By Amélie Quesnel-Vallée
and Rachel McKay EvidenceNetwork.ca
Ask
a random Canadian if our health system looks more like that of the
United States or the United Kingdom. Chances are, most will respond that
our system is nothing like the U.S. - which is largely paid for
privately - and every bit like the U.K., which has publicly-funded
health care.
The reality is more of a cold shower.
This
is 50 per cent more than the U.K., where private health spending is at
20 per cent, and three times as much as in France, where it's only 10
per cent.
Now, a court case that is ongoing in British Columbia, known widely as the Cambie case, has some worried that we might see an even greater development of the private pay health-care market across Canada.
But will we?
The
Quebec experience suggests that a lot hinges on how forcefully and
decisively the B.C. government responds to the court challenge. And, on
this count, B.C. has a head start where Quebec faltered. The court
decisions matter, of course but, at the end of the day, it will be
provincial governments' actions (or lack thereof) that open or shut the
door to a two-tier health system.
For
those with good memories, the Cambie case may be oddly reminiscent of
the Chaoulli case that unfolded more than 13 years ago in Quebec.
To
understand both, it's worthwhile to remind readers of the legal
provisions that constrain the private purchase of health care in
Canadian provinces. Basically, doctors in Canada are prohibited from
extra-billing or double dipping - charging patients for services already
covered under our publicly funded medicare.
Physicians must choose: either be all in the public system or all out.
The
Cambie court challenge seeks to break down the all-in or all-out
dilemma for physicians, striking at the heart of BC's Medicare
Protection Act by targeting all constraints on extra-billing and
opted-out practice, dual practice and private insurance that duplicates
B.C.'s public plan.
The
Chaoulli court challenge was far less ambitious, targeting only
Quebec's legal prohibition on the purchase of private insurance for
services delivered by opted out physicians. Yet, at the time, this was
still perceived as significant risk for the development of a two-tier
system.
Many
were concerned when Jacques Chaoulli won his challenge, and Quebec
responded with Bill 33, which opened the door to duplicative private
insurance for a select number of otherwise publicly-insured health
services.
While
Bill 33 turned out to be fairly innocuous (largely because private
insurers didn't deem this a profitable venture and that it only applied
to Quebec), it nevertheless responded to the spirit of the court
challenge, sending a powerful message that Quebec's elected officials
were at least, in principle, supportive of more private health provision
and insurance.
The
Chaoulli case should really be seen as a symptom rather than a cause of
the fact that Quebec is home to what is arguably one of the largest
private health markets in the country. In fact, the cause stems more
from neglect by legislators - whether benign or strategic, and for
decades preceding Chaoulli - allowing several hot spots of privatization
to flourish.
This
includes private diagnostic services, which are reimbursable by private
insurance in Quebec but not elsewhere in Canada; physicians opting out
of the public system in ever increasing numbers, year after year; and
extra-billing, which was only been officially banned by the province in
2017 (only after threats of claw backs of the federal health transfer).
While B.C. shares similar historical trends with Quebec, we see no such benign neglect by B.C. legislators.
Instead, the B.C. government appears to be fighting tooth and nail in the face of Cambie, pulling out all the stops to buttress the Medicare Protection Act. It even resurrected 14-year-old Bill 92, the Medicare Protection Amendment Act, in a deft counterpunch to give the province more powers to crack down on extra-billing.
With
both sides firmly entrenched in their positions, it's unlikely that we
will see a swift resolution to the Cambie conflict. Whichever side loses
the court case is likely to bring it to the B.C. Court of Appeal and,
from there, to the Supreme Court of Canada, as happened with Chaoulli.
In other words, there's still a long battle ahead.
Amélie
Quesnel-Vallée is the Canada Research Chair in Policies and Health
Inequalities and the director of the McGill Observatory on Health and
Social Services Reforms at McGill University. She's also a contributor
with EvidenceNetwork.ca,
which is based at the University of Winnipeg. Rachel McKay is a
post-doctoral fellow with the McGill Observatory on Health and Social
Services Reforms at McGill University. |
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Friday, January 4, 2019
Quebec's health-care privatization a lesson for the whole nation But much still hinges on the outcome of the ongoing court case in B.C.
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