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No one is illegal: Everyone in Canada is entitled to health care


By administrator - Posted on 24 December 2008

The baby Marley case shows the folly of a closed-border immigration policy


The story of a newborn baby whose birth documents were initially withheld
by an obstetrician ("Marley's the baby who didn't exist," Nov. 27, and
"Pediatrician offers to treat baby Marley," Nov. 28) exposes a
lamentable, all-too-frequent reality. It represents the tip of a much
more significant problem faced by people who do not have permanent
residency status in Canada. Dr. Yvonne Vasilie from the Lakeshore
Hospital withheld baby Marley's birth documents because her parents,
Laura Cobian and Wayne Samuels, were not able to fully pay the fees for
the obstetric care provided to Cobian.Vasilie's actions are
contrary to medicine's mantra of "primum non nocere" ("first, do no
harm"): She unnecessarily delayed the process by which baby Marley
would receive her medicare card by not submitting the relevant papers
as per protocol. Vasilie's actions might have also played a role in
influencing baby Marley's parents to leave the hospital earlier than
necessary, despite the baby's reportedly being clinically jaundiced.


An obstetrician's job is not to determine who can and cannot give birth in a hospital, but
to deliver care; a physician's role is not to judge those she is treating.
The primary responsibility of health-care providers should be to restore
and maintain the health of individuals and populations whom they are serving;
financial compensation for services rendered should never compromise this prime directive.

The doctor's actions imply that some people have a right to be in this country, while others don't. We categorically reject such a position.
We affirm that people have a right to migrate, work and live wherever
they wish. In particular, we recognize the fact that people migrate as
a result of being displaced for economic, political and social reasons,
usually because of exploitative policies by Western countries and
corporations.

As long as such iniquitous and exploitative policies persist, and as long as borders exist that allow for the free
flow of capital, these same borders must remain open to the free
movement of people. In this situation, the hospital has taken a
laudable position critical of what Vasilie did, and Vasilie now says
that this was all a "misunderstanding."

Baby Marley's parents and family should be applauded for going public with their case. There are far too many similar situations
that go unreported. The most extreme cases are those of non-status people
(those callously referred to as "illegals") who cannot risk reporting such
undignified treatment for fear that they will be detained or be deported.

Those fears mean people might delay accessing health- care services or be forced to get care in more clandestine ways, often at
their own peril. As health-care workers on the island of Montreal, we see
these situations frequently and it is clear that such political encumbrances
undermine our ability to provide the standard of care these people are
entitled to as human beings. Universal and accessible health-care services
should be guaranteed for all, regardless of citizenship status or
ability to pay.


We live in a political context in which military spending costs billions and
money is wasted on other dubious initiatives and bureaucracies at federal,
provincial and municipal levels, while politicians continue to be
paid exorbitant salaries and enjoy comprehensive health-care benefits.
In light of this, it is disingenuous to cite money woes as a justification
for draconian health-care policies that have nefarious consequences on
everyday people.

Meanwhile, the claim that "foreigners" are supposedly "abusing the system" ("Sick of foreigners abusing the system," Nov. 28) is a
convenient distraction that scapegoats migrants - primarily racialized migrants
- while ignoring the excesses that occur within the system and reinforcing the as-yet
unsubstantiated claim that more money necessarily translates into better services.

From a public-health perspective, there is a myriad of studies thatunderscore the heavy burden on individuals and society from a
lack of access or incomplete access to health-care services for all. Ensuring
that all people in Montreal are able to access health-care services is
a simple matter of dignity and justice.

There are campaigns in Toronto for a "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy to safeguard access to services - including health care - for people
with precarious citizenship status, spearheaded by groups like No One Is Illegal - Toronto.

Indeed, the solution in Montreal, Quebec and Canada quite simple: health care for all. Period.

-
Samir Shaheen-Hussain is a Montreal pediatrician. His opinion piece was
signed by Nazila Bettache, MD; Joey Bonifacio-Cruz, MD; Juan Carlos
Chirgwin, MD; Anne-Marie Gallant, a nursing student; Helen Hudson, RN;
Annie Janvier, MD; Jad Abou Khalil, a medical student; Tarek Loubani,
MD; Gillian Morantz, MD; Chi-Minh Phi, MD; Olivier Sabella, MD; Sophie
Schoen, a nursing student; and Brett Schrewe, MD.

Retrieved on December 24, 2008 from http://www.montrealgazette.com/illegal+Everyone+Canada+entitled+health+care/1028881/story.html

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