Wait lists are a problem. Solving them by adopting a system as inept and brutal as the USA's is not the answer. In fact, we have much of the answer in the Romanow Report.
Reverend Blair said:I'm seeing the usual trend here. Those who support fixing the present Canadian system have facts and figures to back them, as well as anecdotal evidence.
Those who would impose an American-style system on the rest of us offer anecdotal evidence only.
Funny how that works.
Reverend Blair said:We can fix the system here. The numbers show that keeping our system fully public and addressing the inefficiencies is cheaper than changing the system.
Reverend Blair said:That's not at all true, MMMike. They show that a public system is cheaper because it does not duplicate services, does not require a new layer of paper pushers, and does not suck people out of the public system and pull them into the private system, which puts upward pressure on wages for health care professionals.
A public system allows us to control costs. A private or two tier system takes that control away.
Reverend Blair said:Think about it Mikey. For once in your life, just sit down and feckin' think. What's cheaper... paying directly, or paying a couple of middlemen to make a profit?
It's really that simple.
Compare costs per capita or costs per GDP. Look at the studies. It's cheaper to have a public system.
Nascar_James said:Kellen said:Nascar_James said:Kellen said:Nascar_James said:GL Schmitt said: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. . . .
In that you wind up with two hospitals in a city that has a population of fifty thousand.
One is a private hospital that offers single rooms, state-of-the-art technology, a two-to-one patient-to-nurse ratio, five-foot plasma televison monitors, and lap dances, for a mere $8,500. per day rate. (Plus treatment costs)
The public hospital, in a different part of town, offers a crowded waiting room, with two overworked doctors, an intern who’s only there to skim the smack, three nurses, and a two-ward sixteen-bed-capacity facility, to serve the rest of the city.
Well, it is their choice if they want to keep supporting an inefficient public health care system. Those who don't mind waiting for their surgeries, then so be it. However, an individual has a right to pay for private insurance if he/she so chooses in order to avoid long waits for medical procedures.
...While millions of others will not be able to afford the high healthcare costs and will be left without any opportunity for treatment? The rights of the few over the rights of the many?
No thanks. The system Canada has now is fine, it just has to be tweaked a little. The Liberals have to stop blindly throwing money at it and actually fix it. A two-tier system will eventually turn into a completely privatized system anyway.
Well Kellen, I guess those of us in the US have preferential treatment then since we are not faced with this wait issue. Not to mention the lower taxes.
Well James, I guess that a third of Americans don't have to deal with wait times since that's the number of people that can't afford it.
Not really Kellen. Individuals are generally responsible for costs, either out of pocket or through insurance. Many have employer-paid or subsidized programs. The very poor are covered by the government's Medicaid program, and seniors and the disabled are covered largely by the government's Medicare program.
In addition, many Canadains don't like to gamble with their lives and head south of the border for critical surgeries since they will not have to wait weeks as they would in Canada. With the higher taxes in Canada versus the US, this is unacceptable.
Because of the "death risk factor" with waiting lists, Canadians should have the right to choose if they want to be a part of the Canadian health care system or opt for private insurance. As such, if they opt for private insurance, they would not pay their share of the tax portion that goes to public health care. Deaths due to waiting lists equals lawsuits which equals higher taxes. Who do you think pays the government settlement if familes sue due to wrongfull death. The Canadian taxpayers will pay. But alas, Canada is a country built on taxes, so it would simply be adding to the list....
Kellen said:Nascar_James said:Kellen said:Nascar_James said:Kellen said:Nascar_James said:GL Schmitt said: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. . . .
In that you wind up with two hospitals in a city that has a population of fifty thousand.
One is a private hospital that offers single rooms, state-of-the-art technology, a two-to-one patient-to-nurse ratio, five-foot plasma televison monitors, and lap dances, for a mere $8,500. per day rate. (Plus treatment costs)
The public hospital, in a different part of town, offers a crowded waiting room, with two overworked doctors, an intern who’s only there to skim the smack, three nurses, and a two-ward sixteen-bed-capacity facility, to serve the rest of the city.
Well, it is their choice if they want to keep supporting an inefficient public health care system. Those who don't mind waiting for their surgeries, then so be it. However, an individual has a right to pay for private insurance if he/she so chooses in order to avoid long waits for medical procedures.
...While millions of others will not be able to afford the high healthcare costs and will be left without any opportunity for treatment? The rights of the few over the rights of the many?
No thanks. The system Canada has now is fine, it just has to be tweaked a little. The Liberals have to stop blindly throwing money at it and actually fix it. A two-tier system will eventually turn into a completely privatized system anyway.
Well Kellen, I guess those of us in the US have preferential treatment then since we are not faced with this wait issue. Not to mention the lower taxes.
Well James, I guess that a third of Americans don't have to deal with wait times since that's the number of people that can't afford it.
Not really Kellen. Individuals are generally responsible for costs, either out of pocket or through insurance. Many have employer-paid or subsidized programs. The very poor are covered by the government's Medicaid program, and seniors and the disabled are covered largely by the government's Medicare program.
In addition, many Canadains don't like to gamble with their lives and head south of the border for critical surgeries since they will not have to wait weeks as they would in Canada. With the higher taxes in Canada versus the US, this is unacceptable.
Because of the "death risk factor" with waiting lists, Canadians should have the right to choose if they want to be a part of the Canadian health care system or opt for private insurance. As such, if they opt for private insurance, they would not pay their share of the tax portion that goes to public health care. Deaths due to waiting lists equals lawsuits which equals higher taxes. Who do you think pays the government settlement if familes sue due to wrongfull death. The Canadian taxpayers will pay. But alas, Canada is a country built on taxes, so it would simply be adding to the list....
Only the poorest people can qualify for medicaid, you even said so yourself. Lower to middle clase people who can't afford insurance will be left without any kind of coverage.