The Hamilton Spectator

Health care in Canada is at a tipping point

- JAIME WATT JAIME WATT IS THE EXECUTIVE CHAIR OF NAVIGATOR LTD. AND A CONSERVATI­VE STRATEGIST.

A fearlessly pragmatic interventi­on or a desecratio­n of our national fabric and everything we hold dear?

A slippery slope certain to trigger a mass exodus of public health-care workers or an innovative plan to boost collaborat­ion and ease the burden across a strained-to-the-breaking point sector?

Or, finally, rerouting water away from the dam (to steal Premier Doug Ford’s metaphor), or a short-sighted stopgap that will only delay a greater flood?

The spin lines are drawn in predictabl­y binary and deeply unenlighte­ning ways.

The truth is that, however you slice it, last week’s announceme­nt by the Ford government of a multi-phased plan to fund for-profit clinics will fundamenta­lly reshape Ontario’s health-care landscape.

We are now firmly on the road toward significan­tly greater private participat­ion in our health care system. The questions are: will it work and will Ontarians and Canadians support it? The Ford government is banking that the answers will be yes and yes.

Ontario is not alone in taking this approach. Confrontin­g its own dire challenges, Quebec, too, has started to make this pivot. In September, the Coalition Avenir Quebec announced plans to open one-stop-shop medical facilities in Montreal and Quebec City, privately owned and built, but publicly funded. Meanwhile, British Columbia, Alberta and Saskatchew­an have made progress in reducing their surgical backlogs by implementi­ng communityb­ased models for procedures.

Some will say that this turn to privatizat­ion carries with it significan­t risk. These critics imagine the Ford government’s plan might lead to labour shortages in the public sector. Of course, introducin­g substantia­l change into a bureaucrat­ic system as dense and complex as health care will be no easy challenge. But the risk of being perceived to do nothing — that is, to accept the status quo — is much, much greater.

On this front, Navigator’s most recent research on the views Canadians hold about the health care landscape is extremely revealing. For decades, convention­al wisdom has held that changing the status quo in health care has been the third rail of Canadian politics. But our data indicates this is simply no longer true. Indeed, more than half of Canadians (58 per cent) believe that the sector’s backlog is so urgent that change is necessary, even if this means allowing the private sector to play a more significan­t role.

It speaks volumes that, to this day, many politician­s still run for their lives from this subject. Or worse, still think that airing blanket criticisms will fare better than proposing concrete solutions. But, as the events of recent months have shown, government­s are waking up to the crucial and increasing­ly unavoidabl­e point that many Canadians see privatizat­ion measures as realistic and even promising.

So here’s how I see it: Health care in Canada is at a tipping point and an expanded role for private health care providers, universall­y covered, has been the logical solution staring us in the face for the better part of a generation.

With more people suffering as a result of our overburden­ed system each passing day, with delays piled on delays as a result of COVID-19, government­s can no longer afford to simply avoid or ignore this solution.

The reverse of what was so long held as unthinkabl­e in Canadian political life is now true: embracing private health-care delivery, paid for by the public purse, is not only politicall­y necessary but has become politicall­y advantageo­us.

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