Healthy Debate
  • Search
  • Health topics
  • Debates
  • Special Series
  • All topics
  • All articles
Most popular today
  • COVID-19 (551)
  • Vaccines (132)
  • Opioids (44)
  • Cancer (145)
  • Addiction (156)
  • Racism (36)
  • Alcohol (23)
  • Infectious Disease (653)
  • Marijuana (22)
  • Tobacco (20)
  • Aging (196)
  • Dementia (40)
  • Long-Term Care (78)
  • Children and Youth (265)
  • Education (345)
  • Medical Education (175)
  • Depression (25)
  • Misinformation (87)
  • Nursing (27)
  • End of Life (124)
  • In Memoriam (5)
  • MAiD (30)
  • Environment (64)
  • Climate Change (32)
  • About
  • Subscribe
Opinion
Jun 5, 2023
by Colin Siu Sampreeth Rao Amy Gajaria Jennifer Hulme Kate Hayman Akm Alamgir Cliff Ledwos

What is the price of human life? Cutting off uninsured is ‘irresponsible’

0 Comments
Share on:

Is health care priceless? Not quite. For hundreds of thousands of Ontarians, a visit to the emergency department will now cost hundreds of dollars just to walk through the door. Need someone to run a lab or take a CT scan? Add another few hundred dollars. A routine visit can easily add up to nearly $1,000.

Uninsured patients must weigh their ability to pay against meeting their other basic needs. Groceries for the family, or going to emergency for a possible heart attack? Paying this month’s rent, or getting a CT for worsening abdominal pain? Diapers for the new baby, or seeing someone for postpartum depression? These are the choices that have become a reality for the uninsured since the Ontario government ended their coverage on April 1.

In March 2020, the Ontario government began covering medically necessary services for uninsured patients – a long overdue measure to protect public and community health. In March 2023, without consultation from health-care professionals, the government announced that the program was ending. As health-care providers, health-equity researchers and community health leaders, we know from our research and first-hand experience that the plan to stop hospital and physician payments for medically necessary services for uninsured individuals is short-sighted and irresponsible.

The government has a responsibility for the health of uninsured individuals, who are amongst the most vulnerable people in our country. Prior to 2020, more than half of uninsured pregnant women were found to have clearly inadequate prenatal care. Uninsured children presented more often for injuries, trauma and mental health concerns than other children. When previously uninsured people were provided with coverage in the United States, their health significantly improved. Conversely, in Spain, restricting access for uninsured patients to health care led to an increase in the mortality rate.

If we extrapolated this data to an Ontario context, this would mean 1.5 more uninsured people dying every month because our government decided to end their access to health care. In a paper published in the Canadian Journal of Emergency Medicine by our study team, the overwhelming response from health-care providers was that the most effective way to improve care would be to make permanent the temporary extension of health coverage to uninsured patients enacted during the COVID-19 pandemic. The government did the opposite.

We know that this decision will mean that burned out health-care providers will be left to manage the systemic gaps created by short-sighted policies.

We know that the result of this decision will mean that burned out and overburdened health-care providers will be left to manage the systemic gaps created by short-sighted government policies. As health-care providers, we have moral and ethical obligations to provide care to all patients regardless of their insurance status. However, caring for this population can lead to moral distress as providers are forced to balance treatment costs and therapeutic benefits against the economic shortfalls that delivering these interventions may impose. This policy may force uninsured people into only seeking care when it is most emergent, which is the point when it is most emotionally taxing on our health-care providers and most financially taxing on our system. As health-care providers, we are simply asking the government to give us the tools and resources that we need to do our job.

Lastly, these actions beg the question of whether the government is infringing upon the universality of the health-care system, a fundamental Canadian ethos. By denying public health care to uninsured individuals, we create a two-tiered system that devalues the lives of uninsured individuals and perpetuates health disparities. If we, as a society, are to move toward an equitable future while upholding the integral tenets of our past, we need to walk together and not opt to leave the most vulnerable behind.

So, what is the price of a human life?

