
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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