The
presence of for-profit hospitals is commonplace around the
world
TORONTO,
OTTAWA, WINDSOR, WINNIPEG, CALGARY, EDMONTON, VANCOUVER OUT
By Nadeem
Esmailand Bacchus Barua The Fraser Institute |
VANCOUVER,
B.C./ Troy
Media/ - Defenders of Canada's health system have long argued that there are
only two valid policy options: we can have a universal health-care system
dominated by government or a system where private, for-profit insurers and
hospitals are present but universality is unattainable.
The truth,
however, is that universal health care can successfully include for-profit
providers. A number of other countries offer clear examples.
The noble
goal of universal-access to health care is not unique to Canada. It's shared
with nearly every other developed country, all of which pursue it through a
combination of government, private non-profit and for-profit institutions.
Consider the examples
of Australia, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden and Switzerland, each of
which delivers higher quality universal health care for costs similar or lower
than Canada. Unlike Canada, these countries do not appear to be frozen by a fear
of profit-making - they seem to have embraced it as part of their
higher-performing approach to universality.
In all of
these countries, private for-profit insurers compete in the voluntary insurance
sector, variously offering services such as expanded choice of physicians and
hospitals, private rooms, coverage for vision and dental, and expedited access
for elective treatment and day surgeries.
For-profit
companies also compete to offer primary universal health-care insurance in the
Netherlands, and offer a substitute for public health insurance in Germany. In
these countries, doctors are able to practise in both the public and private
systems, and accept payments from either insurer.
The presence of
for-profit hospitals is even more commonplace. In 2012, some 42 per cent of
hospitals in Germany were for-profit institutions, as were more than half of
hospitals in Switzerland, and about 40 per cent of hospitals in France. Nearly
all of these for-profit hospitals provide care for the universal systems of each
country. In Australia, 35 per cent of hospitals are for-profit facilities with
some contracted to provide universally accessible care. Even in Sweden, three of
the country's 83 hospitals are for-profit, including a large acute-care facility
that delivers care to patients within the universal system.
This level
of co-operation between public funders and for-profit institutions is ostensibly
absent in Canada. Private for-profit parallel insurance is disallowed, dual
practice by physicians is prohibited in most provinces, and only a small number
of for-profit clinics and hospitals can be found. The climate simply does not
encourage their formation.
Some
pundits say such involvement by the private sector (for-profit institutions in
particular) is antithetical to the goal of universal-access health care. Others
in Canada argue more strongly that any involvement of the private sector,
especially the for-profits, will sacrifice the universal nature of our
health-care system. None apparently have bothered to look at what other
countries, particularly those with high-performing universal access health-care
systems, are doing.
While
Canada struggles with long
wait times, physician
and medical-technology shortages and health-care expenditures that are eating
away at provincial budgets, pundits and policy-makers are taking valuable
policy options off the table for philosophical reasons.
The
experience of other countries demonstrates how the private sector can play an
important role in delivering on the promise of universal-access health care. We
owe it to patients to consider all options that provide universal, high-quality
health care.
Nadeem
Esmail and Bacchus Barua are authors of the recent Fraser Institute study
For-Profit Hospitals and Insurers in Universal Health Care
Countries.
© 2015
Distributed by
Troy
Media
|
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