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Long wait times driving patients south
By Melinda Dalton, Joe Fantauzzi And Matthew Strader, Metroland Media Group
News
Nov 27, 2009
For nearly three years, Brandon Taylor lived in agony with a herniated disc.

The now 22-year-old Hamilton student and his father, Stuart, were told open back surgery at Brandon’s age could be dangerous.

The wait to see a specialist who could help decide treatment was up to a year, they were told. The best the Ontario health system could offer was prescription painkillers.

In August 2007, Stuart Taylor packed up his son and agreed to pay $28,000 in Florida for minimally invasive laser microsurgery. The treatment worked for Brandon, now a fourth-year engineering student at McMaster University.

But father and son are embroiled in a bitter battle with OHIP to have the medical costs reimbursed.

The Ontario officials who decide whether out-of-country treatment should be paid by public health insurance say the Taylors broke the rules.

OHIP says they did not apply for pre-approval as required, and that the Florida surgery does not qualify as it is considered experimental here.

“Every single person I have spoken to, except OHIP, says I did the right thing,” says Stuart Taylor, who mortgaged his house to pay.

The Taylors are not alone.

 

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