Thursday, June 09, 2005

Canadian Ban on Private Health Insurance Struck Down

The Globe and Mail reported that the Canadian Supreme Court has just struck down as unconstitutional a law in Quebec that makes private health care insurance illegal. Dr. Albert Schumacher, the President of the Canadian Medical Association, said, "this is indeed a historic ruling that could substantially change the very foundation of medicare as we know it."
The court found "in sum, the prohibition on obtaining private health insurance is not constitutional where the public system fails to deliver reasonable services."
Health Care Renewal has frequently discussed the excesses of the for-profit and private not-for-profit organizations that comprise a major chunk of the US health care system, so Canada's impending leap into a multi-centric health care system may not be an unalloyed success. However, throwing caution about commenting about another nation's politics aside, I can't help but think that putting a little more control of health care into the hands of individual Canadians may not be entirely a bad thing. Maybe some of our friends north of here will comment more knowledgeably.

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