Moderator: Dictators in Training
No waiting? Explain to me then why the last time I went to one of the local hospitals at 1am I spent THIRTEEN hours in the EMERGENCY room waiting to get seen? Was that just a figment of my imagination? Meanwhile I'm sitting there barely able to breathe and coughing continually cause I had a lovely bout of pneumonia?
The Fraser Institute, a Canadian think tank, calculated in 2003 the average Canadian waited more than four months for treatment by a specialist once the referral was made by a general practitioner. According to the Fraser Institute's work, the shortest median wait was 6.1 weeks for oncology (cancer) treatment without radiation. In some provinces, neurosurgery patients waited more than a year. A simple MRI requires, on average, a three-month wait in Canada.
Tikker wrote:you're so full of shit Lyion that you must sneeze brown
lyion wrote:Some states are implementing their own coverage, which I think is good. It should be handled at the state level, with funding from the Fed, but NOT controlled by DC.
DR DAVID GRATZER wrote:Canadian doctors, once quiet on the issue of private health care, elected Brian Day as president of their national association. Dr. Day is a leading critic of Canadian medicare; he opened a private surgery hospital and then challenged the government to shut it down. "This is a country," Dr. Day said by way of explanation, "in which dogs can get a hip replacement in under a week and in which humans can wait two to three years."
Market reforms are catching on in Britain, too. For six decades, its socialist Labour Party scoffed at the very idea of private medicine, dismissing it as "Americanization." Today Labour favors privatization, promising to triple the number of private-sector surgical procedures provided within two years. The Labour government aspires to give patients a choice of four providers for surgeries, at least one of them private, and recently considered the contracting out of some primary-care services--perhaps even to American companies.
Other European countries follow this same path. In Sweden, after the latest privatizations, the government will contract out some 80% of Stockholm's primary care and 40% of total health services, including Stockholm's largest hospital. Beginning before the election of the new conservative chancellor, Germany enhanced insurance competition and turned state enterprises over to the private sector (including the majority of public hospitals). Even in Slovakia, a former Marxist country, privatizations are actively debated.
Under the weight of demographic shifts and strained by the limits of command-and-control economics, government-run health systems have turned out to be less than utopian. The stories are the same: dirty hospitals, poor standards and difficulty accessing modern drugs and tests.
Admittedly, the recent market reforms are gradual and controversial. But facts are facts, the reforms are real, and they represent a major trend in health care.
The Canadian health care system is hemorrhaging. We're losing doctors faster than we're gaining them. In fact, an estimated 30% of Ontario doctors are leaving within 2 years of completing their training. It is fairly safe to assume that the majority of these doctors end up in the U.S.
Arlos wrote:The difference is, even with contracting out to private companies, people STILL HAVE UNIVERSAL COVERAGE. THAT is the important thing. Improving how it is delivered is one thing, lacking it entirely is another.
-Arlos
Arlos wrote:No waiting? Explain to me then why the last time I went to one of the local hospitals at 1am I spent THIRTEEN hours in the EMERGENCY room waiting to get seen? Was that just a figment of my imagination? Meanwhile I'm sitting there barely able to breathe and coughing continually cause I had a lovely bout of pneumonia?
-Arlos
lyion wrote:A lot of those countries are moving further away from the socialized model. Why is that, Snero, if it's so good as you think?
Anyways, don't take my word. Listen to a Canadian Doctor. Or their National Association. I guess they are 'full of it', too.DR DAVID GRATZER wrote:Canadian doctors, once quiet on the issue of private health care, elected Brian Day as president of their national association. Dr. Day is a leading critic of Canadian medicare; he opened a private surgery hospital and then challenged the government to shut it down. "This is a country," Dr. Day said by way of explanation, "in which dogs can get a hip replacement in under a week and in which humans can wait two to three years."
Market reforms are catching on in Britain, too. For six decades, its socialist Labour Party scoffed at the very idea of private medicine, dismissing it as "Americanization." Today Labour favors privatization, promising to triple the number of private-sector surgical procedures provided within two years. The Labour government aspires to give patients a choice of four providers for surgeries, at least one of them private, and recently considered the contracting out of some primary-care services--perhaps even to American companies.
Other European countries follow this same path. In Sweden, after the latest privatizations, the government will contract out some 80% of Stockholm's primary care and 40% of total health services, including Stockholm's largest hospital. Beginning before the election of the new conservative chancellor, Germany enhanced insurance competition and turned state enterprises over to the private sector (including the majority of public hospitals). Even in Slovakia, a former Marxist country, privatizations are actively debated.
Under the weight of demographic shifts and strained by the limits of command-and-control economics, government-run health systems have turned out to be less than utopian. The stories are the same: dirty hospitals, poor standards and difficulty accessing modern drugs and tests.
Admittedly, the recent market reforms are gradual and controversial. But facts are facts, the reforms are real, and they represent a major trend in health care.
In regards to my other comment...The Canadian health care system is hemorrhaging. We're losing doctors faster than we're gaining them. In fact, an estimated 30% of Ontario doctors are leaving within 2 years of completing their training. It is fairly safe to assume that the majority of these doctors end up in the U.S.
Arlos wrote:No waiting? Explain to me then why the last time I went to one of the local hospitals at 1am I spent THIRTEEN hours in the EMERGENCY room waiting to get seen? Was that just a figment of my imagination? Meanwhile I'm sitting there barely able to breathe and coughing continually cause I had a lovely bout of pneumonia?
-Arlos
Evermore wrote:Arlos wrote:No waiting? Explain to me then why the last time I went to one of the local hospitals at 1am I spent THIRTEEN hours in the EMERGENCY room waiting to get seen? Was that just a figment of my imagination? Meanwhile I'm sitting there barely able to breathe and coughing continually cause I had a lovely bout of pneumonia?
-Arlos
Back on June 8th, I got rushed to the emergency room at 9 am. i could barely breathe, chest hurt and i was unable to sit up straight. I got taken straight in. this made some poor kid with a cut on his head wait to be seen. i was put on oxygen and amazingly enough the doc came right in and sent me for xrays an ultrasound and a CAT scan. the problem: multiple bi-lateral pulmonary emboli. One of which had broke off and lodged just outside the heart where the blood goes to the lungs. I had one in the main vein of my left leg as well. Needless to say i was admitted to a monitoring floor. fun shit. I was 9 hrs waiting for a room to open and be cleaned. I just wonder how many people had to wait because their issues were not as serious as mine, and how much of that time I had to wait because of the 2 car accident victums that were brought in, one i saw, covered in blood.
my long winded point. You wait due to the seriousness of your issue. I was classified as having a life threating issue yet there were still more peeps that were worse off.
Now, you think in canada i would have died?
Harrison wrote:So you get injected with morphine within 40 minutes of complaining about abdominal pain?
That's pretty fucked up.
lyion wrote:Better, newer facilities. Better, newer equipment. No wait. Better specialists. The best foreign doctors come here, including many of the best from Canada. Generally, there is no line here and the treatment and care is more advanced.
Yamori wrote:No one asks the doctors what THEY think about their jobs being nationalized. As always.
Narrock wrote:Yup, I ... was just trolling.
Narrock wrote:I wikipedia'd everything first.
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