Health Care Rights in Canada: The Chaoulli Legacy

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Health Care Rights in Canada: The Chaoulli Legacy
Abstract
The 2005 Supreme Court decision of Chaoulli v. Quebec (A.G.) is the most significant Canadian case vis-a-vis health care rights in the last decade. The two litigants were Dr. Chaoulli, a physician originally from France who was frustrated with governmental limits on his ability to practice privately, and George Zeliotis, a sixty-seven-year-old patient with hip and heart conditions who had to wait nine months for a hip operation. Mr. Zeliotis thought that if he were able to purchase private insurance then he could have financed his hip operation in the private sector. Chaoulli and Zeliotis were unsuccessful at both the trial and appeal levels but struck controversial success before the Supreme Court of Canada.
Genre
SSRN Scholarly Paper
Archive ID
1148956
Place
Rochester, NY
Date
2008-06-20
Accessed
8/29/23, 4:41 PM
Short Title
Health Care Rights in Canada
Language
en
Library Catalog
Social Science Research Network
Citation
Flood, C. M., & Xavier, S. (2008). Health Care Rights in Canada: The Chaoulli Legacy (SSRN Scholarly Paper 1148956). https://papers.ssrn.com/abstract=1148956
Author / Editor