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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Canada
Canadas Supreme Court hears case aimed at overturning
public health care system
By François Legros
16 September 2004
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author
Canadas Supreme Court will soon render judgment on a
case that targets the countrys public health insurance system,
Medicare. Last June 8, a Quebec-based physician, Dr. Jacques Chaoulli,
and his patient, Georges Zeliotis, went before the court to demand
that it strike down two provincial laws that bar Quebecers from
purchasing private health insurance to cover the cost of medically
necessary treatments that are available through the public system
and from paying for medical services at a public hospital. Should
the court rule in favor of the plaintiffs and find the laws unconstitutional,
the door will be open in Quebec, and by legal extrapolation across
Canada, for the development of a multi-tier health care system
in which the well-to-do have access to the best health care that
money can buy, while the majority of the population are forced
to rely on a shrunken, cash-starved public system.
Previously, the court had refused to hear like cases, accepting
without comment lower-court rulings upholding the constitutionality
of Medicare. That Canadas highest court has seen fit to
hear the Chaoulli case is bound up with the intense ruling class
debate over the future of Medicare, a national public health insurance
system, which is funded by both the federal and provincial governments
but administered by the provinces.
Since the beginning of the decade, Canadas corporate
and political elite have touted heath care reform
as the number-one social policy issue facing the country. Corporate
think tanks, newspaper editorialists andincreasinglypoliticians
have proclaimed the current Medicare system unsustainable.
Amongst the elite, a consensus has emerged that the current
public health system must be fundamentally transformed by transferring
a major and increasing share of health care costs from government
budgets to individuals and their families. There are important
differences, however, over what mechanisms or combination of mechanisms
to employuser fees, insurance premiums, government-sponsored
individual health care accounts, the de-listing of services, or
encouragement of the parallel private provision of some services
and treatmentsand just how far to go in the direction of
a US-style free market in health care.
Private health care and insurance companies are eager to profit
from the dismantling of the public health care system. The Canadian
Manufacturers Association, meanwhile, favors a cost-efficient
public insurance system, since the current state-funded plan gives
Canadian-based manufactures a significant competitive cost advantage
over their US rivals.
By far the biggest obstacle to big businesses assault
on Medicare is popular support for a state-funded, universal public
health scheme and hostility to a US-style system. The US system
has left more than 40 million people without access to proper
health care because they have no insurance, and many tens of millions
more are just a pink slip away from being in the same position.
Massive social spending cuts by both Ottawa and the provinces
during the 1990s have caused a serious deterioration in the quality,
especially the timeliness, of health care in Canada. Yet, hospital
emergency-room overcrowding, long waiting lists for necessary
and even life-saving medical treatments, and the frequent lack
of advanced equipment have, at least until recently, not shaken
public support for Medicare, as measured by the opinion polls.
Important sections of Canadas political and economic
establishment are hoping that the Supreme Court with its decision
on the Chaoulli case will provide a legal mechanism through which
to trump the popular opposition to the dismantling of Medicare.
Typical was a July 18 editorial written by André Pratte,
the principal editorial writer for Montreals La Presse.
Titled Shock Therapy, the editorial declared, In
an ideal world, the [federal and provincial] governments would
have admitted the hypocrisy of their position and opened the door,
where it would be useful, to private health care. Sadlywe
saw during the recent federal election campaignthe politicians
continue to support the myth of an efficient public health care
monopoly. From all the evidence, an electric shock will be needed
to force the politicians to face the reality of the situation.
It is far better that this shock be administered by the Supreme
Court, in a coherent and prudent fashion, than by the financial
crisis that will inevitably arrive sooner or later.
The Chaoulli-Zeliotis case
Chaoulli and Zeliotis are seeking to have the court overturn
two statutes whose effect is to limit the development of private,
for-profit health care. Central to their legal argument is the
lamentable state of public heath care in contemporary Canada.
They point to the fact that many patients cannot obtain treatment
within a medically safe time period because of lengthy waiting
lists, and that others must suffer great pain or loss of mobility
while awaiting their operation. They then argue that Quebecs
restrictions on obtaining private health insurance and paying
for treatments at public hospitals are a violation of Article
7 of Canadas Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which guarantees
the right to life, liberty and security of person.
