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Alberta spearheads assault on public health care
By Lee Parsons
22 January 2002
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Alberta Premier Ralph Klein is to outline this week major changes
to the provinces public health insurance schemechanges
aimed at off-loading a greater portion of health-care costs onto
individuals, reducing demand for publicly-funded health care services,
and providing big business with increased opportunities to profit
from the provision of health care.
Kleins announcement will come in the form of his response
to a report tabled January 8 by the Alberta Premiers Advisory
Council on Health. This council was created by Klein last year
to lay the groundwork for a major assault on Medicare, Canadas
universal public health insurance system. The Council is headed
by Don Mazankowski, the Deputy Prime Minister in the federal Tory
government of Brian Mulroney, and has been stacked with longstanding
advocates of the marketization and privatization of
health care, such as Brian Lee Crowley, President of the Atlantic
Institute for Market Studies.
No sooner did the council issue an interim report last fall
that concluded the current public health system is unsustainable,
than the Alberta government began a $1 million advertising campaign
to promote the need for Medicare reform.
The councils second report, A Framework for Reform,
provides Klein with 44 policy recommendations, including introducing
user fees, de-listing some medical services and procedures (effectively
privatizing them), hiking health insurance premiums (Alberta is
one of two provinces where individuals and families pay such premiums)
and contracting out management of health-care facilities.
Many of the proposals lack specifics. The details of others,
like the proposal for government-funded personal health accounts,
are arcane. (The accounts would serve a double purposeto
provide a financial disincentive to people seeking medical attention
and to transfer some health-care costs from the state to individuals.)
However, the reports central thrust is patently clear:
the portion of health-care costs paid by the state must be radically
scaled back and the services and procedures covered by Medicare
systematically curtailed. Declares the report in its opening pages:
Medicare was never designed to cover the full range of health
services available today.
Much of the information and most of the ideas in the council
report have been recycled from earlier studies. Its tone and timing
are notable, however. The council points to the months-long waiting
lists for treatments for even life-threatening conditions, the
chronic staff shortages, and the overcrowding of emergency roomsthe
cross-Canada crisis in health care produced by more than a decade
of massive budget cuts by the federal and provincial governmentsto
decry state inefficiency. It then holds out the false promise
of empowering individuals by introducing more choice and personal
responsibility in health care.
Its time to open up the system, declares
the report. Take the shackles off, allow health authorities
to try new ideas, encourage competition and choice, and see what
works and what doesnt. In truth, individual empowerment
will mean that the well-to-do gain unfettered access to the best
health care in the world, provided by for-profit health providers.
Working people, on the other hand, will have to make do with an
impoverished and chronically understaffed public system.
Klein is hoping to seize the initiative in the national debate
over health care and in particular to pre-empt a report on the
future of Medicare that the former New Democratic Party (NDP)
premier of Saskatchewan, Roy Romanow, is preparing for the federal
government. Whilst Romanow has said major changes need to be made
to Medicare, including the de-listing of services, the right fears
that he will not go far enough, especially in privatizing services
and introducing financial disincentives to drawing on the resources
of the public system.
To no ones surprise, the Alberta report was quickly embraced
by Ontarios Tory government. In recent months, Ontario Premier
Mike Harris has repeatedly threatened to make radical changes
to health care, beginning with the scrapping of the provinces
homecare and drug plans, if Ottawa does not boost its transfers
to the province by $2 billion a year. Ernie Eaves, the frontrunner
in the race to replace Harris as premier and provincial Tory leader,
responded to the Alberta report by saying he too favours the imposition
of user fees.
In the past, the federal Liberals have posed as defenders of
Medicare against Klein and Harris, the better to conceal their
own role in drastically reducing federal health-care funding.
But Alan Rock, who until last weeks cabinet shuffle was
the federal health minister, declared his support for the spirit,
if not all the specific recommendations, of the Alberta report.
What we need, said Rock, is fresh thinking ...
the status quo is unacceptable.
The ruling class debate over heath care
Rocks successor, Anne McLellan, has gone considerably
further. She has praised Klein for his purported commitment to
the Canada Heath Act, the federal legislation that establishes
national minimum standards for Medicare, and declared her eagerness
to work with the provinces in redesigning public heath insurance:
I dont think the Canada Heath Act should be etched
in stone ... lets look at the act, lets look at modernizing
it.
The National Post and other right-wing standard-bearers
have hailed the appointment of McLellan, who in her previous post
as justice minister played a pivotal role in authoring legislation
that in the name of fighting terrorism runs roughshod over civil
liberties. Alberta Health and Wellness Minister Gary Mar said
naming the fellow Albertan McLellan Health Minister is a
strong signal from the federal government that were going
to enter into a phase of constructive discussion and dialogue
on health care.
All this does not preclude a future wrangle between Ottawa
and Alberta or other provincial governments. The reorganization
of health care raises major issues for the ruling class. Big business,
especially its political representatives, are acutely aware, the
crisis in the current Medicare system notwithstanding, there is
widespread popular support for a universal public heath-care scheme.
Canadians only have to look across the border to the United States
where more than 40 million people are without any health insurance
and catastrophic health-care costs are the leading cause of personal
bankruptcies.
Although the most important concern for the ruling class is
how best to impose Medicare reform on a sceptical
public, there are also serious differences over how far to go
in reducing the states role in the provision of heath care.
Different sections of the ruling class stand to gain or lose depending
on how heath-care costs are shifted from the state to individuals
and to what extent management functions and health-care services
are privatized. The Big Three automakers, for example, have long
cited Canadas state-financed health insurance plan as giving
their Canadian operations a major competitive advantage
over their US plants. Big business proponents of the state continuing
to play a major role in the provision of health care point out
that the US spends large sums on determining and collecting health-care
costs and devotes a larger share of its GNP to health services
than Canada.
Working class opposition to the dismantling of Medicare must
begin with the recognition that all factions in the ruling class
debate over heath care are agreed that the heath-care system must
be reorganized at the expense of working people and that all sections
of the political establishmentfrom the New Democrats and
Parti Québécois to the Canadian Alliancewere
complicit in the repeated rounds of the budget cuts that have
brought Medicare to the brink of collapse.
The federal Liberal governments choice of Roy Romanow
to head its Commission on the Future of Health Care in Canada
is neither accidental nor incidental. The Liberals are calculating
that because of the NDPs historical association with the
introduction of Medicare, Romanow will be better able to sell
the public on the shrinking of Medicare in accordance with corporate
Canadas struggle for markets and profits. As premier of
Saskatchewan, the social-democrat Romanow slashed health-care
spending, closed dozens of rural hospitals, broke strikes by nurses
and other health-care workers when they rebelled over staff shortages
and overwork, then appointed his own commission to rethink Medicare.
See Also:
Canada: Alberta Premier
berates homeless in visit to shelter
[22 December 2001]
Canadian elections:
the real issues in the health care debate
[21 November 2000]
Alberta health care
workers end illegal strike
Provincial Tory government to press ahead with dismantling
of Medicare
[27 May 2000]
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