Stephen John Duckett (born 18 February 1950) is an economist and health services manager who has occupied leadership roles in health services in both Australia and Canada. He is currently a professor at the University of Alberta.
Contents |
Stephen Duckett was born in Sydney and educated at Woollahra Public School (Opportunity classes) and Fort Street High School. He subsequently studied economics at the Australian National University (BEc) and health administration at the University of New South Wales (MHA, PhD). His academic contributions have been recognized by the University of New South Wales by the award of a higher doctorate, Doctor of Science, (DSc), and by election as a Fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia (FASSA).
Dr Duckett worked as an academic (Lecturer/Senior Lecturer) in the School of Health Administration at the University of New South Wales from 1974 to 1983. He was an active public commentator supporting Australia's Medicare scheme, and worked with a number of non-government organizations such as the Australian Council of Social Service and the New South Wales Council on the Ageing. His research also examined aspects of hospital administration[1]
He worked in the Victorian health system for a number of years from 1983 including as Regional Director and subsequently Director of Acute Health for the Victorian Department of Health and Community Services, in the latter role he was responsible for introducing case mix funding to Australia. This was the first major application of this approach to hospital funding in a publicly funded health system[2]
He was appointed Departmental Secretary to the Commonwealth Department of Human Services and Health (now the Department of Health and Ageing) in 1994 and served in that role until the election of the (conservative) Howard Government in 1996.
From 1996 to 2005 he worked at La Trobe University in Melbourne, Australia as Professor of Health Policy, Dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences and, for part of that period, Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Learning and Teaching. During this period he continued research on aspects of hospital economics and published a book on the Australian health care system.
Dr Duckett served as chair of the Board of Directors of the Brotherhood of St Laurence (2000–2005) and of Bayside Health (2000–2006).
He was recruited to Queensland Health in 2006 in the wake of the Dr Death scandal to lead improvements in quality and safety as Chief Executive Officer of the Centre for Healthcare Improvement.
Dr Duckett was hired by the provincial government of Alberta in the spring of 2009 as President and Chief Executive Officer of its newly created health "superboard," Alberta Health Services with a significant reform agenda. (Alberta Health Services is a quasi-independent agency of the Alberta government created in May 2008 to operate hospitals and other public health services throughout the province of Alberta). Dr Duckett moved to Edmonton Alberta and took up his duties on 23 March of that year.
Shortly after his appointment, the provincial government imposed a significant ($1billion) budget cut on Alberta Health Services. Implementation of these cuts by Alberta Health Services was unpopular and controversial.
On 20 November 2010, Stephen Duckett came under scrutiny for televised remarks to the media following a high-level meeting about the situation in the province’s emergency rooms. During the aired segment, Duckett refused to answer questions by reporters waiting outside the meeting room, using the excuse he was eating his cookie.[3] and that another person had been designated to make comments. He later issued an apology noting that he had not felt comfortable as a non-elected official being asked to respond to the comments of other, elected, officials.[4] He has subsequently stated that he had been instructed by the office of Alberta Premier Stelmach not to make any comments.[5] On 24 November 2010, the chairman of the Alberta Health Services Board announced that Duckett's contract was terminated and that after mutual consultation, he had been released from his contractual obligations. Both parties felt that his ability to continue in his duties had been "compromised."[6] On July 29, 2011, based on the terms of his contract, Duckett was paid $661,250 in severance pay, $54,380 in variable pay and $20,000 for all other liabilties.[7]