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| Canadian Healthcare Continues Its Collapse | | Print | |
| Written by Michael Tennant | ||||||||||||||||||
| Wednesday, 02 June 2010 10:20 | ||||||||||||||||||
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Just as the retirement of the baby boomers is causing major strains on U.S. government programs such as Social Security and Medicare, it is also putting serious pressure on the Canadian universal healthcare system. In a Reuters news analysis, Claire Sibonney writes: “Pressured by an aging population and the need to rein in budget deficits, Canada’s provinces are taking tough measures to curb healthcare costs, a trend that could erode the principles of the popular state-funded system.” My health-care prejudices crumbled not in the classroom but on the way to one. On a subzero Winnipeg morning in 1997, I cut across the hospital emergency room to shave a few minutes off my frigid commute. Swinging open the door, I stepped into a nightmare: the ER overflowed with elderly people on stretchers, waiting for admission. Some, it turned out, had waited five days. The air stank with sweat and urine. Right then, I began to reconsider everything that I thought I knew about Canadian health care. I soon discovered that the problems went well beyond overcrowded ERs. Patients had to wait for practically any diagnostic test or procedure, such as the man with persistent pain from a hernia operation whom we referred to a pain clinic — with a three-year wait list; or the woman needing a sleep study to diagnose what seemed like sleep apnea, who faced a two-year delay; or the woman with breast cancer who needed to wait four months for radiation therapy, when the standard of care was four weeks. Gratzer decided to write a book on the subject. In researching the book he found that “at a time when Canada’s population was aging and needed more care, not less, cost-crunching bureaucrats had reduced the size of medical school classes, shuttered hospitals, and capped physician fees, resulting in hundreds of thousands of patients waiting for needed treatment — patients who suffered and, in some cases, died from the delays. The only solution, [Gratzer] concluded, was to move away from government command-and-control structures and toward a more market-oriented system.” Trackback(0)
Comments (10)
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The Canadian System is Fine, Lowly rated comment [Show]
Rick Baker
said:
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founder since 2003, my organization has been sending Canadians to the U.S. for urgently needed surgeries, such as cardiac bypass procedures.In the course of expediting over 2000 of these, we have saved the lives of 7 of our fellow Canadians.If Canada's healthcare system worked as well as the U.S. system, there would be no need for our organization's services. If it were BETTER than the U.S. system, would not Americans be coming to Canada for their healthcare? |
Rick Baker
said:
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... By the way, for any Canadians who are on long waiting lists for cardiac or spinal or orthopedic or gynecological procedures, Timelymedical.ca will be able to help you |
Penny
said:
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... Please help us remove IB from public schools across America by singing this petition http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/removeibfrompubliceducation/ |
rick mailson
said:
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... why do u americans and canadians always bicker - u are sad think of those poor buggers who were killed nby the israelis u should be grateful u have great neioghbours |
Regan Straley
said:
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Bull Four different polls conducted by independent, highly respected research firms in 2009 suggest that the word “crumbling” is a bit extreme when describing how Canadian view their health care system. The combined average of surveys conducted by Harris Decima, Nanos Research, and Angus Reid Strategies reveals that 75% of Canadians hold a favorable view of their health care system. When prompted to state a preference between the Canadian and American systems, the averages of polls taken by Ekos Politics, Angus Reid, and Harris Decima show Canada eking out a 58%-17% victory, with 24% rating the two systems roughly equal and 10.5% too stupid to know. |
Robert
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... To Regan Stanley, Well, ok, 75% of Canadians have a favorable view of their health care system. Thats fine, but the article above wasn't talking about the popularity of the system, it was talking about the economic sustainability of the system and it's severe shortfalls. Canada cannot continue to afford a completely nationalized healthcare system much longer. The patients are waiting 3 to 4 years for vital treatments and some are not getting them in time before they die. This is what I fear could happen in the US if we continue to suscumb to the temption of government supplied health care. That is the issue of the article. I am glad 75% of Canadians poled are happy with their system, but poles don't always tell the whole story. An again that is not the point of the article. |
Pathenry
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privatize pay per visit, investigate private options for certain proceedures, fee for procedure - sounds like the free market and unregulated competition could be the new thing! |
Thewarner
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No Conflict Rick, There is no conflict between Canadians and the U.S. There is a sense here that you are not of this country with your poor understanding of what is being said here (or you went to the government schools). The Canadians are dyed in the wool Socialists and they like it. The U.S. is also but do not know it. The issue is the whining level of about what we are living with. Some Canadians are saying do not follow our lead, it doesn't work. The other North Americans (U.S.) are saying "what? we can't hear you-we are too busy watching Oprah and listening to, "The One", Obomanation". A Russian General speaking at the University of Michigan, in Ann Arbor, attending a trade conference in the 60'S, opened his talk during the Vietnam War with "I like your communism better than my communism, it is working here. You have had more time than we have had in my country. The American business men attending just snickerd not understanding what this snide remark meant right under their noses. You see, everyone in the world of Socialim outright knows America is going down by her own people-Only her own people don't know it. They are too d---n dumb. We are divided and conquored already. All the Elites need now is a monoply on the guns. |
Francis A. Toto
said:
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Founder and Director Will American Healthcare Suddenly, Violently Collapse? The historical and the scientific evidence is compelling. Learn more from the definitive authority on the health care crisis. It's a ticking time bomb and no body seems to know what is surely coming. Frank Toto in San Diego |





With the passage of ObamaCare, the United States has taken another fateful step down the road to fully socialized medicine, the ultimate goal of the American political class with regard to healthcare. Meanwhile, our neighbor to the north, which reached the end of that road over 40 years ago, is being forced by the laws of economics, which no government can repeal, to head in the opposite direction.

