Closing arguments begin in legal case over private health care in B.C.
VANCOUVER — A lawyer arguing in favour of a two-tier health-care system in British Columbia says the government can’t legally justify preventing patients from paying private doctors to alleviate their suffering sooner than the public system could provide treatment.
Peter Gall began his closing arguments Monday in a decade-long constitutional challenge of the Medicare Protection Act of B.C. as lead plaintiff Dr. Brian Day, CEO of Cambie Surgical Corp., looked on from the gallery.
The case has drawn a fierce defence from those who warn a parallel public-private system would only benefit the wealthy and expanding private insurance would disproportionately impact patients who aren’t considered “profitable.”
“If you cannot provide timely service to everyone, you cannot prohibit anyone from going outside the system for private care,” Gall told B.C. Supreme Court Justice John Steeves.