Constitutional challenge to the Alberta’s health care monopoly and waiting lists

Allen v. Alberta

John Carpay answering questions at Calgary courthouse July 2012

Constitutional challenge to the Alberta’s health care monopoly and waiting lists

Allen v. Alberta

John Carpay answering questions at Calgary courthouse July 2012

The Justice Centre sought leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada from the Alberta Court of Appeal decision in Allen v. Alberta, a constitutional challenge to the government’s health care monopoly and its painful waiting lists.  The Alberta Court of Appeal was unanimous in rejecting the Charter challenge of Darcy Allen, who argued that access to a waiting list is not access to health care.  Leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada has been denied.

The Court ignored the evidence that many patients in Alberta are on waiting lists for surgery, and many of those patients, like Darcy Allen, suffer severe pain for years.  This evidence was substantially similar to the evidence before the Supreme Court of Canada in the Chaoulli decision, which struck down Quebec’s ban on private health insurance.

Dr. Darcy Allen practiced as a dentist in Okotoks, Alberta, until severe and continuous back pain forced him to stop working.  Dr. Allen suffered in pain for years on waiting lists in the government’s health care monopoly until he finally added another mortgage to his house to pay for the medically necessary surgery in Montana.

Dr. Allen sought to extend to Alberta the 2005 decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in Chaoulli v. Quebec, which held that “access to a waiting list is not access to health care.”  In Chaoulli, the Supreme Court noted that painful and sometimes deadly waiting lists for patients, in combination with laws that effectively prohibit access to basic medical services outside the government’s monopoly, violate the Charter rights to life and security of the person.

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