Canadians
are undergoing a public debate over the future of the countrys
universal health care system. At stake is nothing less than
a matter of national self-identitywhether to retain free
health care for everyone or move to a greater reliance on
privatization.
Canada has offered its citizens
free universal health care since 1957. The Canada Health Act
of 1986 governs the delivery of health care in Canada today
under Medicare, a system funded by the federal government
and administered by the provinces. All medically necessary
services are covered by provincial health plans, so despite
lines at clinics and hospitals, eventually everyone receives
needed care without paying out-of-pocket. Many Canadians consider
free health care a birthright and they are proud of having
a system that provides for everyone, considering it a foundation
of Canadas egalitarian society.
"Having a universal health
care plan that provides fair and equitable health care to
everyone is vital to Canada," said First District International
Vice President Don Lounds. The IBEW has joined labor groups
throughout Canada in a campaign to save Medicare.
The system could be jeopardized
if the high-level commission slated to release its long-awaited
recommendations in November is swayed by forces campaigning
for increased privatization. The Romanow Commission on the
Future of Health Care in Canada has been traveling the country
and researching the Medicare delivery system for several months.
Headed by former Saskatchewan Premiere Roy Romanow, the commissions
federal mandate is to address the long-term sustainability
of Canadas publicly administered health system.
Many of the problems plaguing
the Canadian health care system mirror those in the United
States: high doctor workloads, growing demands but less money
for hospitals and community health centers, long waiting lists
for diagnostic or treatment services, shortages of medical
specialists and reports of growing acuity among patients,
a likely result of health care system limitations. The systems
in the U.S. and Canada are administered quite differently,
however, with private health maintenance organizations responsible
for administering health care in the United States and the
provincial governments responsible for the system in Canada.
But while the United States occasionally considers adopting
a public health system similar to that in Canada, Canada is
contemplating assimilating elements of private health care
into its public system.
Possible recommendations include
privatizing certain health services, forcing patients to pay
by imposing user fees on doctor and hospital visits and allowing
for-profit companies to operate hospitals and other health
services. In the language of the debate, these possibilities
would introduce a "two-tier" system, a for-profit
health system alongside the current non-profit one. Critics
warn that access to health care would be based on ability
to pay rather than according to need.
Arguing such a move would benefit
the well-to-do at the expense of poor and moderate-income
residents, many in the labor movement are actively lobbying
its members, the public and the Romanow Commission against
privatization.
"We know there must be compromises.
We know we must be realistic," said James Clancy, president
of the National Union of Public and General Employees, in
the Toronto Star. "But we also know we are the ones who,
in the end, pay the freight for everything. Given all that,
our first choice still is to reclaim and expand Medicare."
Medicare supporters have accused
politicians and insurance companies of conspiring to withhold
vital funding to encourage the appearance that Medicare is
beyond repair. As a percentage of gross domestic product,
Canada spends less on health care today than it did 10 years
ago. But recent tax cuts precipitated a revenue decline, making
provincial spending on health care a higher share of the budget.
The advocates for repairing the
existing system argue that Medicare is sustainable with the
necessary resources from the federal government. Some Canadians
are even willing to support a tax increase to ensure a universal
health care system is maintained and reorganized to be more
efficient. They advocate adding prescription drug and home
health care benefits for seniors. But consumer and labor groups,
including the Canadian Labour Congress, have come out against
user fees for physician and hospital visits.
Other supporters call the sweeping
public debate a response to a well-orchestrated war on Canadas
public health system that includes many provincial governments,
representatives of physician organizations, insurance companies
and right-wing research institutes.
Calling the United States medical
system the most expensive and most commercial in the world,
Medicare supporters point south to the pitfalls of a private
health care system. Americans spend 14 percent of their gross
domestic product on health care. According to the National
Union of Public and General Employees, Canadas system is
fairer, more cost-efficient and more effective than any private
health care system.
By contrast, 40 million Americans,
approximately 15 percent of the population, have no health
insurance. Another 40 million Americans are "underinsured,"
only able to afford limited coverage. And the rest who count
themselves lucky to have health insurance, may only visit
certain doctors and hospitals. Some insurance companies provide
no coverage at all for "pre-existing" conditions
and health insurance company auditorsnot doctorsdetermine
the level of patient care. Many Americans would embrace Canadas
universal health care system.
The Canadian Heath Coalition,
which includes organizations representing unions, seniors,
women, students, consumers and health care professionals from
across Canada, says advocates of privatization have shown
no evidence that it lowers costs or provides higher quality
care.
The Romanow Commission is expected
to release its recommendations in November. The liberal federal
government will consider those findings before deciding what
action to take. For more information on the commissions work,
see www.healthcarecommission.ca.
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