Is Larry's paradise in trouble?

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000087&sid=aMvl03s8vCRE&refer=top_world_news

Quebec Ban on Private Health Insurance Is Struck Down (Update2) 
June 9 (Bloomberg) -- Canada's highest court struck down a Quebec law
that bars people from buying insurance to pay their own medical
expenses and bypass the province's public-health system, opening the
way for creation of private clinics.

The Supreme Court of Canada today voted 6-3 to overturn a lower court
ruling. The ban violates Quebec's constitution by denying people vital
health care and putting their lives in jeopardy, the high court said.

``This is the end of medicare as we know it,'' John Williamson,
federal director of the lobby group Canadian Taxpayers' Federation,
said in a telephone interview. ``It's also the beginning of better
care.''

The decision paves the way for lawsuits to be filed in the rest of
Canada's provinces and puts the country of 33 million people on a path
toward the kind of two-tier health-care system prevalent in most
European countries, Williamson said. Prime Minister Paul Martin has
resisted efforts in British Columbia and Alberta to let private
clinics provide services covered by the government-funded system.

``The evidence in this case shows that delays in the public health
care system are widespread, and that, in some serious cases, patients
die as a result of waiting lists,'' the Supreme Court said in its
ruling. Prohibiting private health insurance allows ``only the very
rich, who can afford private health care without need of insurance, to
secure private care.''

U.K. Example 

Martin has threatened to cut off federal funding to provinces that
violate the Canada Health Act by allowing private clinics. The Supreme
Court said the publicly funded system can co-exist with private care,
as in the U.K.

``The evidence on the experience of other western democracies with
public health care systems that permit access to private health care
refutes the government's theory that a prohibition on private health
insurance is connected to maintaining quality public health care,''
the ruling said.

The lawsuit was filed in 1997 by Quebec businessman George Zeliotis,
73, who had waited a year for hip-replacement surgery. He was told it
was illegal to buy private health insurance.

Quebec courts had ruled that although the law violated the
constitution it had to remain in place to protect the public
health-care system.

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