Toronto Star

Prisoners denied liberty, not right to health care

- LEANDRA KEREN CONTRIBUTO­R LEANDRA KEREN IS THE ARTICLING FELLOW FOR THE JOHN HOWARD SOCIETY OF CANADA.

When an individual serves a federal prison sentence in Canada, they leave their health card, and all the rights that card affords them, at the prison gates. It is hard to keep track of an offender’s health-care records from there. This is bad policy that fails the medically vulnerable while violating the law and costing taxpayers millions.

The Canada Health Act explicitly excludes federal prisoners from its definition of “insured person.” This, combined with the provisions of the Correction­s and Conditiona­l Release Act (CCRA), which assign responsibi­lity for providing prisoner health care to the Correction­al Services of Canada (CSC), result in a health-care standard that is woefully inadequate inside our prisons. Yet this population has health-care needs far more severe than most — high rates of addiction and other mental illnesses, skyhigh HPV rates, various chronic diseases, and the many issues associated with aging.

While those of us who have access to our provincial health care systems can walk into our local health clinic, federal prisoners wait months to see a physician who may not believe in employing a harm reduction approach to treating addictions, or who denies you a prescripti­on that you’ve been taking for decades before arriving at prison due to pressures from CSC surroundin­g cost and security.

This system undermines a health-care hallmark — independen­ce for medical practition­ers. Independen­ce for doctors is required, yet out of reach inside our prisons. In the eyes of CSC, medical staff, prescripti­on drugs, and specialist consultati­ons, all constitute major costs, which detract from CSC’s budget. The fox is providing the hens with health-care. This, along with the punitive culture of prisons, results in the mistreatme­nt of prisoners through the denial of their health-care.

The lack of accountabi­lity CSC provides its physicians also allows for the negative stigma associated with criminal behaviour to infect those treating prisoners. Worse, provincial oversight bodies struggle to regulate physicians who are operating in a federal context. Often pain goes untreated, which sometimes results in cancers reaching lethal stages before being detected. All of this, along with the cumbersome process required to gain access to one’s own health records, denies individual­s their human rights.

With previous efforts to engage the government proving unsuccessf­ul, the John Howard Society of Canada has filed a claim in the Nova Scotia Superior Court, along with Mr. Michael Devlin, a federal prisoner suffering from deteriorat­ing health and severe pain because of CSC's substandar­d care. He is one of countless nation-wide who continue to suffer.

John Howard’s claim alleges the federal health care system is outside of CSC’s jurisdicti­on (ultra vires), and that it violates prisoner’s human rights as guaranteed by sections 7, 12 and 15 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Prisoners are denied their liberty, not their right to healthcare. The inhumanity and injustice of excluding them from our universal health care protection­s and allowing them to suffer needlessly with inadequate medical services must end.

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