After explaining that there's no such thing as "free" health care, I told him about the horror stories coming out of Canada involving people who can't get the care they need or want and are coming to the U.S. to pay for care out of their own pockets. His teacher never told him that part of the Canadian health care story.
Today there's an article about the guy who created the Canadian system and the regrets he now has:
Back in the 1960s, Castonguay chaired a Canadian government committee studying health reform and recommended that his home province of Quebec — then the largest and most affluent in the country — adopt government-administered health care, covering all citizens through tax levies.
The government followed his advice, leading to his modern-day moniker: “the father of Quebec medicare.” Even this title seems modest; Castonguay’s work triggered a domino effect across the country, until eventually his ideas were implemented from coast to coast.
Four decades later, as the chairman of a government committee reviewing Quebec health care this year, Castonguay concluded that the system is in “crisis.”
“We thought we could resolve the system’s problems by rationing services or injecting massive amounts of new money into it,” says Castonguay. But now he prescribes a radical overhaul: “We are proposing to give a greater role to the private sector so that people can exercise freedom of choice.”
Freedom of choice - what a concept. Here are some of the Canadian horror stories:
Years ago, Canadians touted their health care system as the best in the world; today, Canadian health care stands in ruinous shape.I hope Republicans are filing this article away for the next time some Democrat cites Canada as an example of a successful socialized medical system.
Sick with ovarian cancer, Sylvia de Vires, an Ontario woman afflicted with a 13-inch, fluid-filled tumor weighing 40 pounds, was unable to get timely care in Canada. She crossed the American border to Pontiac, Mich., where a surgeon removed the tumor, estimating she could not have lived longer than a few weeks more.
The Canadian government pays for U.S. medical care in some circumstances, but it declined to do so in de Vires' case for a bureaucratically perfect, but inhumane, reason: She hadn't properly filled out a form. At death's door, de Vires should have done her paperwork better.
De Vires is far from unusual in seeking medical treatment in the U.S. Even Canadian government officials send patients across the border, increasingly looking to American medicine to deal with their overload of patients and chronic shortage of care.
Since the spring of 2006, Ontario's government has sent at least 164 patients to New York and Michigan for neurosurgery emergencies — defined by the Globe and Mail newspaper as "broken necks, burst aneurysms and other types of bleeding in or around the brain." Other provinces have followed Ontario's example.
Canada isn't the only country facing a government health care crisis. Britain's system, once the postwar inspiration for many Western countries, is similarly plagued. Both countries trail the U.S. in five-year cancer survival rates, transplantation outcomes and other measures.
The problem is that government bureaucrats simply can't centrally plan their way to better health care.
A typical example: The Ministry of Health declared that British patients should get ER care within four hours. The result? At some hospitals, seriously ill patients are kept in ambulances for hours so as not to run afoul of the regulation; at other hospitals, patients are admitted to inappropriate wards.
3 comments:
I play soccer for a local league. Last month, I tore my MCL. A common sports injury. the day this happened, I walked into the hospital, within 30 minutes, my electronic file was brought up. I was scanned for an MRI within the next 30 minutes. A physician examined my leg within the next 40 minutes.
He recommended that I get a second opinion, to ascertain if I needed surgery for sure. I met the surgeon, the following Monday. The funny thing is he wanted to make sure that the sports injury surgeon (didn`t know the hospital had one!) concurred with him that surgery was needed.
Fast forward 3 weeks, during which physiotherapy was required. At the end of the 3 weeks, I returned to the hospital and met with the surgeons together, (on a friday). They scheduled me for a surgery on the following monday at 11:00 am.
As I sit here typing this, I can`t help but feel grateful that we don`t live in a openly cynical country like the US. Where Sheeple (Sheep+people) like you know that for the taxes that American pay, they can very well have health care at no exorbitant cost or inordinate tax burden. So I call bullshit on your story.
You can call it whatever you like, but the story stands as published. Believe it or not the entire reputation of the Canadian health care system does not rely on your endorsement alone.
Go talk to the Canadians who cross the border every day for non-emergency surgeries that would take months of waiting to get in Canada.
If you want to pay for socialized medicine, have at it. It's free country - for at least a little while longer.
Way to go, Neil!American "conservatives" always have to use lies and deception to make their point; facts only get in their way. I wish this country (USA) had a Tommy Douglas.
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