That's a bit funny considering that because of the Gliberals consistent unwillingness and inability to deal with healthcare as well as their constant whittling down of the federal financial interests in it, infrastructure, maintenance, and much of the rest of it has been increasingly a provincial issue. IOW, federal involvement in healthcare is redundant to provincial involvement. As far as I'm concerned, the only thing the feds should have to do with healthcare is help the provinces keep a minimum standard across the country. (Same for education).We are extremely disappointed with Prime Minister Stephen Harper's decision to end support for the Health Council of Canada....Everyone in this country should be deeply concerned because the federal government is distancing itself from the health and health care of Canadians.
Or take it from my friends at Canadian Doctors for Medicare.
“The federal government is no longer walking away from health care, it’s sprinting at full speed,” said Dr. Ryan Meili, vice-chair of Canadian Doctors for Medicare. “Cutting funding to the Health Council means cutting information on sustainability, quality and efficiency of our health care system – information that Canadians should be able to expect from their government.”
Killing the Health Council bad for Canada’s health care system, say docs | Media Releases
Because their impulses are noble. And they love our precious healthcare system, and want to make it even better.
I've explained many times why Stephen Harper hates medicare. Because it embodies the softer, more caring values of the Canada he despises so much.
By reducing transfers, just as the boomers start flooding into our hospitals. By forcing the provinces to pay more for services like retraining workers. By making them pay to house more prisoners. By throwing more and more unemployed Canadians off E.I. and on to provincial welfare rolls.
Sooner or later, the provinces, especially the poorer ones, will be forced to cry uncle. And the private health care vultures will move in. Just like they have in Britain, where the Cameron Cons are gutting the National Health System.
And forcing public hospitals to reserve 49 percent of their beds for private patients.
For let me be absolutely clear if we don't stop Harper and his gang of inhuman monsters, if we don't listen to the doctors and the nurses, if we allow the Cons to blind us, and condemn us to walk in the darkness.
As I've said so many times before.
We or our loved ones WILL end up in a horrible place.
In a country we don't recognize...
more
Montreal Simon: Stephen Harper Begins his Assault on Medicare
And if I break a leg or get some infection or other, I really couldn't care less whether my healthcare comes from gov't or some private healthcare outfit. I have insurance.
Exactly.Investment in infrastructure is always good.
Anyways, I went looking for info on the Health Council of Canada, it's an NGO whose mandate is to, well, here, you check it out.
Seems to me that it's kind of redundant given the fact that the provinces pretty much do an equally poor job of doing the same thing.
Maybe it isn't such a bad idea after all.
lol You really think federal bureaucrats and politicians are better than territorial and provincial ones?The Canadian Healthcare system (I use the term very loosely) needs to be pulled from the hands of the Provinces and be centralized with a standard that is country wide. You want to know what's wrong with our system. Too many ivory towers and no standard practices.
I suppose your idea would be cool if the fed gov't was allowed to make money at enterprises like private outfits so it can afford the country's healthcare,that would be a bit communistic, wouldn't it? So the result is that the feds tax us and business to pay for what drives gov't. And if the fed were to take on more of the burden of healthcare, don't you suppose it would want more and more taxes? I'm not really liking that idea considering that the Boomers are starting to slip into the ranks of the old and fragile. IOW, the bigger the gov't the more wasteful and inefficient it is. I'll stick with a provincial healhthcare, goofy as it is here, thanks.