Tuesday, March 15, 2022

Doug Ford’s government is quietly privatizing health care

On the cusp of an election, Ford may play down plans for privatizing hospitals. But it is his record, not his words, that is important.

By Nancy Olivieri, Michael Hurley, Natalie Mehra
Contributors
Tue., March 15, 2022

Words matter.

Recently, Health Minister Christine Elliott announced the expansion of private hospitals in Ontario. Missed this? So did many of us, possibly because of the words she selected: “we can let independent health facilities operate private hospitals.”

That offhand reference to “independent health facilities” sounds a whole lot better than this:

“We will award public funds to private, for-profit hospitals and clinics, knowing that these private facilities are associated with worse care, higher costs and more deaths.”

But if she’d said that, Elliott might have been asked about the Private Hospitals Act, which banned new private hospitals in Ontario in 1973. Or about the Canada Health Act, which bans extra billing for necessary services which is, nonetheless, regularly violated in private clinics.

After the Ontario Health Coalition picked up this bombshell, Premier Doug Ford began to furiously back-pedal, claiming what had been recorded was not accurate. But this was not the first declaration of Ford’s intention to privatize public hospital services — his COVID response plan had also announced that “innovative channels,” including “alternate health facilities,” would deliver additional surgeries and diagnostic services.

Again, words matter. What the plan said: Innovative channels and alternative health facilities.

What it means: For-profit clinics and hospitals.


All these euphemisms suggest the premier is finding it difficult to claim the private sector does things better, possibly because it virtually never does. During COVID, many Ontarians watched in horror as deaths in for-profit long-term-care homes rose to five times those in publicly owned homes — while company CEOs and shareholders profited.

Ford is positioning himself as Ontario’s rescuer, claiming to expand private hospitals — whoops, alternate health facilities — to clear backlogs, employing the popular fiction that private health care reduces wait times. Let’s be clear: private health care does not reduce wait times. And the backlogs themselves arose from the relentless downsizing of public hospitals: closures of operating rooms and staff shortages, including Ford’s appalling treatment of nurses, leading to an exodus from the profession.

Ford’s privatization agenda follows the standard playbook: Defund. Disable. Destroy. Once resource-starved public services no longer work well, respond to public anger — then transfer ownership to private capital. Per capita, Ontario now has the lowest health care and hospital funding, and the fewest hospital beds and nurses, of any province. Yet provincial revenues are $19.5 billion higher than estimated a year ago, providing plenty to spend on public services, if the will were there.

Worse, private hospitals come with another price tag: poor care and higher rates of death. Unsurprisingly, Ford is reluctant openly to state: “In private hospitals, more of you will die.” But an analysis of over 26,000 hospitals and 38 million patients found that, compared to not-for-profit hospitals, care in private hospitals carries a significantly increased risk of death. This is also true for private for-profit hemodialysis clinics.

In both settings, profits trump standards of care. Private hospitals employ fewer skilled personnel, a practice strongly associated with hospital mortality. Private hemodialysis clinics hire technicians over nurses, use (and often reuse) single-use equipment, and profit by shortening dialysis times, associated with higher mortality.

Think this couldn’t happen in Canada? At private Ontario pain and colonoscopy clinics, many failing safety standards and a series of medical and surgical disasters — including life-threatening, permanent complications — went unreported for years before exposure by the Toronto Star.

Meanwhile, Ford is quietly privatizing over 18,000 long-term-care beds and home care. In the midst of a pandemic, he privatized vaccines and COVID testing. On the cusp of an election, he may play down plans for privatizing hospitals. But it is his record, not his words, that is important.

And speaking once more of words, Ford likes to campaign on the slogan “For the People.” But the People deserve the indisputable evidence: For-profit hospitals and clinics translate as worse health outcomes, increased suffering and avoidable deaths — and benefit only the wealthy.

In this election, “For some of the people, but not for you” are the words that matter.

Dr. Nancy Olivieri is a physician and professor at the University of Toronto. Michael Hurley is president, Ontario Council of Hospital Unions and a member of CUPE’s National Executive Board. Natalie Mehra is executive director, Ontario Health Coalition.


‘We are seeing the creation of a two-tier system of health care in Ontario’

By Robert Williams
Record Reporter
Mon., March 14, 2022

WATERLOO REGION — A provincewide call to action on the alleged privatization of health care will see a series of emergency summits held across Ontario over the next month.

Kicking off next week in Ottawa and running in 20 different cities across the province over March and April, the Ontario Health Coalition — a network of over 400 member organizations including seniors’ groups, unions and non-profit community agencies — will host a series of summits to launch the “biggest fightback we have ever mounted.”

The Waterloo Region Health Coalition — the region’s local chapter — will host its summit on April 5, with a series of keynote speakers set to address the “subtle privatization” of the public health-care system.

“There is this relentless and ongoing strategy by the Conservative government to privatize the public health care system,” said Jim Stewart, co-chair of the Waterloo Region Health Coalition. “How they do it is they make these very quiet announcements, they pass legislation, and what occurs is the breaking down of our public health-care infrastructure.”

The summit is timed to roll out in the lead-up to the upcoming provincial election, when Conservative Premier Doug Ford will look to win a second term in office when voters head to the polls on June 2.

The organization said it intends to “set the threat to our public health care as a key election issue and push all political parties to make commitments to safeguard public health care, stop privatization and address the urgent needs to improve care and staffing,” in a release sent out on Monday.

It is not the first time the coalition has voiced its concerns on the privatization issue. With the decimation of long-term care homes during the COVID-19 pandemic, the group has long called for the province to allocate more resources to its publicly funded homes.

The province has been in the process of awarding 30-year capital funding deals and operational licenses for 30,000 new long-term care beds and upgrading thousands more outdated long-term care beds.

For-profit, non-profit and municipal-run organizations providing long-term care have been able to apply for the bed allocations.

However, in a report released last November, the coalition found most of the bed licenses in progress — over 16,000 — were being awarded to for-profit homes. They found almost 14,000 of the in-progress beds were going to non-profit and municipal homes.

Stewart is also concerned with the growth of for-profit private clinics, which he said will move resources for diagnostic and surgical floors away from public hospitals to private spaces.

The long-term impact, he said, is longer wait times for patients to enter and move through the health-care system, and fewer resources to treat them once they’re there.

“Ultimately, we are seeing the creation of a two-tier system of health care in Ontario,” he said. “We are terrified that private clinics and private hospitals are going to be established, and we know these facilities just don’t do a better job, moving resources away from a public model that desperately needs it.”

Those interested in taking part in the summit can register in advance online. The speaker series will include patient advocates, a member of the Ontario Nurses Association and an Ontario health-care investigative researcher.


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