Alberta partially rolls out new surgery funding model for public hospitals
Model will start in a dozen public hospitals across the province.

An Alberta Health Services sign is pictured outside the Rockyview General Hospital in Calgary on March 20. The government says what it calls patient-focused funding began last month for an initial group of hospitals, including Rockyview. Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press
Jack Farrell, CBC Calgary, The Canadian Press Jun 01, 2026
Last Updated: June 1
Alberta is rolling out a new surgery funding model that ties money to patients, starting in a dozen public hospitals across the province.
The government calls it patient-focused funding and says it began last month for the initial group of hospitals, including Edmonton’s Royal Alexandra Hospital and Calgary’s Rockyview General Hospital.
The 12 hospitals, operated by Alberta Health Services and Covenant Health, will see their funding for surgeries be tied to the number and type of procedures they perform, rather than receive blanket budgets for surgeries.
There’s also a government-set price for each type of surgery, and documents about the trial released by the province say some have been set slightly below historical averages to encourage efficiency.
The switch to the new funding model was announced by Premier Danielle Smith more than a year ago.
At the time, Smith said it would make hospitals more accountable and drive costs down by fostering competition among public and private surgical providers who perform publicly funded procedures.
However, the initial rollout announced Monday is limited to public hospitals.
| Government must ‘start somewhere’: Smith |
Government officials told reporters during a briefing that the plan is to use the new funding system to inform future contract discussions with private providers.
Smith said at a news conference that the government had to “start somewhere” in terms of implementing the system and bringing costs down.
“This is about getting the level of efficiency up at all of our hospitals,” she said.
“We are starting from a position of fairness — that we know that different types of surgeries take different amounts of resources — and we want to be able to pay everybody fairly on that basis.
“As we learn more over the course of the next year, maybe there’ll be some adjustment based on what we discover on the efficiencies and the pricing.”

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith said at a news conference that the government had to ‘start somewhere’ in terms of implementing the system and bringing costs down. CBC News
The funding model applies to knee, hip and cataract replacements, and arthroscopic rotator cuff repairs. The government said it could expand to include additional procedures and hospitals if the initial rollout goes according to plan.
| ‘Price book’ released |
Acute Care Alberta, the provincial health agency that oversees hospitals, released a “price book” on Monday.
In the book, knee replacement day surgeries, for example, are pegged at $8,530, but hospitals can receive more funding if patients have pre-existing conditions that make the procedure more complicated and resource-intensive.
That day surgery cost, according to the price book, equals a two-per-cent funding bump compared to historical averages. For knee replacements on patients with more complex conditions, hospitals are set to receive two per cent less than historical averages.
The funding bump for day surgeries and reductions for surgeries on patients with comorbidities applies to hip and cataract replacements as well. Rotator cuff procedures are also being funded two per cent less than the historical average.
Acute Care Alberta says in the document that the initial trial with a dozen hospitals will be a “learning year,” as it tracks how the new system works.
The document says the agency knows emphasizing efficiency can create concerns about quality of care declining. An official with Acute Care Alberta said during the briefing that readmission rates, infections and other quality control measures will be monitored.
Dr. Aaron Low, Acute Care Alberta’s chief medical officer, said Monday that high-quality care is a priority for Alberta’s hospitals, regardless of the funding model, and that the goal isn’t to do “high-volume, low-quality services.”
Smith also said she thought the push for efficiency wouldn’t compromise care, adding she expects surgeons and other health professionals to find ways to reduce downtime.
| Hospitals critic says funding model not a solution |
Sarah Hoffman, the Opposition NDP hospitals critic, said the funding model wasn’t a solution for surgical backlogs.
“Activity-based funding pushes hospitals towards quicker, less complex procedures at the expense of comprehensive care, proper followup and better health outcomes,” Hoffman said in a statement.
“If this government truly wanted to fix health care, it would invest in public surgical capacity, address bottlenecks across the system, and work with patients, providers and communities on real solutions.”
Chris Gallaway, executive director of the advocacy group Friends of Medicare, said the plan would benefit surgical centres that do certain types of surgeries over public hospitals, which must do comprehensive types of surgeries.
“We’ve talked about this before, but the real limiting problem is the workforce, and nothing today addresses the workforce issues,” he said.
Dr. Brian Wirzba, president of the Alberta Medical Association, said the group doesn’t want to see public hospitals racing to take care of easier patients to compete with chartered surgical facilities.
“So, it really all depends on that formula that’s used. We would be asking that that formula be transparent, so that everyone knows how it is addressing that patient complexity,” he said.
Government officials said during the briefing that signs of success for the new model will be increased surgeries and shorter hospital stays.
Acute Care Alberta’s price book indicates that close to 26,000 surgeries — half of which are cataract replacements — are planned to be funded through the new model in the first year.
In 2024-25, a little more than 65,000 hip, knee, cataract and rotator cuff surgeries were performed by both public and private operators, the document said.
| With files from Janet French |
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Source CBC Calgary
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Patient-focused funding – A new funding model for acute care in Alberta Alberta.ca