Times Colonist

B.C. accused of using taxpayer money to outlast trial plaintiffs

Advocates of privatized medicine frustrated by case’s slow progress

- GEORDON OMAND

VANCOUVER — The B. C. government is being accused of using a vast supply of taxpayers’ dollars to win a legal war of attrition against advocates for two-tier health care by the man who has become the face of privatized medicine in Canada.

Dr. Brian Day, an orthopedic surgeon and owner of Cambie Surgery Centre in Vancouver, said he believes the government is trying to delay a B.C. Supreme Court trial to whittle down the resources of those in favour of private care, who launched the lawsuit.

But the federal government is blaming the delay on the plaintiffs, consisting of Day’s clinic and a group of patients, accusing them of submitting new documents at the last minute that have led to unanticipa­ted procedural problems.

Day said private health advocates are trying to raise more money to continue the fight, which is scheduled to resume in September after an adjournmen­t of almost five months. The trial began last September.

“We’re into it for eight months and we’re not even halfway through. More than half of the court time has been spent on legal manipulati­ons and legal arguments that are nothing to do with health care,” Day said.

“It is never a level playing field when you take on government because they have resources that outlast you.”

The case against the Medicare Protect Act is the latest in a nearly decadelong challenge of B.C.’s ban on the sale of private insurance for medically necessary services already covered in the public system.

Day argues that the prohibitio­n violates patients’ constituti­onal rights by forcing them to endure long wait times while their health deteriorat­es.

The B.C. Health Ministry is the defendant in the case and has said its priority is to uphold the act and the benefits it safeguards.

The federal government is an intervener in the case.

Sindy Souffront, a spokeswoma­n for Health Canada, wrote in an emailed statement that the plaintiffs submitted unexpected evidence and requested new documents from the provincial and federal attorneys general.

“The plaintiffs have chosen to introduce new evidence, including a number of new expert reports, in the middle of the trial and have added a significan­t number of witnesses to their case,” Souffront wrote.

She said the adjournmen­t will provide time to sort out any problems so the remaining evidence can be presented more efficientl­y.

The legal battle could spell the end for Canada’s universal health-care system, its supporters argue.

But proponents of private health say it could cut wait times and improve access to treatment.

Day accuses the province’s lawyers of using every opportunit­y to delay proceeding­s, objecting to everything from expert witnesses to how many coauthors from a single scientific paper are needed for their testimony to be valid in court.

“The point is, everything like this takes up to a day or more of court time and that just prolongs the case,” Day said.

“And, of course, the government has unlimited resources to keep the case going.”

Twenty-nine interim rulings have been made in the case, 24 of them after the trial had started.

In a decision dated April 7, Justice John Steeves says about half of the 70 hearing days to that point had been taken up primarily by disagreeme­nts over expert witnesses.

“The usual and most effective time to argue these disputes and receive decisions on them would have been prior to the commenceme­nt of this trial,” Steeves says. “That was not done.” He writes that the proceeding­s cannot continue in an efficient way until these disputes have been decided and that no further evidence will be admitted until then.

The trial adjourned on April 10 and is scheduled to resume on Sept. 5.

So far, the plaintiffs have paid about $2 million and Day anticipate­s spending another $4 million as the case likely winds its way up to the Supreme Court of Canada.

Cambie Surgery Centre has been operating since 1996.

It describes itself as the only free-standing private hospital of its kind in Canada and has provided surgical care to more than 55,000 patients.

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