Since its election, Alberta’s government has taken steps to aggressively contain healthcare costs, including imposing changes to physician pay that doctors had asked to delay until COVID-19 was better contained. Although these changes have been in effect for less than a month, numerous doctors have already resigned from rural hospitals, which will undoubtedly adversely affect patients in those communities.
Provincial governments enter into multi-year agreements with provincial medical associations on the terms of physician compensation. This has sometimes lead to acrimonious negotiations. For example, Ontario’s negotiation with its medical association lasted several years before finally reaching a resolution via arbitration in early 2019. Similarly, while Saskatchewan’s compensation agreement with doctors expired in 2017, negotiations are still ongoing. In December 2019, the Newfoundland and Labrador Medical Association’s president released a letter criticizing the government for its “irresponsible delay” in beginning contractual negotiations given the time these discussions can take.
In Alberta, failed negotiations culminated in the Alberta Medical Association (AMA) launching a $250-million lawsuit against the government on April 9.
The Alberta government and the AMA began negotiations last November in anticipation of the compensation agreement expiring on March 31. The government’s approach was to aggressively contain costs, claiming that Alberta doctors are paid significantly more than those in comparable provinces to achieve similar outcomes. The AMA vehemently disagreed, calling the data “flawed,” and said doctors are projected to make only 5.7 per cent more than counterparts in other provinces.
The AMA says it negotiated in good faith and proposed several cost-savings measures but alleges the government did not reciprocate. Instead, on December 4 the government passed Bill 21, permitting it to unilaterally terminate any agreement respecting compensation matters with the AMA. The power to terminate a negotiated agreement for any reason and with no consultation or dispute-resolution process creates an environment that makes meaningful negotiation impossible.
Nevertheless, at the end of January, the government and the AMA began mediation. The process, however, lasted for only a few weeks before the government unilaterally terminated its contract with physicians, effectively ending negotiations. The government then imposed controversial conditions on physician pay that took effect on March 31.
These measures will negatively affect access to care, particularly that provided by family doctors and those practicing in rural areas. Some rural doctors have reported that they are now unable to deliver obstetrical services due to changes in the government’s contribution to liability insurance premiums. Others say that changes in the way their overhead is paid make it unfeasible to both run their community offices and provide care to patients in hospital. Doctors in several towns have already given notice that they will no longer provide care at rural hospitals or plan to leave those communities entirely.
The AMA’s lawsuit alleges that by terminating the AMA agreement, negotiating in bad faith, and removing the AMA’s right to arbitration, the government has infringed on its Charter right to freedom of association.
The AMA has favorable caselaw to bolster its claim. In 2015, the Supreme Court of Canada affirmed that freedom of association encompasses the right to strike. The court found that Saskatchewan legislation denying essential workers the right to strike was unconstitutional because of the lack of an alternative mechanism to resolve bargaining impasses. Drawing on this case, Alberta physicians persuasively argue that because of their legal and ethical inability to walk off the job, the meaningful exercise of their constitutional rights requires an alternative dispute resolution process (in this case, arbitration).
Although it is not directly binding in this type of dispute, the AMA’s claim is also supported by the Canada Health Act. According to this legislation, a province’s healthcare system must meet certain criteria to attract federal funding, including “accessibility,” which requires “reasonable compensation for all insured services rendered by medical practitioners.” The Act specifies that this requirement is met if the province has entered into an agreement with doctors that provides for negotiations and the settlement of disputes through conciliation or binding arbitration, which has not occurred in this case.
Given Alberta’s current fiscal climate, the optics of a lawsuit that seeks more than $250 million may be poor. However, the AMA is not focused on monetary damages. Instead, it has said “[t]he best-case scenario would be for the AMA and government to reach a negotiated agreement while this legal case proceeds.” Failing that, the AMA wants a court to conclude that it is constitutionally entitled to arbitration and that the government cannot unilaterally change compensation agreements.
While some critics point to the poor timing of the lawsuit given the COVID-19 outbreak, the AMA and more than 800 doctors requested that the government delay implementing the compensation arrangement to allow them to focus on the pandemic. The government’s only concession has been to delay new rules around complex modifiers that allow doctors to bill more for patients who require longer consults.
It is in the public interest that doctors and the government are partners in the healthcare system and have access to a reasonable dispute resolution mechanism when negotiations fail. In both Ontario and Alberta, the government failed to treat this relationship as a partnership, instead choosing to unilaterally impose compensation terms.
By fighting the AMA’s legal claim, the Alberta government is risking the resignation of additional rural doctors who are particularly difficult to recruit. Instead, the government should be devoting the time and legal resources that will be wasted in litigation to responding to COVID-19 and its aftermath.
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I just found out through many visits of incompetent performances that the body responsible for listing these uneducated so called doctors accepting new patients without investigating their history. Well I dug deep into just one particular person and found out how one came to be employed as a doctor here. Not good !!! Another list of Doctors have had to go through many gruelling years of medical education plus what ever else they endured to become a professional Doctor and a stranger can waltz right in on their word and set up a medical practice. Not right or fair to our REAL DOCTORS !!! No wonder our Doctors want to discuss pay and are leaving Alberta. I stood by my younger sister ad she went through the cancer ordeal then passed 5months later, if I were to expose what I discovered with the medical procedures the world would be disgusted! The government is wise to address the doctor qualifications in this Country and adjust their incomes and status !
The Transportation Department has rectified the Professional Driver problem after an enormous increase in accidents and deaths. What is it going to take for this situation?
Thank you for a balanced article highlighting the KEY issues here which are about engaging in sincere, good faith conversations to work together to solve the challenges of BOTH the demands of providing effective health care and the financial realities we find ourselves in currently in Alberta.
I am just glad I am not practicing anymore!
Excellent article!
Who would trust any politician who has torn up negotiated contracts?
Do not allow these dishonourable politicians to impose any new conditions, however good they appear. If they are not negotiated, they are not valid.
Excellent article. It is impossible to be ‘partners’ with the government in a healthcare system where legislation is so heavily tilted in favour of government. It all starts with the Canada Health Act (CHA) – arbitration for physicians is part of the CHA but it specifically states that any arbitration award can be legislated away by the provincial government. So…really, arbitration does not exist under such circumstances. That is why arbitration is not offered by most provinces and those who do ‘offer’ it have gone through protracted battles with medical associations to deny that ‘right’
Add to this that physicians are not allowed to unionize, are prohibited from any form of effective ‘job action’ by their governing colleges and are effectively legislated into a dependent contractor status and you can see why provinces all over the country treat physicians so badly with impunity. Physicians, however, can quit and are still mobile…being a physician is not a life sentence under such untenable conditions. That so many of us see this as a ‘calling’ further allows the profession to accept horrible treatment that no other profession would accept under any circumstances. Government is quite comfortable calling the profession’s bluff and is counting on most physicians not acting under any threats that they put out in response to callous draconian treatment.
I wish the physician in Alberta well in their battle with government. We in Ontario, were bloodied and bruised from 4 years of absolute war with our provincial government…we had to endure being vilified, denigrated, sidelined, devalued and marginalized. As someone who was on the frontlines of that battle for over two years, I can tell you that the among lasting casualties and scars of that war is trust…we as a profession have been too trusting for too long…and have paid for it in spades over the past 35+ years.