Healthcare Transformation in Canada:
The Delivery Problem No System Can Outrun
Canadian healthcare systems are running past the limits they were designed for. Demand keeps climbing, driven by population growth, aging, and clinical complexity that did not exist at the scale we see today, while workforce capacity, fiscal headroom, and public tolerance for disruption keep narrowing. The pressure shows up in occupancy rates, in nursing ratios, and in the calculations hospital executives are forced to make every week about which problems they can afford to address and which ones they have to defer.
Total healthcare spending in Canada is expected to reach $399 billion in 2025, roughly $9,626 per Canadian, or about 12.7 percent of GDP.1 Healthcare is now the largest and fastest-growing area of public expenditure in the country, often accounting for more than 40 percent of provincial program spending.2 The number is striking on its own. What is even more striking is that the steady increases in funding have not produced proportional improvements in access or outcomes, which is the part of the story most public conversations skip.
In 2023 and 2024, Canada experienced population growth of 2.9 and 3.0 percent respectively,3 the highest rates in over 60 years. As a direct consequence, real per capita health care spending in the public sector actually declined by 1.4 percent in 2024.4 The system is absorbing a much larger population with fewer real resources per person, and the gap between what is being asked of it and what it can reliably deliver is widening in ways that cannot be closed by incremental adjustments.
Across provinces, hospital occupancy routinely exceeds safe operating thresholds. Workforce shortages persist and are projected to deepen over the next decade. Burnout has shifted from an individual and team-level concern to a system-level risk, and the expectations placed on the system, for access, quality, digital services, and outcomes, continue to climb from every direction at once.
The defining question for today’s Deputy Ministers of Health and healthcare CEOs is not which reforms to pursue. The ideas are not in short supply. The harder question is what to stop, what to sequence, and how to protect delivery capacity while change is underway.
Five Structural Realities Shaping Canadian Healthcare
The pressures facing Canadian health systems are structural, not cyclical. They will not resolve as funding ticks up or as pandemic-era backlogs slowly clear. They represent the operating conditions that leaders now have to design their systems around, whether or not those conditions are politically convenient to acknowledge.
1. Healthcare demand is rising faster than workforce supply and training pipelines.
A Health Canada study published in 2025 documents persistent and widening supply-demand gaps across most healthcare occupations, both now and over the next decade. Employee compensation in Canadian hospitals reached $50.7 billion in 2023–2024, a 13 percent increase from the prior year and the first double-digit growth since 2010–20112. Even with that investment, hospital workforce shortages have not eased—and they will continue to push costs upward.
The supply pipeline is structurally insufficient to close the gap at the pace demand is growing. Regulatory changes to promote labour mobility across provincial and territorial borders, fast-track pathways for internationally educated health professionals, and return-of-service agreements are all being pursued. As CIHI has noted, however welcome those efforts are, large-scale creative solutions will be required to bridge the gap in any meaningful way.
2. Burnout, absenteeism, and early retirement are reducing effective capacity.
The headline employment numbers understate the problem. A nationwide survey released in February 2025 found that 89 percent of health professionals reported the system is in crisis. More than half described it as understaffed. Eighty percent said that working short-staffed was producing moderate or severe effects on their own health, and 61 percent reported experiencing heavy workloads and burnout—numbers that should give pause to anyone planning new initiatives on top of an already strained workforce.
Overtime worked by all employees in Canadian hospitals also climbed from less than 3 percent of all worked hours in 2019 to almost 5 percent in 20232. This is not a buffer. It is a structural dependency on a workforce that is already at or beyond sustainable limits. Any transformation approach that does not explicitly account for workforce absorption capacity is, in practice, not a realistic plan.
3. Hospital occupancy frequently exceeds levels associated with safe and reliable care.
Alternate Level of Care (ALC) pressures are a direct driver of hospital congestion. In 2023–2024, 16.9 percent of hospital days nationally were used by patients designated ALC, representing 3.2 million ALC days and the equivalent of 8,866 beds occupied at full capacity by patients awaiting more appropriate care settings7. In Ontario, that figure reached 17.4 percent8. The system is paying acute-care prices for care that should be delivered, and could be delivered better, somewhere else.
Clinical complexity in long-term care is increasing at the same time. Nationally, 24.6 percent of assessed residents were clinically complex in 2024–2025, up from 22.7 percent in 2019–20202. Sixty percent had a diagnosis of dementia2. The system is absorbing more complexity at every level, and the capacity to manage that complexity without destabilising adjacent parts of the system is shrinking.
4. Digital health remains fragmented across organisations and jurisdictions.
While Canada has invested significantly in digital health infrastructure over the past decade, the returns have been uneven. Digital tools are often layered onto manual processes rather than replacing them, which increases complexity without reducing workload, and interoperability across organisations and jurisdictions is still limited enough that patient information does not follow patients reliably. Clinical decision-making is too often operating with incomplete data, which is the kind of constraint that no amount of additional spending on tooling alone will fix.
