Provincial Health Services Authority
Health service provider in the Canadian province of British Columbia / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Provincial Health Services Authority (PHSA) is a publicly funded health service provider in the province of British Columbia. PHSA is unique in Canada as the only health authority having a province-wide mandate for specialized health services, although within British Columbia the First Nations Health Authority is also non-regional and highly dispersed. The five other health authorities in the province have regional jurisdiction. Services are provided either directly through PHSA agencies or through funding or collaboration with regional health authorities.
Quick Facts Formation, Type ...
Formation | 2001 |
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Type | British Columbia Health Authority |
CEO | David Byres |
Budget | c. $3.6 billion in 2019–20 |
Staff | c. 22,000 |
Website | www |
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PHSA operates and manages a number of well-recognized specialized programs/services:
- BC Cancer
- BC Centre for Disease Control
- BC Children's Hospital & Sunny Hill Health Centre for Children
- BC Emergency Health Services (with programs BC Ambulance Service and the BC Patient Transfer Network)
- Health Emergency Management BC
- BC Mental Health & Substance Use Services
- BC Renal
- BC Transplant
- BC Women's Hospital & Health Centre
- Cardiac Services BC
- BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS (with the partnership with Providence Health and UBC)
The PHSA concentrates on doing three things to meet its responsibilities in health care:
- Provide leadership and management of selected agencies and organizations providing province-wide health care services;
- Ensure health care is delivered by overseeing performance agreements, expectations and funding allocations for selected provincial health care programs and services; and,
- Province-wide coordination of programs, services and support systems required by all health authorities and/or the Ministry of Health.