Chaoulli has thrice before brought court cases aimed at promoting
private health care. In the current case, which arises out of
delays in providing Zeliotis with a hip replacement, the lower
courts have found that, given the lengthy waiting lists, the prohibitions
on having a private medical insurance plan or personally paying
for a medically necessary treatment at a public hospital do constitute
a violation of Article 7. But the courts refused to declare the
prohibitions unconstitutional, for it found their infringement
on individual rights reasonable given that they help
sustain a universal public health insurance system.
The 150-page judgment the Quebec Superior Court issued in rejecting
the case brought by Chaoulli and Zeliotis reveals that the judiciary
is acutely conscious that a decision in favor of the plaintiffs
would have a profound impact on class relations and spark political
conflict. The present debate over health care and its current
problems of accessibility, begins the judgment, sometimes
causes us to forget the not so distant past when sick people didnt
get cared for simply because they didnt have the means.
The judgment then considers the historical origins of the public
health system and the experience of privatization in other countries,
notably Australia. It concludes that privatization through the
promotion of private health insurance outrageously
benefits the rich. Experience, the judgment adds, shows that,
contrary to what the proponents of privatization claim, this purported
solution further enfeebles the public health care system by draining
resources and personnel to the private sector while leaving it
to care for the persons who are the sickest and pooresti.e.,
those unable to obtain private insurance.
Experience has demonstrated that the right to have access
to a parallel system of private health care would have repercussions
on the rights of the entire population, threatening the integrity,
the proper functioning, and the viability of the public system....
It isnt up to the courts to find solutions to the problems
of the health system. As to whether there needs to be a revision
of the model on which the current system is based is a political
question the court cannot answer.
A further extract of the Superior Courts ruling gives
an idea of the social elements for whom Chaoulli and Zeliotis
are speaking and their reactionary politics. The ruling summarizes
Chaoullis argument as follows: It is in reality for
reasons of a moral character, the contention that the search for
profit leads to abuse, that private hospitals are repressed. Dr.
Chaoulli asserts that other than the Créditistes [supporters
of the right-wing, populist Social Credit party], at the time
[Medicare was established] all the parties and labor federations
vigorously asserted that it was unacceptable that patients, having
paid a non-participating [i.e., private] doctor, should have a
greater access to health services. Marxist-Leninist theses have,
according to him, led to the egalitarian ideology that we have
today and the Medical Insurance Law was adopted in this
context.... Said the legal counsel for his co-plaintiff George
Zeliotis, I plead for the right of richer people to have
access to parallel health services.
Not surprisingly, among the interveners in the case who are
supporting Chaoulli and Zeliotis are several private health companies,
such as Cambie Surgeries Corp., Speciality MRI Clinics and the
numbered company 411044 Canada Inc.
A group of 10 senators, led by Liberal Senator Michael Kirby,
have also been given legal standing to intervene in the case.
They do not go as far as Chaoulli and Zeliotis in advocating unrestricted
access to private health care. Rather, they have asked the courts
to allow people to use a parallel private system if the public
system fails to provide them timely access. There is no question
that important sections of business and the political establishment
would welcome a ruling along these lines, believing it would provide
an important lever to press over time for the dismantling of Medicareespecially
since these same sections are pressuring governments to curtail
public spending and lower taxes. Kirby is himself a director of
Markham, Ontario-based Extendicare, which owns a chain of for-profit
nursing homes.
Politically, it must be said, however, that the biggest support
for the cynical legal arguments of Chaoulli-Zeliotis and for the
big business campaign to undermine Medicare in general has come
from the federal and provincial governments, which, whatever the
stripe of the political party in power, have presided over the
budget cuts and chronic underfunding of the public health care
system that have caused growing numbers to be denied vitally needed
care in a timely fashion.
Canadas social-democratic party, the NDP, takes pride
in associating itself with the founding of Medicare. But where
it has formed provincial governments over the past decade, it
has slashed health care budgets. Subservient to big businesss
drive for profit and international competitiveness, the NDP counterposes
the defence of the queue (that is, health-care rationing) to the
rights reactionary campaign for individual wealth to be
the arbiter of who gets access to health care and how fast. Thus,
former Saskatchewan NDP Premier Roy Romanowin the major
report he prepared for the federal Liberal government on health
care in 2002 and in repeated public interventions sincehas
opposed calls for medical experts to determine what are safe and
reasonable waiting-times for the most important operations and
procedures and for the state to guarantee that sufficient resources
are provided to ensure those needing such care receive it within
the prescribed time limits.
See Also:
Canada: budget cuts have contributed
to spread of super-bug
[30 August 2004]
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