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by stubybubs
1074 days ago
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For breast cancer, we're talking 88.6% vs 85.8%. It's very much on par. We generally do better with lower socioeconomic status people as well. Another thing to consider is that we treat everyone. You don't have to consider of it's going to bankrupt your family before you engage in treatment. So we often treat people who are sicker and poorer because we don't have affluence as a selection mechanism for our patient population. |
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Sure, you can cherry-pick one family of cancers to make a point, but again: there's a whole series of studies that have been conducted on this exact question for the last 30+ years, tracking all common cancers, and which have consistently shown the same results: while Canada does not perform as badly (with respect to the US) on cancer survival rates as many other OECD countries do, Canada does still fall behind the US.
> Another thing to consider is that we treat everyone. You don't have to consider of it's going to bankrupt your family before you engage in treatment. So we often treat people who are sicker and poorer because we don't have affluence as a selection mechanism for our patient population.
Yes, and that actually works against your point: even though there people in the US who can't get treated because of cost barriers, the survival rates are still better in the US.
There are a lot of things to criticize about the US healthcare system. The survival rates of cancers are not one of them.