Jagmeet Singh says the Canada Health Act could be used to challenge private health care. Could it? - Action News
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Jagmeet Singh says the Canada Health Act could be used to challenge private health care. Could it?

Federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says the federal government needs toutilizethe Canada Health Act, which he said has significant powers to challenge for-profit privatized care. But does it really?

CHA needs to be used more aggressively by the federal government, Singh says

Two nurses stand in a hospital hallway.
The Canada Health Act, enactedin 1984 after being passed unanimously in the House of Commons,laid out criteria to ensure 'reasonable access to health services without financial or other barriers.' That meant Canadians would have access to medically necessary services without being directly charged for those services (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Federal NDPLeader Jagmeet Singh has been sounding the alarmaboutprivatization creeping into the public health-care system.

Recently, Ontario Premier Doug Ford announced he wanted to give a greater roletoprivately run for-profit clinics. Thesefacilities are clinics operated by the private sector that receive public funding from the Ontario Health Insurance Plan (OHIP) to perform medically necessary procedures.

But Singh says he's worried that trend of using public money to fund procedures in private clinics willtake resources from the public system.

He said the federal government needs toutilizethe Canada Health Act (CHA), which he said has significant powers to challenge for-profit privatized care.

"And it should be used more regularly and more aggressively to protect public health care," Singh said Monday, speaking to reporters on Parliament Hill.

But what exactly does the CHA do, how is it used and is it a tool that those who oppose health-care privatization can rely on to stop that trend? CBC News explains:

What is the Canada Health Act?

The Canada Health Act, enactedin 1984 after being passed unanimously in the House of Commons,laid out criteria to ensure "reasonable access to health services without financial or other barriers."

That meant Canadians would have access to medically necessary services without being directly charged for those services. All such services would be covered through the province or territories' health-care insurance plan, according to the act.

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It also established a number of conditions related to health-care access that the provinces and territories had to fulfil in order to receive transfer payments from the federalgovernment, known as the Canada Health Transfer (CHT). One of those conditions stipulated that patients couldn't be charged an extra fee for medically necessary services, also known as "extra-billing."

What restrictions are there on private health care?

Singh said he wants the government to use the CHA to challengefor-profit care. But there are no restrictions on private delivery inside public health-care systems,said Colleen Flood, director of the Centre for Health Law, Policy and Ethics and University Research Chairat the University of Ottawa.

"So what Ford has proposed, with private for-profit clinics, is perfectly fine under the Canada Health Act," she said.

The CHA does notforbid the provision of health services by private companies, as long as residents are not charged for insured services, according to the federal government website.

"In fact, many aspects of health care in Canada are delivered privately. Family physicians mostly bill the provincial or territorial health-care plan as private contractors. Hospitals are often incorporated private foundations, and many aspects of hospital care (e.g., lab services, housekeeping, and linens) are carried out privately," the website states.

"Lastly, in many provinces and territories, private facilities are contracted to provide services under the public health-care insurance plan."

It's the finance side of the CHAwhere restrictions are imposed that disallow patients to be charged out of pocket for medically necessary hospital and physician services, Floodsaid.

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"What is medically necessary and how those rules are fixed are determined province by province."

No province or territory totally prevents a two-tiersystemthey just try to make it lessappetizingfor doctors, she said.

"Almost all provinces have this rule which says, 'look, if you want to bill thepublic system, then you have to only billthe public system.If you want to opt out, opt out.'"

Bacchus Barua,director of health policy studies at The Fraser Institute, said oneproblem with the CHA is that the conditions imposed are "remarkably vague," which create a risk-averse environment in terms of health-care policy.

"Because of that risk aversion, a lot of provinces actually go beyond what'sexplicitly required by the CHA so that they don't accidentally get hit by by the federal government's interpretation of it," he said.

"We don't see the sort of experimentation with policies that are proven elsewhere, to work in most other universal health-care systems."

What happens if a province or territory violatesthe Act?

As the CHA states,ifhospitals and doctors charge fees for medically necessary services,then the federal government is supposed to deduct $1 from the province or territories'annual grant or CHTfor every dollar assessed of the so-called extra billing.

Has the federal government gone after provinces forviolations?

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, responding to Singh's concerns about the enforcement of the CHA, said Monday that hisgovernment will continue to defend the Canada Health Act and can pull back money from provinces that violate it.

"In the past, this government has pulled back money from provinces that haven't respected it. We will continue to do that."

A man in a suit and a turban stands at a podium in front of a line of Canada flags
Federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says he's worried more provinces will start using public money to fund procedures in private clinics and take resources from the public system. He's urging the federal government to utilize the Canada Health Act to halt the trend. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

According to the 2020-2021 Canada Health Act Annual Report, for the most part, provincial and territorial health-care insurance plans metthe requirements of the Canada Health Act. But there were some instances when the federal government said it had to withhold funds.

A deduction of$4,521 was taken from the March 2021 CHT payments to Newfoundland and Labrador for charges at a private ophthalmological clinic. Both New Brunswick and Ontario were dinged around $65,000 and nearly $14,000 respectively for charges at private abortion clinics.

The biggest violator, according to the report, was British Columbia, which submitted a financial statement of extra billing and user charges for fiscal year 20182019, in the amount of nearly $14 million. A deduction in the same amount was taken from British Columbia's March 2021 CHT payments. (The federal government has reimbursed the province in recognition for its Reimbursement Action Plan).

The province has been the centre of a legal battle waged byprivate health-care advocate Dr. Brian Day, the owner of the Cambie Surgery Centre in Vancouver, who argues thatpatients should havea right to pay for services if wait times in the public system are too long.

But Dr. Michael Rachlis,a public health physician and an adjunct professor at the University of Toronto Dalla Lana School of Public Health, says that for the most part the federal government has not gone after provinces or territories for contravening the ban on extra billing for medically necessary services.

"The way the act is enforced it's not like there's federal inspectors," he said."The provinces are asked to investigate themselves. There is no real enforcement mechanism."

Rachlissays he also believes that there are lots of privateclinics across Canada charging for medicare-covered services or up-selling services, citing a Globe and Mail 2017 investigation and work done by the Ontario Health Coalition.

"And the feds aren't doing anything."

With files from The Canadian Press and Mike Crawley