5 Facts for Alberta’s Health Care Choice Debate
Canadian think tank SecondStreet.org applauded the Alberta government’s recent announcement to let patients choose between using the public system or paying for treatment at non-government clinics. The think tank noted it will help reduce wait times and put forward five facts for the public to consider on this issue.
“It’s excellent that the Alberta government continues to embrace policies used in better-performing public health care systems in Europe,” said SecondStreet.org President Colin Craig. “Allowing more choice in health care is a move that’s long overdue. Polls consistently show a majority of Canadians support it. Combined with other decisions, like changing how hospitals are funded to incentivize output, will help reduce wait times.”
Five quick facts:
1) Every country that has a better performing universal public health care system does what the Alberta government is doing: allow patients to choose between the public and private systems. France, Sweden, Japan – SecondStreet.org has visited those countries and interviewed their officials directly.
2) Polls show the public supports choice in health care – 59% of Canadians support keeping the public system but allowing private options according to an October 2025 Leger poll commissioned by SecondStreet.org.
3) Albertans have shared stories with SecondStreet.org of travelling all over the world for health care – Germany, Mexico, United States, Lithuania and more. Allowing them to pay locally would not only be good for patients, it would be good for the economy.
4) The Supreme Court decided in 2005 that Quebecers have the right to use the public system or pay for treatment. It only makes sense for Albertans, and those in the rest of the country, to have this same right. (Even if the Supreme Court won’t extend this right.)
5) More health care options also means more options for workers. Every year, Canada loses thousands of trained health care workers to the U.S. As of 2023, U.S. border states and other popular states like California and Texas, had issued over 1,456 licenses to health workers with Alberta mailing addresses. Giving Alberta workers more options to work (or supplement their income), can help retain staff.
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