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The Founding College of the University of Toronto
Portrait Photo of Raisa Deber

Raisa Deber

Affiliated Faculty
Health Studies
PhD
Professor, Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation / Dalla Lana School of Public Health
416-978-8366
Website
Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation University of Toronto Health Sciences Building 155 College Street, Suite 425 Toronto, ON M5T 3M6
Campus: St. George

Raisa B. Deber of the University of Toronto is an internationally recognized expert on Canadian health policy. She is renowned for her ability to analyze major health policy issues at local, provincial, national, and international levels, and to develop novel conceptual frameworks backed by data analysis, which have generated policy-relevant conclusions that have significantly influenced health policy theory and practice. Through scholarship, mentorship, and championing of multidisciplinary teamwork, she has enhanced our knowledge of shared decision making, the public-private mix in financing and delivering health care, health human resources, and home and community care.

Professor Deber’s current research centers on Canadian health policy. Projects, conducted with colleagues and students, include: preferred role for patients in making treatment decisions; implications of the distribution of health expenditures and public/private roles for financing and delivery of health services; the implications of different ways of financing primary health care; examination of where nurses and other health professionals work and the factors associated with differential “stickiness” across sub-sectors; issues associated with the movement of care from hospitals to home and community; decision making, and approaches to accountability.
 

Education

  • PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Research Interests

  • Preferred role for patients in making treatment decisions
  • Implications of the distribution of health expenditures and public/private roles for financing and delivery of health services
  • The implications of different ways of financing primary health care
  • Examination of where nurses and other health professionals work and the factors associated with differential “stickiness” across sub-sectors
  • Issues associated with the movement of care from hospitals to home and community

Publications

  • Deber, R. (2018).  Treating Health Care.  Toronto, ON: University of Toronto Press.
  • Roblin, B., Deber, R., Kuluski, K. and Silver, M.P., 2019. Ontario’s Retirement Homes and Long-Term Care Homes: A Comparison of Care Services and Funding Regimes. Canadian Journal on Aging/La Revue canadienne du vieillissement38(2), pp.155-167.
  • Deber, R. and Schwartz, R., 2016. What’s measured is not necessarily what matters: a cautionary story from public health. Healthcare Policy12(2), p.52.
  • Rudoler D, Deber R, Barnsley J, Glazier RH, Dass AR, Laporte A. Paying for primary care: the factors associated with physician self‐selection into payment models. Health Economics. 2015 Sep;24(9):1229-42., DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2014.11.001