Socialised health care in Canada poll

Quote from achilles28:

Canadian healthcare is over-rated. Most of the criticism is deserved.

Long waits for specialists, CT, MRI. surgery, critical surgery etc.

I had heard similar things from Canadian friends. Wealthy Canadians don't worry about costs (like any wealthy person anywhere). If they need an MRI and want it *now*, they just go to the US and pay for it. Ordinary people have to wait months. I've heard 6, 9 or even 12 months.
 
<i>I had heard similar things from Canadian friends. Wealthy Canadians don't worry about costs (like any wealthy person anywhere). If they need an MRI and want it *now*, they just go to the US and pay for it. Ordinary people have to wait months. I've heard 6, 9 or even 12 months.</i>

Here's one anecdotal evidence on how insane our system in the US is:

My father in law had had a heart attack. He had been taken to a small hospital. They didn't have the facilities needed. He needed to be quickly transferred via ambulance to a bigger hospital 90 minutes away. Before the ambulance company agreed to transfer him, the ambulance company demanded that he sign a document stating that the transfer was patient required and not medically required. This would enable the ambulance company to get the patient to pay and thus get a much higher fee than if it was medically required.

Can you imagine a health care system where the patient is dying and at the same have to fight with the ambulance company about who should pay for the ambulance fare?

It is fricking insane!

As it was, he was to weak to fight so he signed it (the doctor was unavailable as he had just started surgery on another patient). Afterwards, we went to court and won after a 2 year court fight. The cost for the ambulance fare would have been almost $3,000!

I think most people in our country, the US, have good health insurance through our companies. So, most of us think we have good system. Until we get laid off... Or until we see what 's wrong. For example when I saw what happened to my father-in-law and the ambulance fare.

Our system is very much imperfect. To say it can't be fixed is to deny reality.

Why would we only have to import the Canadian system? Why couldn't we take the best of the American/Swedish/French/etc system and truly enact something that is the envy of the world?
 
In Switzerland, it's mandatory to have health insurance...
much like it is mandatory to have car insurance here in the US...
 
Quote from PohPoh:

In Switzerland, it's mandatory to have health insurance...
much like it is mandatory to have car insurance here in the US...

Great idea but I would add a condition in there like, mandatory for people earning over 25k per household.

Then regulate the insurance companies allowed to do business in the country.

Cap there earnings to a max set % and anything above must be returned in premium rates.
 
Quote from stevegee58:

I had heard similar things from Canadian friends. Wealthy Canadians don't worry about costs (like any wealthy person anywhere). If they need an MRI and want it *now*, they just go to the US and pay for it. Ordinary people have to wait months. I've heard 6, 9 or even 12 months.

Nonsense! Three months top in a super busy metropolitan area like Vancouver.
 
Quote from JOSEF:


I think most people in our country, the US, have good health insurance through our companies. So, most of us think we have good system. Until we get laid off... Or until we see what 's wrong.

Well said. That's exactly the problem and also the major difference between the US and the Canadian system. People in Canada simply don't have to worry about it and that's a major weight lifted of one's shoulders when one hits a rough patch in life.
 
Quote from Vespasian:

As someone who was a victim of the Canadian health care system let me tell you how TERRIBLE it is.

It literally KILLS hundreds if not thousands of people each year.

Here are the reasons:

1. Long delays in critical procedures.

As an example, I had an operation that developed an infection but because the cost of MRI and wait was so long it took 2 weeks before I could get one. By this time it had grown to dangerous levels and if I had waited much longer it would have killed me.

I see this all the time.

The doctors have their hands tied because they can't do anything but deal with the government bureaucracy and it takes years even to make small changes while people rot.

2. The brightest doctors in Canada leave and go to the US where they get paid up to 5x as much. So what this does is leave us with the second best (as a generalization) there are "some" great doctors in Canada but few and far between.

These are the 2 primary reasons why the Canadian system sucks.

If your healthy Canada is great because you'll only need it for small stuff.

If your a sick person or you become sick the Canadian system is down right dangerous and deadly.


To say that Canadians like our system is not true. The truth is our political parties use it as a tool for election and votes.

The whole thing is DISGUSTING.


A 2 tier system is the best of both worlds and that would be optimal.

Let the wealthy or the sick pay for attention when required and let the status quo stand in line for free when they need it.

Same thing in Sweden.
 
Don't you see the handwriting on the wall? Humanity is just beginning to realize that healthcare SHOULD have nothing to do with big BIZ. it's our next 'level' of wisdom.

make your $ somewhere else, but when it comes down to decisions of who lives and who dies, who gets medicall attention they need and who doesn't...

who gets well, who doesn't..
i don't care what it costs everyone should get the healthcare they need

we can spend a million dollars per minute 'democratizing' the planet ??
 
Quote from Vespasian:

Right and the 407 is suing the 401 for being free!

Your Wrong and nothing but a political puppet .

I'm not a puppet to anyone. I simply don't believe in the free market theory applies everywhere. The US system is clear proof of that. Please, explain a bit more about your reasons (407 vs 401). I'm always willing to change my opinion but so far I didn't hear anything that would warrant that. And yes there are horror stories in both systems, believe it or not. I also had a quite bad experience with waiting for a long time in ER in a Canadian hospital for service but probably nothing compared to what you experienced (as mentioned in one of your posts).
 
Quote from Kassz007:

What Sam has described here is the exact problem with the USA healthcare system. Doctors see patients as customers, not patients. How often do you think unnecessary appointments and tests are done on patients? A lot, because it's money in the Doctor's pocket.

You should read Coronary. Over a five-year period, two doctors performed over a thousand unnecessary coronary bypass surgeries. Anything to help the bottom line...

I also think that many of the latest/most expensive tests, imaging procedures etc. that we use here are either unnecessary or not cost-effective. I read that somebody authored a computer program that asked patients a series of questions about their symptoms. The program was slightly more accurate in diagnosing illnesses than human doctors.
 
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