The problem is not a lack of technology ambition. The problem, more precisely, is that digital transformation in healthcare has frequently been designed as a technology project rather than a care model redesign enabled by technology. The sequence is wrong. Redesigning care must come first, and digital tools should follow it.
5. Accountability is distributed while operational authority is often localised.
Canadian health systems are governed through layered structures—ministries of health, regional health authorities, hospital boards, community health agencies, primary care networks—each carrying its own governance, funding, and accountability framework. The result is a system where responsibility for outcomes is shared broadly and authority to change the conditions that produce those outcomes is held narrowly.
Transformation initiatives regularly stall at the points where authority and accountability do not line up. A ministry can set direction. A health authority can deploy resources. A hospital can change its protocols. But the patient pathway that crosses all three is owned by no one in a way that allows coordinated action at the pace the system actually requires. That misalignment is one of the most consistent constraints on execution in Canadian healthcare, and it is also one of the least often named directly in public reform conversations.
STRUCTURAL REALITIES
- Healthcare demand is rising faster than workforce supply and training pipelines.
- Burnout, absenteeism, and early retirement are reducing effective capacity.
- Hospital occupancy frequently exceeds levels associated with safe and reliable care.
- Digital health remains fragmented across organizations and jurisdictions.
- Accountability is distributed, while operational authority is often localized.
Where Strategies Break Down
Healthcare strategies rarely fail because the diagnosis is wrong. They fail because the execution assumptions baked into them are unrealistic.
The pattern is recognisable across systems and provinces, and once you see it, you start to see it everywhere. Reforms are launched without reducing existing workload while digital tools are layered onto manual processes, adding complexity for frontline staff who are already at capacity. Care model changes are announced before workforce roles, funding flows, and governance structures have been redesigned to support them. New initiatives are added to organisations that are already running more concurrent change than their leadership can effectively govern.
The result is visible activity without sustained performance improvement. Frontline staff experience each new initiative as one more demand rather than as a reduction in burden. Leaders spend more and more of their time managing the consequences of changes that were not properly sequenced or resourced, instead of driving the improvements those changes were supposed to produce. This is a failure of execution design, and it shows up reliably wherever the design conditions are not addressed.
Trends and Insights: What Is Changing and What It Requires of Leaders
- Explicitly cap the number of concurrent transformation initiatives.
- Redesign care models before investing in technology.
- Actively remove low‑value administrative and clinical work.
- Sequence change based on workforce absorption capacity, not political urgency.
- Align funding, accountability, and decision rights to outcomes.
1. Fiscal pressure is intensifying even as spending continues to grow.
Total health care spending is expected to grow by 4.2 percent in 2025. Real per capita public-sector spending, though, is expected to grow by only 0.6 percent after the negative growth of 2024. With population growth moderating and inflation easing, the most acute phase of the per-capita squeeze may be passing. The structural reality, however, remains in place: the system must find ways to deliver better outcomes from a cost base that cannot grow indefinitely at the rate demand is rising.
For system leaders, this means making explicit choices about where to invest, where to reduce, and where to stop. Healthcare systems have historically avoided these conversations—for understandable political reasons. The fiscal environment is now making them unavoidable.
2. The workforce strategy is the transformation strategy.
The most significant constraint on transformation in Canadian healthcare is not funding, technology, or political will. It is the capacity of the workforce to absorb change while continuing to deliver care. Any transformation that does not seriously account for workforce absorption capacity is, again, not a plan. It is an aspiration dressed up in the vocabulary of one.
High-performing health systems are now treating workforce strategy as the starting point for transformation planning, not as a parallel track to be coordinated later. That means understanding the actual burden on frontline teams before adding new initiatives, designing change sequences that reduce burden rather than add to it, and building the kind of workforce leadership capability that sustained transformation actually requires.
3. ALC and capacity flow are the most actionable near-term levers.
The 3.2 million ALC days consumed in Canadian hospitals in 2023–2024 represent the most direct and measurable opportunity for capacity recovery in the near term. Each ALC day is a hospital bed occupied by someone who would be better served in a community, long-term care, or home care setting. Reducing ALC rates requires coordination across system levels that most governance structures do not currently support well—but the operational and financial case for addressing it is unusually clear.
Leaders who treat ALC as a hospital problem are addressing the symptom. Leaders who treat it as a system flow problem, requiring coordinated action across hospitals, community care, and home care, are addressing the cause. The distinction matters more than it sounds.
4. Digital health is maturing from infrastructure investment to care model redesign.
Canada’s 10-year federal–provincial health funding agreement includes significant investment in digital health and data infrastructure. The open question is whether organisations will use that investment to layer more technology onto existing care models, or to redesign care models with technology as the enabler. The distinction matters enormously, both for outcomes and for the frontline experience of the people delivering care.
The systems moving furthest are those that have sequenced care model redesign before technology deployment, ensured frontline clinical staff are involved in design rather than subjected to implementation, and established governance that connects digital investment to measurable improvements in care delivery—not just to project milestones.
