That's garbage man. Canada's average wait time for surgery is more than 18 weeks I promise. Three months for MRIs is realistic though. If your wife's sister got her surgery in 4 months it was probably deemed "urgent".
France, Norway, and Denmark all have decent healthcare, but those guys are paying half their income or more, and almost NO medical/bio innovations come out of there. Whenever the government gets involved in providing something, the price goes up and the quality goes down. We need something which addresses the costs of health care. Subsidizing part of med school debt? Importing more doctors( and not ones from Africa, the Carribean, or Belize)? Tort reform? All the above?
France, Norway, and Denmark all have decent healthcare, but those guys are paying half their income or more, and almost NO medical/bio innovations come out of there. Whenever the government gets involved in providing something, the price goes up and the quality goes down. We need something which addresses the costs of health care. Subsidizing part of med school debt? Importing more doctors( and not ones from Africa, the Carribean, or Belize)? Tort reform? All the above?
Quote from tomdavis:
A national healthcare system only works if you cap costs. When you cap costs, you end up with rationing. My wife's sister lives in Canada. She badly injured her knee in a car accident. She had to wait three months for an MRI and an additional four months for surgery. She was in excruciating pain and had to take strong pain killers. After seven months of pain pills, she was addicted to painkillers and she had to go through treatment for that problem. Now she's finding out that seven months of painkillers caused kidney damage. What a nightmare.
The following article says that wait time for surgery in Canada is over 18 weeks.
http://www.canada.com/health/Surgical+wait+times+increase+Canada/3933033/story.html
Come up with a way to control costs that doesn't result in severe rationing and the entire country will support a national healthcare system.