Montreal Gazette

A uniquely Canadian fear

OUR OPPOSITION TO PRIVATE HEALTH CARE IS INGRAINED, BUT NO OTHER UNIVERSAL SYSTEM BANS IT LIKE WE DO

- TRISTIN HOPPER

Whenever the prospect of private health care is mentioned in Canada, the usual political reaction is to warn of an imminent descent into the inequitabl­e hell of “U.s.style privatizat­ion.”

“Universal Public Healthcare is a core Canadian value. Us-style Privatizat­ion isn't,” reads a recent tweet by NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh, issued in response to mounting calls for private options to offset unpreceden­ted backlogs in the public system.

In the last federal election, Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland kicked off the campaign by attacking then-conservati­ve leader Erin O'toole for underminin­g “universal health care” because he had expressed support for the provision of private options “inside of universal coverage.”

An ingrained fear of privatizat­ion is even held by our high courts. Last month, the B.C. Court of Appeal upheld a Canadian ban on two-tier health care, even though the justices admitted the decision would impose “real hardship and suffering” on patients stuck in the government queue.

But it's a curiously Canadian conceit. In virtually every other developed nation that offers universal health care, private options are a common and uncontrove­rsial part of the heath mix. While Canada may see private health care as a harbinger of American inequity, the likes of Australia, Germany and Norway see it as no different than a private school, a paid security guard or a toll road.

A 2003 profile in the New England Journal of Medicine wrote that the Canadian system was “unique in the world” in that it banned coverage of core services by private insurance companies.

What this means is that if a service is offered under the Canada Health Act, it's illegal to get it covered by private insurance. As a result, while an estimated two-thirds of Canadians have private health insurance (usually through an employer or union), they can only use it to obtain services “excluded under universal health coverage,” such as dental care and prescripti­on drugs.

“This ban constrains the emergence of a parallel private medical or hospital sector,” wrote the journal.

None of the world's other socialized health systems are quite so repelled by the existence of a parallel system. As Canadian proponents of liberalize­d private health care will often note, even Communist China allows core services to be covered by for-profit private health insurance.

Australia follows a two-tier system: Aussies are universall­y covered by a government system that, like Canada, is mostly free of out-of-pocket costs. At the same time, nearly half of Australian­s take out health insurance that gives them access to a parallel system of private hospitals and clinics.

In 2020, Vox covered the experience of two Australian sisters who gave birth; one in the government system, one in the private system. The government birth was free but “not glamorous.” The private birth cost AUS$5,000, but featured better food, a private room and the option for on-thespot appointmen­ts with an obstetrici­an.

Germany allows citizens to opt out of the public system and pay for “substituti­ve coverage.” There are tight government controls on who's eligible for substituti­ve coverage, but as of 2017, roughly 10 per cent of Germans had gone that route.

Private health care is even an institutio­n in the United Kingdom, whose National Health Service is often held up as the poster child of universal care. Just like Canada, the U.K. health system has been hit by a severe backlog as it recovers from the COVID-19 pandemic. Unlike Canada, British citizens have the option of opting out of the government queue.

The Canadian system does allow the existence of private clinics. But the private system is intentiona­lly constraine­d through tight controls. Any physician billing the private system is prohibited from working in any hospital or clinic that receives public money. And as noted above, government controls on private health insurance mean that most private surgeries or consultati­ons must be paid in cash.

While a clear majority of Canadians support the existence of universal health coverage, polls show that the country may be warming to the existence of a German or British-style two-tier system.

The right-leaning think tank Second Street, commission­ed a Leger poll last year finding that 62 per cent of respondent­s believed that “Canadians should be allowed to spend their own money for the health care they want.” Another 67 per cent favoured “government­s using private and non-profit health clinics to reduce surgical backlogs as a result of the pandemic.”

This is all occurring amid an unpreceden­ted shortage of care within the Canadian health care system. Just last month — amid mounting wait times and surgical backlogs — Canada's 13 premiers unanimousl­y declared the country's health system was “crumbling.”

Meanwhile, an ever-shrinking pool of family doctors has left more than five million Canadians without access to primary care. In Nova Scotia alone, more than 100,000 of the province's one million people are on a waiting list for a family doctor — a 45 per cent increase from just 12 months ago.

 ?? ARTUR WIDAK/NURPHOTO ?? Protesters march in Edmonton in the spring in response to the Alberta government's steps toward private health care. Despite Canada's scorn of privatizat­ion, in almost all developed nations that offer universal health care, private options are an uncontrove­rsial part of the health mix.
ARTUR WIDAK/NURPHOTO Protesters march in Edmonton in the spring in response to the Alberta government's steps toward private health care. Despite Canada's scorn of privatizat­ion, in almost all developed nations that offer universal health care, private options are an uncontrove­rsial part of the health mix.

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