Would you cross the border for health care? 42% Canadians say yes in poll
By
Katie Dangerfield Global News
Posted March 4, 2024 5:00 am
Updated March 4, 2024 9:02 pm
5 min read
WATCH: Canadians don't have much confidence that provincial governments are ready to address emergency room wait times, according to new Ipsos polling conducted for Global News. And as health reporter Katherine Ward explains, people are looking for other options to get the care they need in a timely manner – Mar 4, 2024
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Amid Canada’s ongoing battle with prolonged
emergency room wait times and
staffing challenges, a new poll finds that many are willing to journey southward in pursuit of timely
health care, even if it means paying out of pocket.
The Ipsos poll conducted exclusively for Global News found that 42 per cent of respondents would go to the United States and personally pay for more routine health care if needed. That is up 10 percentage points compared with January 2023.
And 38 per cent of respondents said they would travel to the U.S. and personally pay for emergency care (up nine points from a year ago).
1:57Ontario signs on to $3.1B health-care deal with federal government
“I think the increase is happening because of the increasing level of frustration that Canadians have in the health-care system,” Sean Simpson, vice-president of Ipsos Public Affairs, told Global News.
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“It’s not the quality of care that that people are upset about, it is the timely access to care, meaning wait times in emergency rooms, wait times to see specialists, to get appointments, for screening. As a result, we have a significant chunk of the population say if they can get that service elsewhere, such as the United States, they may consider doing so.”
The Ipsos polling comes as provinces continue to struggle with
shortages of family physicians,
escalating wait times for surgeries and
escalation of emergency room backlogs.
Speaking at a media conference Monday, Health Minister Mark Holland was questioned about Canadians’ inclination to seek medical treatment in the U.S. He responded that “unequivocally that private care is not the answer.”
5:36New IPSOS polls paints bleak healthcare picture
“Going and paying your way out of your circumstance creates a terrible malady in our system. Because what it means is that private carriers will take the cases that are the most profitable ones, leaving the public system eviscerated,” he said. “And that is a circumstance we cannot allow.”
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He argued that most of the waiting that is happening is for either elective procedures or for non-emergency situations, and urged Canadians “to be patient.”
“I know that’s hard, but that but that we are working on making sure we get through these health workforce issues.”
'More money isn't the solution'
A significant portion of the health-care pressure stems from the remnants of the pandemic, Simpson said.
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“Since the pandemic, we’ve seen the health-care system was in many respects, holding on by a thread. And that thread is continuing to unravel,” he said.
As a result of this, in February 2023, the federal government offered the provinces and territories a health funding deal worth $196.1 billion over 10 years, including $46.2 billion in new money.
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As of Monday, all provinces and territories have agreed to the health accord in principle except for Quebec.
Last month,
Ontario was the latest province to sign a $3.1-billion health-care funding deal that will see the province hire more health-care workers, deal with surgical backlogs and upgrade to a digital data system.