That is a fantastic question, and I think it speaks in a very poignant way to what we're talking about here. We often hear that the majority of Canadians, over 75%, want to die at home. It is true that we can improve the number of home deaths, given resources and processes that we can put in place, but we cannot forget the other components of the health care system.
I always use the analogy of a car. If we go into a dealership and we say we want a car with a fantastic right front tire and forget about the other tires, that car is not going to go anywhere. It's the same thing with the health care system. We know that patients experience different palliative care needs across the illness trajectory, from diagnosis to the very end. Sometimes they are basic needs that can be addressed by a generalist, and sometimes their needs are very complex. We do know that we can't just focus on home care. We need to improve home care, but there are some patients who don't want to die at home, and there are other patients who can't die at home. There are patients who find themselves in hospital.
In Edmonton there was some wonderful work done when I was working there in the first regional palliative care program in Canada at the time. We were making sure we put in place the different components in the right proportions. We improved home care services significantly. We made sure there were enough beds in the palliative care unit, so that those patients across the illness trajectory with very complex needs could get the best care possible by highly trained specialists. We made sure there were enough hospice beds. In fact, we used the formula that's known quite well across the world, which is that for every 100,000 population, we need two or three palliative care unit beds and about six or seven hospice beds. We put all of that in place. Within a few years, we showed not only improved care of patients but also a significant lowering of cost to the health care system.
There was a very well-known paper published in 2005 by researchers in Edmonton and Calgary, who showed that putting in all the components in the right proportion, not neglecting one or the other, helped patients and saved the system lots of dollars.
So yes, we can do a better job in improving home care and palliative home care, but we cannot neglect the other components of the system.