We strongly recommend that the Ontario government reverse its decision to eliminate coverage for medically necessary services for uninsured individuals. We urge the government to prioritize the health and well-being of all Ontarians, especially those who are most vulnerable. The government may stand to learn from our health-care principle to “do no harm.”

Share on:
Related content
May 10, 2023
by Maddi Dellplain

What will happen to Ontario’s uninsured? Experts weigh in

Adding to the list of lifted pandemic policies, Ontario will no longer cover the cost hospital services and physicians fees for the previously uninsured. Without OHIP for these groups, what can we expect to see? Is this the right move? Experts weigh in.

May 16, 2023
by Manavi Handa

Uninsured health cuts and pregnancy: Why all Canadians should care

Many of the funding cuts to the uninsured will impact pregnant people. These health cuts are costly - not just to the burdens of the health-care system, but to our sense of humanity and fundamental Canadian values.

Jul 5, 2018
by Dafna Izenberg Ngozi Iroanyah Serena Thompson

Uninsured patients in Ontario: People get sicker, the system pays more

Authors

Colin Siu

Contributor

Dr. Colin Siu is a family physician with the University of British Columbia and recently completed his Master of Public Health through the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. He is engaged in health equity research through a primary care lens.

Sampreeth Rao

Contributor

Dr. Sampreeth Rao is an Emergency Medicine resident at the University of Toronto.

Amy Gajaria

Contributor

Dr. Amy Gajaria is a Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health and Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto. She is also the Associate Director, EDI Education and Training, for the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto.

Jennifer Hulme

Contributor

Jennifer Hulme is an emergency physician and health systems researcher in Toronto.

Kate Hayman

Contributor

Dr. Kate Hayman is an Emergency Physician and Assistant Professor at the University of Toronto.

Akm Alamgir

Contributor

Akm Alamgir is the Director of Knowledge & Learning at a Community Health Centre in Toronto.

Cliff Ledwos

Contributor

Cliff Ledwos has more than 27 years of experience in the community health sector in senior management and governance roles.  Currently, he is the Associate Executive Director of Access Alliance, a board member of the Alliance for Healthier Communities and on the Executive of the Mid West Toronto OHT.

Republish this article

Republish this article on your website under the creative commons licence.

Learn more

The comments section is closed.

Authors

Colin Siu

Contributor

Dr. Colin Siu is a family physician with the University of British Columbia and recently completed his Master of Public Health through the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. He is engaged in health equity research through a primary care lens.

Sampreeth Rao

Contributor

Dr. Sampreeth Rao is an Emergency Medicine resident at the University of Toronto.

Amy Gajaria

Contributor

Dr. Amy Gajaria is a Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health and Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto. She is also the Associate Director, EDI Education and Training, for the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto.

Jennifer Hulme

Contributor

Jennifer Hulme is an emergency physician and health systems researcher in Toronto.

Kate Hayman

Contributor

Dr. Kate Hayman is an Emergency Physician and Assistant Professor at the University of Toronto.

Akm Alamgir

Contributor

Akm Alamgir is the Director of Knowledge & Learning at a Community Health Centre in Toronto.

Cliff Ledwos

Contributor

Cliff Ledwos has more than 27 years of experience in the community health sector in senior management and governance roles.  Currently, he is the Associate Executive Director of Access Alliance, a board member of the Alliance for Healthier Communities and on the Executive of the Mid West Toronto OHT.

Republish this article

Republish this article on your website under the creative commons licence.

Learn more

Donate to Healthy Debate

Your support allows us to publish journalism about healthcare in Canada that is free to read and free to republish. Donations are tax-deductible.

Donate

Join the mailing list

Sign up below to receive our newsletter every Thursday morning.

You can republish our articles online or in print for free. Read more.

Republish us
  • About
  • Contribute
  • Contact
  • Community Guidelines
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy

Republish this article

  1. Please use the invisible republishing code below on the page where you republish this article.
  2. Please give credit to Healthy Debate and include a link back to our home page or the article URL . Our preference is a credit at the top of the article and that you include our logo  (available by clicking the link below).

Please read the full set of instructions for republication here.