the shareholders, is reflected at board level and in the senior management where directors and senior executives include individuals who have a long experience of working in both sectors. As a result, InterHealth Canada prides itself on having a real understanding of the constraints under which the public sector has to operate, whether in North America, Europe, Africa, the Middle East or elsewhere. Indeed, in all its work with the public sector, the company seeks to develop with its government clients a relationship as close as possible to that of a “partnership” in which it can bring its experience and expertise plus the best of North American healthcare practice, to the benefit of its “partner” in a manner which allows the government client to preserve its rightful position as the “National Healthcare Provider” to its electorate and others. Apart from that underlying ethos of “partnership”, one of the company’s more significant assets is its ability to call upon its shareholder base for support, guidance and technical expertise in the diverse fields of medicine – often in the form of visiting experts in a particular field. Those attributes have enabled InterHealth Canada to approach the international market for the provision of healthcare from a unique position of strength. By way of example, the company was awarded the first licence for the provision of a private sector hospital in Beijing, it has worked with the World Bank in Hungary, in Thailand and has very successfully operated a new 350 bed tertiary care hospital for the government of the Emirate of Abu Dhabi. It is also presently operating a new trauma centre for the government of the Emirate of Dubai, a diabetes research and treatment centre for an arm of the government of Kuwait, a leading Women’s and Children’s Hospital also in Kuwait, two Treatment Centres for the Department of Health in England and, earlier this year, signed a contract for the financing, design, construction, equipping, staffing, facilities management and clinical operation of two full service hospitals for the government of the Turks and Caicos Islands in the Caribbean. Most recently, the company has now signed Heads of Agreement for a contract to operate and manage a Neurology and Neurosurgery ward for one of the leading Foundation Hospitals in London, England. As an adjunct to its core business of operating and managing healthcare facilities, InterHealth Canada also provides consultancy services to governments in relation to specific aspects of healthcare such as the provision of Emergency Services or the provision of a specific service such as Oncology. That consultancy division also plays a vital role for both governments and private sector clients in the provision of technical advice and assistance in relation to the planning and establishment of new facilities - spatial analyses, the specification and procurement of medical equipment and clinical and non-clinical commissioning. Healthcare has been rightly described as being dependent upon people – a “people business” – and this concept is reflected throughout the InterHealth Canada group. Uniquely, the company has for many years included its own recruitment subsidiary with a very substantial database of healthcare professionals from around the world through which the company has recruited the clinicians and other medical and non medical staff for the hospitals and other healthcare facilities which it operates. That division also carries out all necessary Interheath_DPS.qxp 01/05/2008 11:32 Page 2 credentialing and other background checks both for the company’s own purposes and as required by the laws of the particular jurisdiction in which the company may be working. Having well qualified staff is only a part of the solution: staff have to be confident that the HR Policies and Procedures which the company has in place meet all legal requirements, are fair, will be properly operated by management, that the financial packages are maintained in line with market trends and that opportunities for ongoing professional development will be made available. To that end, InterHealth Canada has its own staff training programmes headed by a Training Officer and also seeks to develop arrangements with universities and other teaching institutions in those countries where it is working. That the company meets those staff objectives is evidenced by staff turnover rates which are well below average and by the receipt of a “Best Employer of the Year” award from the government of the Philippines. Only by providing a quality service can the needs of patients, of sponsoring governments and the aspirations of a qualified staff be properly met. Quality stems from good facilities and modern, properly maintained equipment operated by qualified staff working to properly drawn up and approved policies and procedures within a clinical and operational management structure which monitors key parameters, provides a forum for peer review and has the ability to accommodate changes which may be found necessary or desirable to reflect changing patterns or volumes in the patients being treated and recent developments in the practice of medicine. InterHealth Canada operates its facilities according to policies and procedures and within structures which have been developed to reflect best practice and which are kept under regular review to ensure that they reflect the rapid advances in healthcare and changes in recommended practice. While being essentially “standard” throughout the group, the company recognises that local law has to be complied with; accordingly in each jurisdiction those policies and procedures are adapted to reflect the particular requirements of the local environment in which the company is working. For the company and also importantly for a sponsoring government which needs to be able to maintain statistical information as a basis for its national healthcare provision, quality is also dependent upon having complete and accurate information and the ability to access the latest developments in medicine. These criteria were specific requirements of the Turks and Caicos Islands Government with which InterHealth Canada has contracted to deliver clinical services to the Islands’ population for the next twenty three years. To meet those specific requirements the company will be developing central and remote site IM&T patient management systems using the latest available software technology which will link into the government’s national database. This also enables the company to access the long term future development of telemedicine functions so that the latest advances in medicine will be brought to the population of these Caribbean islands A key measure of quality is the achievement and maintenance by ongoing assessment, of accreditation by one of the internationally recognised Accreditation Bodies or similar national agency. Interhealth Canada is proud to be associated with the Canadian Council on Health Services Accreditation (CCHSA). The company’s directors and senior executives include past and present assessors for the CCHSA. The company has a detailed knowledge of the requirements for such accreditation and takes considerable care to ensure that all its protocols, policies and procedures reflect the most recent practices sought by the CCHSA when determining whether or not Accreditation is to be afforded and then renewed. In England, all healthcare facilities have to be licensed annually by the Healthcare Commission and this requirement affords a similar measure of quality. The two Treatment Centres which the company operates were licensed on opening and have had those licences renewed annually without question. Many of the practices which the company operates within those Treatment Centres are held out by the Department of Health as examples of good practice to be aimed for by others. That dedication to the delivery of quality healthcare enabled the company to commit to and to achieve accreditation of the tertiary hospital in Abu Dhabi within two years of opening – the first hospital outside North America to be accredited by the CCHSA – and allows the company to confidently predict that the new hospitals in the Turks & Caicos Islands will similarly be accredited within two years of opening. Website: www.interhealthcanada.com Tel: +1 416 362 4681 Fax: +1-416-362 7633