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Comment: Shopping for ‘European’ health care not the solution

There’s no question the Canadian health-care system needs improvement, but critics who suggest we look to Europe for solutions are looking in the wrong direction.

There’s no question the Canadian health-care system needs improvement, but critics who suggest we look to Europe for solutions are looking in the wrong direction.

The long-anticipated legal challenge to the publicly funded Canadian health system is underway in B.C. Supreme Court. The plaintiffs — led by Dr. Brian Day of Cambie Surgery Centre — allege that medicare violates the Charter of Rights and Freedoms by forcing patients onto long wait lists for care.

By way of remedy, Day and his colleagues are not asking the government to reduce wait times for all patients. Too bad.

Instead, they are asking the court to overturn the law that stops the sale of private insurance covering medically necessary care. They are also asking the court to overturn the law against dual practice that requires doctors to choose whether to work for the public system or unenrol from medicare and work for the private sector. They also want to overturn prohibitions on extra-billing so that physicians can charge whatever they wish for the care they provide, whether in public hospitals or in private clinics.

In thinking through what this legal challenge could mean for ordinary Canadians, the standard investigative question, “Who benefits?” is a good place to start.

The physicians spearheading these challenges certainly stand to benefit handsomely.

Under the status quo, most physicians are locked into fee-for-service rates negotiated with the provinces. If the Cambie case succeeds, scores of private buyers will join the bargaining table, driving up prices for physician services and diverting resources to the highest bidder irrespective of medical need.

The physicians involved in the Cambie trial protest that they have only medicare’s best interests at heart. They point to the many western European nations that have “two-tier” health systems that are purportedly the envy of the world. If only Canada would allow greater private payment, we are told, the invisible hand of the market would lead us to join their ranks.

Unfortunately, it’s not that simple.

Proponents of the “European” model of health care never tell us if it’s the French, Irish, British, Dutch, German or Italian model we are meant to be following — they are all distinct.

In England, for example, specialists working in the public system are salaried and contractually bound to a full-time 40-hour work schedule, leaving them little time to moonlight in the private sector.

A contract binding specialists to 40 hours a week in the public system is a viable option in England, where physicians are salaried. It is not a viable option in Canada, where physicians have grown accustomed over a half-century to a much higher level of independence.

Indeed, any Canadian government that attempted to forcibly move large numbers of physicians from fee-for-service payment to salary would find itself in the middle of physician strikes and further constitutional challenges.

So, what about the Netherlands?

A superficial look suggests that private insurance now plays a large role there, and so it must be the kind of two-tier system we are looking for. In fact, there is no separate public system with a private tier: In the Netherlands, the private health-insurance system, heavily regulated, is the public system.

The law requires that all Dutch citizens over 18 buy private health insurance (and their employers contribute to the cost). The market is heavily regulated in an attempt to achieve access and equity goals. The rub is that private health insurers must offer coverage to everybody and cover almost everything. This means private insurers can’t cherry-pick the healthy and wealthy.

When the Cambie challengers and proponents of privatization speak of a two-tier health-care system, they insist there would be a free public health-care system left behind with just a small private tier on the top. That is clearly not the Dutch model.

In a complex system like health care, it is purposefully naïve to suppose that Canada can easily go shopping among the health-care models of western Europe. Selecting particular features from European health systems and pasting them into Canadian medicare will not magically give us a “European” model.

It is certainly true that Canadian medicare is in need of improvement. On that point all sides agree. And Canadians need to be assured that medicare can deliver timely care to them when they are in greatest need.

A patient ombudsman in each province — with real teeth — would be an important start to help patients who fall through the cracks get timely, quality care.

As Canadians, we pay a great deal of taxes toward our publicly funded health-care system. We deserve timely care and we shouldn’t have to throw ourselves at the mercy of the markets to get it.

Colleen M. Flood is a regular contributor to ImpactEthics.ca, a university research chair in health law and policy and inaugural director of the Centre for Health Law, Policy and Ethics at the University of Ottawa. Bryan Thomas is a research associate at the Centre for Health Law, Policy and Ethics.