Nascar_James said:In addition, I save taxes and get a reliable healthcare system. No waiting lists for critial surgeries.
Ten Packs said:Nascar_James said:In addition, I save taxes and get a reliable healthcare system. No waiting lists for critial surgeries.
James, several years ago, my late Mother was having some internal problems and went to the Doctor for an exam - turned out she needed a Colosotomy - which was done the next day!
And the problem would BE ? ? ?
Reverend Blair said:You already posted that example, Nascar Nero. You have to use the same ones over and over again because there aren't that many. Anecdotal evidence doesn't mean much when it isn't backed up by statistics anyway.
Reverend Blair said:The problem with two-tier in Canada is that it leaves us open to a Chapter 11 suit under NAFTA, Mad Hatter. The US insurance companies would be able to force us into an American-style system because health care would suddenly become a commodity.
The Romanow Report still holds the key to fixing Canadian health care. While some try to say that it just says to throw money at the problem, that is wholly untrue. While it does call for increased funding, it also contains cost-saving measures like increased home care and more attention to homeopathic practices and preventative measures.
Reverend Blair said:You already posted that example, Nascar Nero. You have to use the same ones over and over again because there aren't that many. Anecdotal evidence doesn't mean much when it isn't backed up by statistics anyway.
MMMike said:Nobody "told" me that Rev.
Reverend Blair said:The problem with two-tier in Canada is that it leaves us open to a Chapter 11 suit under NAFTA, Mad Hatter. The US insurance companies would be able to force us into an American-style system because health care would suddenly become a commodity.
The Romanow Report still holds the key to fixing Canadian health care. While some try to say that it just says to throw money at the problem, that is wholly untrue. While it does call for increased funding, it also contains cost-saving measures like increased home care and more attention to homeopathic practices and preventative measures.
Who told you that?
Nobody "told" me that Rev.
Who told you that?
(emphasis mine)The National Union has embarked on a campaign to restore Medicare funding and expand services to meet the needs of Canadians in the new millennium. This includes restoring cash transfers to the provinces, maintaining a not-for-profit health care system, improving long-term care, and adding home care and pharmacare to the Canada Health Act.
Reverend Blair said:Nobody "told" me that Rev.
So you read the report then?
Who told you that?
I read the report. It's duller than hell, but if you drink coffee and smoke cigarettes, you can get through it.
There is no solution to our health care problems that doesn't require money, MMMike. Study after study has shown that the single-payer system we have is cheaper than other systems. It has the efficiency of an economy of scale as well not having to pay for middlemen and an extra layer of paper pushers.
The inefficiencies in the system have to addressed, and the Romanow Report is clear on that. We under-utilise nurses for instance. We don't pay doctors for phone consultations that would use up less time. We let equipment sit idle overnight. We pay virtually no attention to preventative medicine. We don't look at alternative treatments enough. We make things like mid-wives very difficult to use.
Everybody concentrates on the spending recommendations in the report, but nobody offers a truly less expensive alternative.
Reverend Blair said:Look at the American system, which is what we get the second we make health care a commodity, and tell me again how that's going to save me money, MMMike.
Not only does privately provided care cost more in the US, but the publically funded portion of their system costs over twice as much as ours. That's per capita and as a portion of GDP, so saying that the US is larger isn't an argument. Meanwhile, the people who depend on health care provided by the state routinely get substandard care. That's not to mention all of the people who slip through the cracks and have no health care coverage at all.
Reverend Blair said:Fine, don't buy it. Just don't make us pay for your refusal to listen.
While my preference would be a full parallel private system, there still can (and should) be private delivery of services even under your single payer system. As far as poor use of the resources we do have, and inefficient use of equipment - the private sector excels in efficiency. Do you really think a private company would let doctors do what nurses could do? or nurses do what nurses assistants could do? etc.... Do you really think a private company would let a hugely piece of (much needed) equipment sit idle because it can't afford to operate it?
They call that the two-tier system.Nascar_James said:Why not have two seperate systems for Canada? This would please both sides. Have seperate hospitals and clinics for each system. . . .
Reverend Blair said:You aren't listening, MMMike. You are refusing to see that, for Canada, we can either fix the system we have now or adopt an already-broken system from south of the border.
You aren't thinking either. A parallel system would require that you pay for insurance and for the public system. That's double your costs. More than double because you have just set yourself up to pay for office staff at insurance companies and in private hospitals, as well as for a whole bunch of government employees to make sure that the for-profit system and not-for-profit systems don't overlap. You also have to pay for corporate shareholders, who do nothing to help you, to turn a profit.
That's not smart, and it's not fixing anything. What it is stupidly clinging to a dogmatic belief in spite of the evidence before you.