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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Canada
Canada: Mass protests against Alberta health care privatization
plan
By Keith Jones
27 April 2000
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this version to print
An Alberta Tory government plan to permit the establishment
of private hospitals is encountering fierce popular opposition.
Last week thousands of Albertans joined rallies and demonstrations
in Edmonton and Calgary to demand the government scrap Bill 11,
legislation that in the name of defending MedicareCanada's
universal, free public health care systempromotes for-profit
health care. More protests are planned for next week when the
Alberta Legislature ends its Easter break.
Alberta Premier Ralph Klein and his Tory government have clearly
been taken aback by the depth of popular opposition. On April
18, Klein lashed out at the media, saying it is spreading malicious
information about the bill. The next day he accused his
Liberal and New Democratic opponents of inciting riots,
after a window was broken and a brief scuffle broke out between
a security guard and some demonstrators during an anti-Bill 11
rally.
The right-wing Canadian Alliance, the Official Opposition in
Canada's Parliament, has long been a staunch ally of the Klein
Tories. But as the protests swelled last week, Deborah Gray, the
Alliance's acting leader who is herself an Alberta MP, urged Klein
to consider dropping Bill 11 or allowing a free vote
on it.
According to an opinion poll conducted well before last week's
protests, 59 percent of Albertans oppose Bill 11, while just 39
percent support it. To the government's chagrin, the legislation
has been condemned by much of Alberta's medical professional establishment,
including the Alberta Medical Association, which represents the
province's doctors.
The majority of Albertans rightly perceive Bill 11 as a major
step toward a two-tier health care system in which the well-to-do
have access to the best care money can buy, while the majority
are forced to rely on a chronically underfunded and understaffed
public system.
In Alberta, as elsewhere in Canada, private clinics already
function in association with the Medicare system, providing many
out-patient medical services and receiving payment from the government
for those services covered under the public health insurance scheme.
Bill 11, however, will greatly expand the range of operations,
treatments and procedures that can be legally provided outside
a public hospital. Private medical centersthe government
refuses to call them hospitals in an attempt to cover up the extent
to which health care is being privatizedwill now be permitted
to perform complex surgeries that involve lengthy hospital stays.
For performing medically necessary services, the
private hospitals will be paid by the government according to
its fee schedule just as are public hospitals today. But, and
this is the rub, they will have the right to charge extra for
providing enhanced services. Bill 11 is purposely
vague, but enhanced services mean better quality health
carea more comprehensive set of tests, a better quality
hip replacement, a more thorough surgical intervention, etc.not
just nicer rooms and better meals.
Klein has made much of the fact that Bill 11 contains a clause
outlawing queue jumpingthat is, people paying
to be bumped to the top of a waiting list for an operation or
other medical services paid for by the government. But a legal
analysis of the legislation commissioned by the Canadian Union
of Public Employees (CUPE) shows that under the guise of providing
enhanced services private hospitals will indeed be
able to provide preferential service to those with the means to
pay. This is because queue jumping is outlawed only for those
receiving exactly the same treatment, not those suffering the
same condition. Nothing bars private hospitals providing speedier
care to those who opt to receive enhanced service,
i.e., treatment more than that deemed by the government to be
medically necessary.
A non-surgical illustration of the general concern,
explains the CUPE-commissioned study, is the situation that
exists in relation to MRIs. The public system wait list, though
long, remains within a period consistent with a clinically
determined acceptable time frame.' Consequently, Alberta government
policy has not prevented private MRI clinics from providing MRIs
on a fee-for-service basis to those patients who are willing to
pay for faster service, on the basis that a more immediate return
of MRI results is not medically necessary'.
Studies of Alberta's existing system of private clinics show
that those receiving only medically necessaryi.e.,
government insuredtreatment wait longer for service than
do patients at public facilities. The reason for this is simple.
It is the same principle that causes airlines to devote much more
resources to serving first class passengers than those in economy
class. The rate of return or profitability of enhanced services
is far greater.
Adding to the public concern over Bill 11 is the fact that
Alberta Health Minister Halvar Jonson has joined many of his provincial
counterparts in calling for a national forum to determine what
health services and procedures should be considered medically
necessary. By delisting non-essential treatments
and procedures, the government will leave people with no recourse
but to go to private health providers and pay for them.
