It's obvious that you're a jackass.
Obvious you may still be asleep
HEY, namecalling namecalling. MOD MOD MOD!!!!
JACKASS.....NAME CALLING
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOHrotest:
:laughing6:
It's obvious that you're a jackass.
I am working on a response to this.Feel free to get back on topic folks. If this is nothing but 'America rules', 'No Canada rules', 'You're lame', 'No you're lame!'.... there is no point in leaving it open.
Joffen, for all intents and purposes, you seem unable to back up the meat of your claim.
Is Canada's economy in the toilet and the US's better? Does the US spend less per capita on health care, with a better outcome (ie., life expectancy, infant mortality, ER wait times, surgery wait times)? Does the fact that the US DOES have socialized medicine (even Eagle has pointed out the poor get treated), not factor in?
Answer some of those questions with some cold hard fact rather than just sabre rattling.
And you can leave Jack out for you description:lol:It's obvious that you're a jackass.
How would one go about judging the value of a country's healthcare? I submit to you the following criteria.
Quickness and quality and affordability.
1. Access to medical care. This means how quickly you actually get treated. After all, the point of medical care is to heal injuries. The faster one gets treatment the better it will be for a person's well-being.
2. Medical technology. If a country has superior medical technology, that will make a big difference in quality.
There are other criteria, however I'd argue that those two are THE biggest factors in judging a country's health care. You might be able to access medical care quickly, but if it is of poor quality, it actually may do more harm than good. Also, if you must wait and wait for care, but it turns out to be of better quality, then that might do more harm as well.
Cost is also a factor, and it's important, but I'd argue the other two take priority. Cost does indeed affect access, but in the United States we have Medicaid and Medicare. Yes, I do describe those government-run insurance programs as socialism. But America does not have government-run health care as thier national system.
So if a country excels against another in 2 out of 3 possible criteria, that country's health care system is better. I am sure you are chomping at the bit to argue that Canada has better technology and better access (as far as speed), but no.You can try, but no.
In the CIA world factbook's ranking, Canada is in 10th place while the US is 49th. That seems pretty damning until you look at the actual difference in age. For all Canada's marvelous health care, it increases the average life expectancy by a phenomenal....three years.Technology does not mean better health care if not used properly. Percentage of preventable deaths, life expectancy, and infant mortality, are better tells than level of technology. Frankly, technology gets in the way of patient care at times, leaving doctors ordering expensive tests rather than sitting down, talking, and listening to their patients.
In the CIA world factbook's ranking, Canada is in 10th place while the US is 49th. That seems pretty damning until you look at the actual difference in age. For all Canada's marvelous health care, it increases the average life expectancy by a phenomenal....three years.
https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2102rank.html
A Dr. that speaks to patients with care and answers their questions has healthier patients. A GP only gets 40hrs studying psychology and mental health training in med school and have trouble realting to what person may be experiencing. The person as a whole needs to be treated and they need to be able to have open dialogue. I know a couple men my age that were too embarassed to mention they were having trouble getting it up and had a hard time peeing.Technology does not mean better health care if not used properly. Percentage of preventable deaths, life expectancy, and infant mortality, are better tells than level of technology. Frankly, technology gets in the way of patient care at times, leaving doctors ordering expensive tests rather than sitting down, talking, and listening to their patients.
Still not much of a difference.
See you're also looking at it wrong. What really determines the life expectancy and infant mortality? A country can have superior medical technology and fast access to doctors, but if the country as a whole has a high rate of gun deaths, car crashes, etc., then it really doesn't matter how good the health care is. Now, which country has more cars? America. Which country has more guns? America. So logically, a higher rate of cars and guns mean a higher rate of car and gun deaths. Also, Americans eat a lot more fast food and a fatty diet, which will also impact a country's life expectancy.The 2000 WHO rankings, and I can guarantee US technology outpaced Canada's at that time, yet we came out on par with US health care.
3 years is 3 years, especially given that you're implying your health care system should be blowing us out of the water, right?
Oh, and, don't forget... no one here has said our health care is marvelous other than you.
Still not much of a difference.
