|
|
|
|
|
by refurb
2718 days ago
|
|
This is correct. Canada's single payer system means doctors can't work in both the public and private systems. They have to choose one over the other. There has been plenty of efforts put into allowing private clinics outside of the public system, but they have all been shutdown. |
|
On the other hand, one thing that is usually ignored about Canadian healthcare when it's discussed in US, is the fact that it's run by provinces. Feds are involved, and most federal money that goes to healthcare comes with strings attached wrt how the resulting healthcare system should look; but ultimately the decision of how (and whether) to run healthcare is down to provinces.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada_Health_Act#History:_Fed...
Furthermore, that system didn't come up all at once - a single province tried it first, and it had proven popular enough that other provinces gradually adopted it. Once it was sufficiently widespread, the federal government stepped in.
Given that federalism in US is more developed than in Canada, I don't understand why this isn't the approach advocated by most adherents here. If Saskatchewan could organize healthcare all by itself back in the day, surely so can California, New York etc.