Privatiation and the dismantling of Medicare
In bringing forward Bill 11, Klein calculated that he could
exploit Canadians' increasing anxiety over the rapid deterioration
of public health care to promote privatization. That hundreds
of thousands of people are currently waiting to receive vital
medical tests and operations underscores that successive rounds
of budget cuts by the federal and provincial governments have
brought the public health system to the point of collapse.
Earlier this month, the Quebec government admitted that in
December 1999 110,000 people in the province of 7.5 million were
waiting for surgery. But when the chief surgeon at Montreal's
Jewish General Hospital said that up to six Quebecers are dying
each month while waiting for heart operations, he was denounced
by a livid Quebec Premier. According to Lucien Bouchard, Quebec's
health system is one of the best in the world.
Polls have shown that a large majority of Canadians disagree.
The public perception is that Medicare is in deep crisis. But
to the consternation of big business and the political right,
the public have thus far remained skeptical of their claims that
the solution to the health care crisis is privatization. Canadians
have only to look at the situation in the US where more than 40
million working people and poor have no medical coverage and tens
of millions of others live in fear that the loss of a job or a
catastrophic illness or accident will leave them unable to pay
for the care they need.
Recognizing that support for a universal public health care
system remains strong, the Klein Tories have tried to mask their
true intentions. Bill 11 is a classic example of doublespeak.
Named the Health Care Protection Act, the law purports to uphold
the principles of a universal public health system, while in fact
promoting privatization. By contriving an absurdly narrow definition
of hospital, the Tories have even been able to include
a clause banning private hospitals from Alberta in
a bill whose purpose is to authorize them.
This attempt to foist privatization on an unsuspecting public
has largely backfired. In fact, the government's duplicity has
only reinforced the public perception that Bill 11 is a fundamental
attack on public health care that has been drafted not to meet
the crisis in patient care but rather the demands of big business.
After all, the same Tory government that now argues the expansion
of private health care is the only way to deal with bed and other
shortages in the public system spent much of the 1990s closing
down public hospitals, on the grounds that there was an over-capacity
of health facilities.
Public health care and its defenders
Politically, the opposition to Alberta's Bill 11 has been dominated
by the Tories' big business political rivals, the Liberals and
the NDP. If working people continue to leave the struggle to uphold
the right to free access to quality health care in these hands
it will surely be lost.
While the Liberals and NDP pose as the defenders of Medicare,
they have played a crucial role in the assault on health care
and other social and public services. Over the past five years,
the federal Liberal government has reduced the transfers to the
provinces that help fund health care, post-secondary education
and welfare by tens of billions of dollars.
Klein's Liberal and NDP opponents are using Bill 11 as a foil
to push through changes to Medicare aimed at reducing services
and shifting more of the burden for care onto individuals and
their families. Federal Heath Minister Allan Rock has said Ottawa
is ready to give the provinces, which under Canada's constitution
are responsible for managing health care, additional funding,
but only if they agree to his as of yet unrevealed plans to achieve
greater cost efficiencies. Saskatchewan's NDP Premier Roy Romanow
is calling for a national dialogue on what medically
necessary services should continue to be insured and to
what extent individuals can contribute to the costs
of their health care without limiting access. The NDP premier
has repeatedly made clear he believes fundamental Medicare reform
is necessary. All provinces, he said earlier this month, are beginning
to hit the wall in terms of financial sustainability.
The opposition to Bill 11 and market-driven solutions
to the health care crisis reflect the progressive instincts of
the majority of working people. Quality health care is a basic
human right that should not be subordinated to the profit needs
of investors. But the opposition to privatization must be politically
fortified by a critique of the capitalist system as a whole.
The logic of capitalist economicsto say nothing of the
proof provided by two decades of failed popular protestexclude
the possibility of successfully pressuring big business governments
to revive the welfare state programs enacted in the context of
the postwar capitalist boom and a system of national economic
regulation. Rather the collapse of Medicare underscores the urgency
of working people articulating their own program to reorganize
economic life so the resources of the world economy can be used
to meet social needs, not enrich the few.
See Also:
Big business blasts Canada's Liberal
government:
Demands "radical" shift to right
[11 April 2000]
Canada's Liberal government
embraces the tax-cutting agenda of big business
[4 March 2000]
Unions strangle Quebec
nurses' strike
[27 July 1999]
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