Journal article
Health Policy, vol. 172, 2026, p. 105687
APA
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Hadid, D., Muraca, G. M., Darling, E. K., & Vanstone, M. (2026). A policy analysis of the three-month waiting period for new and returning residents to access provincial health insurance in Ontario, Canada. Health Policy, 172, 105687. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthpol.2026.105687
Chicago/Turabian
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Hadid, Dima, Giulia M. Muraca, Elizabeth K. Darling, and Meredith Vanstone. “A Policy Analysis of the Three-Month Waiting Period for New and Returning Residents to Access Provincial Health Insurance in Ontario, Canada.” Health Policy 172 (2026): 105687.
MLA
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Hadid, Dima, et al. “A Policy Analysis of the Three-Month Waiting Period for New and Returning Residents to Access Provincial Health Insurance in Ontario, Canada.” Health Policy, vol. 172, 2026, p. 105687, doi:10.1016/j.healthpol.2026.105687.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{dima2026a,
title = {A policy analysis of the three-month waiting period for new and returning residents to access provincial health insurance in Ontario, Canada},
year = {2026},
journal = {Health Policy},
pages = {105687},
volume = {172},
doi = {10.1016/j.healthpol.2026.105687},
author = {Hadid, Dima and Muraca, Giulia M. and Darling, Elizabeth K. and Vanstone, Meredith}
}
BACKGROUND Ontario's three-month waiting period (Regulation 552, subsection 5 (1) for health insurance eligibility under the Ontario Health Insurance Plan (OHIP) was implemented in 1994 amidst a severe economic recession. Justified by legislators as a cost-saving measure, the policy has affected newcomers during a vulnerable resettlement period.
OBJECTIVE This analysis examines the policy and political factors underpinning both the policy's implementation in 1994 and temporary suspension during the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020.
METHODS This is a descriptive health policy analysis using the 3i + E framework. We conducted an environmental scan to identify and analyze publicly available documents related to the policy under study.
RESULTS The implementation of the waiting period policy reflected a complex interplay of institutional developments, including permissive federal regulations, jurisdictional fragmentation, and a legacy of provincial autonomy. Politically, it targeted a marginal group with limited electoral influence, serving as a low-cost, symbolic measure to signal fiscal discipline. Public discourses of fairness, moral deservingness, and economic nationalism framed the exclusion as acceptable. The policy endured due to institutional inertia and path dependence. In contrast, the temporary suspension in 2020 was driven by a shift in public health priorities, stakeholder convergence, and an ideational reframing of health as a collective good.
CONCLUSION The policy illustrates how exclusionary health policies are not only fiscal decisions but also reflect deeper institutional structures and dominant political narratives. While the pandemic opened a rare window for reform, the policy's entrenchment underscores the need for structural change, including stronger federal enforcement of equity-based health access.