See you're also looking at it wrong. What really determines the life expectancy and infant mortality? A country can have superior medical technology and fast access to doctors, but if the country as a whole has a high rate of gun deaths, car crashes, etc., then it really doesn't matter how good the health care is. Now, which country has more cars? America. Which country has more guns? America. So logically, a higher rate of cars and guns mean a higher rate of car and gun deaths. Also, Americans eat a lot more fast food and a fatty diet, which will also impact a country's life expectancy.
I know mentioning fast food and guns will tempt some of you to go on another anti-American tirade, but your jealousy is predictable and absolutely understandable. My point is, health care quality has a negligible impact on the average life expectancy of a country. You can have the best system in the world, but it won't matter much of citizens are dying from too many big macs.
Still not much of a difference.
See you're also looking at it wrong. What really determines the life expectancy and infant mortality? A country can have superior medical technology and fast access to doctors, but if the country as a whole has a high rate of gun deaths, car crashes, etc., then it really doesn't matter how good the health care is. Now, which country has more cars? America. Which country has more guns? America. So logically, a higher rate of cars and guns mean a higher rate of car and gun deaths. Also, Americans eat a lot more fast food and a fatty diet, which will also impact a country's life expectancy.
I know mentioning fast food and guns will tempt some of you to go on another anti-American tirade, but your jealousy is predictable and absolutely understandable. My point is, health care quality has a negligible impact on the average life expectancy of a country. You can have the best system in the world, but it won't matter much of citizens are dying from too many big macs.
That's not what I'm saying at all. Just because life expectancy is similar doesn't mean both health care systems are the same. I'm saying the American model is superior, and the only reason we have a few years difference in life expectancy is due to factors that have nothing to do with health care. I'm looking forward to when that Maclean's series on healthcare comes out.Not much of a difference. Precisely. I'm sorry but these systems have all been analyzed much more deeply by people who know much more about them than you or I could hope to, and we really come out fairly neck and neck. Our system has its flaws, your system has its flaws. Neither one is perfect, and neither one is a model that the rest of the world is looking to in admiration. So when you say that we should drop what we're doing, and be like you, sorry, you come off as nothing but wrong.
See you're also looking at it wrong. What really determines the life expectancy and infant mortality? A country can have superior medical technology and fast access to doctors, but if the country as a whole has a high rate of gun deaths, car crashes, etc., then it really doesn't matter how good the health care is. Now, which country has more cars? America. Which country has more guns? America. So logically, a higher rate of cars and guns mean a higher rate of car and gun deaths. Also, Americans eat a lot more fast food and a fatty diet, which will also impact a country's life expectancy.
I know mentioning fast food and guns will tempt some of you to go on another anti-American tirade, but your jealousy is predictable and absolutely understandable. My point is, health care quality has a negligible impact on the average life expectancy of a country. You can have the best system in the world, but it won't matter much of citizens are dying from too many big macs.
In the CIA world factbook's ranking, Canada is in 10th place while the US is 49th. That seems pretty damning until you look at the actual difference in age. For all Canada's marvelous health care, it increases the average life expectancy by a phenomenal....three years.
https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2102rank.html
Has Canada tried to improve the way it does health care? Has it been small tweaks or major overhauls? Any guesses as to how it might be improved in the future?
MMS: ErrorWHO rankings of health delivery systems:
1 France
2 Italy
3 San Marino
4 Andorra
5 Malta
6 Singapore
7 Spain
8 Oman
9 Austria
10 Japan
11 Norway
12 Portugal
13 Monaco
14 Greece
15 Iceland
16 Luxembourg
17 Netherlands
18 United Kingdom
19 Ireland
20 Switzerland
21 Belgium
22 Colombia
23 Sweden
24 Cyprus
25 Germany
26 Saudi Arabia
27 United Arab Emirates
28 Israel
29 Morocco
30 Canada
31 Finland
32 Australia
33 Chile
34 Denmark
35 Dominica
36 Costa Rica
37 USA
38 Slovenia
39 Cuba
See, the French are doing something right....Wow...the US is just ahead of Cuba.
How is it that a nation spends the most per capita on health at $ 4,631 has such a low ranking?
Not the best money managers that's for sure.
Btw....Canada spends $2,535.00 per capita