01-04-2007, 11:45 AM | #1 | |
for all seasons
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Health Care
It's just a thread-happy day for me, innit?
Anyway: Health Care Problem? Check the American Psyche By ANNA BERNASEK Quote:
But aside from that the article is rather spot on with the numbers, and what I find particularly salient is that if you extrapolate from the data provided, not only does the US as a whole expend more on health care per capita, the US Government spends more on health care than do governments with state-operated systems.
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01-05-2007, 05:31 PM | #2 | |
I do the numbers.
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Saskatoon
Posts: 5,260
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I think the writer of the article is perhaps a bit optimistic about the state of Canadian health care.
I mean, you do still need to get health insurance. There's also quite long waits in hospitals for any kind of treatment, and in Calgary especially there's a horrible shortage of doctors and hospital rooms.
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Quote:
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01-05-2007, 06:07 PM | #3 |
wat
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 7,177
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It's important not to overestimate AND underestimate the Canadian health care system. It's not universal or perfect, no, but it's certainly excellent. I do hear about overwork in the medical profession in general, lack of hospital beds (not so much lately?) and lack of doctors/nurses in Ontario and the Maritimes too, but is it exclusively a Canadian problem? Well, someone non-Canadian give me an answer!
I mean, I'm Canadian and I don't have health care insurance. It's good to have if you plan on (cough cough) contracting some of the major things that aren't covered by our health care (about half of the medication my grandparents require isn't covered). And to get it out of the way in case someone makes the mistake later on in the thread, it's not "free" in Canada either. We pay for it like everything else. Money doesn't come from nowhere (though the article does point out that due to our organization, we at least appear to be paying less on the bottom line for roughly the same treatment). |
01-06-2007, 12:02 AM | #4 |
In need of a vacation
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I think that with waiting lines the numbers you churn out aren't quite on the up and up, sure you may spend less but how many people are on waits and not recieving benefits where in the US you pay out the ass but can get the service when you need it. Demand influences supply in the free market (privatized health care) where as a shortage occurs when governments insert a price ceiling. Either way the government would screw you just as much if not more than private providers (see: corrupt gov't). The main thing that I can see as a big advantage would be none of the out of network crap (yeah I have a 17k bill for a totally approved proceedure that I payed my deductable on). More government influence and control strikes me as really scary in light of how things are going lately.
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01-06-2007, 01:21 AM | #5 | |
helloooo!
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Quote:
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noooo! why are you doing that?! |
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01-06-2007, 06:47 AM | #6 |
We are Geth.
Join Date: Nov 2003
Posts: 14,032
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Isn't it hilariously ironic how we have the funds and capabilities and will to go to another country and fix what they have that's broken, but we're not willing to glean a few ideas from a country that we're physically connected to?
I'd be laughing if I wasn't so frustrated. But I frequently get that way about politics.
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