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by arcticbull
1476 days ago
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Canada has substantially the same health outcomes, or better, than the US. This is simply not true. I'm also Canadian, and have lived under both systems. My father fell off a ladder and had a pretty severe head injury, and had both an MRI and a CT scan within a half hour, at no cost. Yes, lower-priority conditions may have to wait, but it's also by definition because they're lower priority - and they'll have to wait in America too. The idea that the Canadian healthcare system is somehow leaving people to wait and die in a way the American system is not, is a falsehood propagated by major American insurers and their lobbying group AHIP. Here's a Cigna executive apologizing for doing just that. [1] [1] https://www.npr.org/2020/06/27/884307565/after-pushing-lies-... |
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> because of having the kind of health care system you have in making sure that everyone who needs to be treated is treated
That's completely false, Canada has a presupplied quota system set by government forecasting and limited by budgets. If you need treatment you will be treated eventually but you might die or get sicker in the interim.
Using a COVID-19 based article to discuss the merits of single payer single provider completely ignores the massive cultural mentality differences -- the US focuses on individual freedoms, Canada focuses on collective good. This makes a big difference when it comes to adherence things like social distancing and masks. They're taking a multivariate system and claiming it's a single variable that caused the outcome.
Edit: and I might add that it appears that Canada is always intentionally undersupplied such that a moderate wait is guaranteed. Whereas it seems that due to market competition the US system is inherently oversupplied (at least in many areas) such that they can provide to those who can pay essentially on demand.