Did past health accords work? Ottawa is trying to make that question easier to answer
OTTAWA — In medicine, before a doctor treats a patient’s illness, they first try to get a sense of the person’s health.
They collect information on the symptoms, run tests and blood work and gather whatever details they can.
That way, they’ll know whether or not the medicine has worked.
It’s called establishing a baseline, and policy experts do the same thing to figure out if their latest strategy has actually fixed the problem.