What High-Performing Health Systems Do Differently
The gap between health systems that are improving under pressure and those that are struggling is consistent and observable. The strongest systems share five execution characteristics, and none of them are exotic.
- First, they explicitly cap the number of concurrent transformation initiatives. They understand that organisational capacity to absorb change is finite, and they protect that capacity deliberately. They make active decisions about what not to do, and they are willing to defend those decisions when the political pressure to add more inevitably arrives.
- Second, they redesign care models before investing in technology. They resist the pressure to deploy digital tools as a first response to performance problems, because they know that technology layered onto broken processes produces faster broken processes—not better ones.
- Third, they actively remove low-value administrative and clinical work. They treat workload reduction as a transformation objective with the same standing as new capability development, because they understand that adding without removing is not transformation. It is accumulation, and accumulation is what burns frontline staff out.
- Fourth, they sequence change based on workforce absorption capacity, not political urgency. They build transformation timelines around what frontline teams can realistically absorb, and they resist the pressure to announce change faster than it can be implemented safely. This is harder than it sounds when public attention is high.
- Fifth, they align funding, accountability, and decision rights to outcomes. They work to connect the authority to change the system with the accountability for its performance, and they are persistent about closing the governance gaps that allow diffuse responsibility to substitute for actual ownership.
Opportunities and Solutions: Closing the Execution Gap Between Reform Ambition and Frontline Reality
1. Make explicit trade-offs about what to stop.
The most underused lever in Canadian healthcare transformation is the decision to stop. Most systems are running more initiatives than their leadership capacity can govern—sometimes many more. Reducing the number of concurrent priorities is not a retreat from ambition. It is the precondition for the ambition that remains to actually succeed.
The discipline of stopping requires governance structures that can make and enforce these decisions at the system level, along with leadership capable of communicating the rationale to organisations that have invested in the work being stopped. Neither is straightforward. Both are necessary.
2. Stabilise before transforming.
In systems under operational stress, sequence matters as much as content. Transformation initiatives launched into an already destabilised system tend to compound the instability rather than resolve it. For many Canadian health organisations, the highest-value first step is not a new initiative at all. It is identifying what is creating the most friction and burden for frontline teams, and reducing that friction before asking the same teams to absorb additional change on top of it.
3. Redesign governance to close accountability gaps.
The most persistent barrier to execution in Canadian healthcare is the misalignment between where accountability for outcomes sits and where authority to change the conditions that produce those outcomes sits. Closing that gap requires explicit governance redesign—clarifying who owns which decisions, identifying which problems cross organisational boundaries and therefore require shared governance, and naming the escalation paths when coordinated action is needed.
This is detailed, unglamorous work. It is also some of the highest-value work available to system leaders, because it creates the conditions under which every other improvement becomes more possible.
4. Build change capacity as explicitly as clinical capacity.
Canadian health systems invest substantially in clinical capability. They invest comparatively little in the organisational capability to implement and sustain change. The leaders and teams responsible for transformation are too often operating without the governance frameworks, decision-right clarity, and change management expertise that complex system change actually requires.
Building that capability—developing internal transformation leadership, establishing the governance structures that keep initiatives on track, and creating the institutional knowledge to learn from what has and has not worked—is a strategic investment with returns that compound across every subsequent initiative.
Conclusion: Healthcare Transformation in Canada Is Constrained by Delivery Capacity, Not Ideas
Canadian health systems are not short of reform proposals, strategic plans, or political commitment to change. What they are short of is the execution capacity to implement change safely, sustainably, and at the pace the population now requires.
The systems that succeed over the next decade will not be the ones that launch the most initiatives. They will be the ones that are willing to make explicit trade-offs, redesign how care is delivered at the system level, protect the workforce while change occurs, and align governance with the outcomes they are accountable for producing. None of this is glamorous. Most of it is unfashionable. All of it is necessary.
Healthcare transformation in Canada is no longer constrained by ideas or intent. It is constrained by delivery capacity. The organisations that acknowledge that constraint, and design their transformation approaches around it, are the ones most likely to close the gap between what the system currently delivers and what Canadians need it to deliver.
How mBolden Works with Healthcare Leaders
mBolden specialises in the execution gap between healthcare reform ambition and frontline reality. We work with ministries, agencies, and providers on the difficult but necessary trade-offs—what to stop, what to stabilise first, and how to sequence change without accelerating burnout or destabilising care.
Our focus is sustained delivery under constraint. The same principle applies to public health systems and to enterprise healthcare organisations operating at national or global scale, where execution failure translates directly into cost, margin, and service continuity.
Our areas of specialty include healthcare operating model design, transformation governance and decision rights, leadership capacity and sequencing, care model redesign enabling digital investment, and change strategy for organisations managing concurrent operational and transformation demands.
This page is for Deputy Ministers and Associate Deputy Ministers of Health, hospital CEOs and executive leadership teams, health authority and agency leaders, and the transformation, operations, and digital executives who are accountable for making change happen inside systems that cannot afford to stop delivering while they improve.
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