Canadian Healthcare being super-duper? Realistically, more of a pooper - Granite Grok

Canadian Healthcare being super-duper? Realistically, more of a pooper

That’s all we’ve heard since Obamacare started the wind up to become legislation: “look at Canada’s medical system – it’s socialized!”.  Nitwits all – they kept on ignoring the more than anecdotal evidence that many Canadians came here for care (including a government Minister who took advantage of our cardiac expertise).  Thus, I’m not surprised by this (reformatted, emphasis mine):

A new survey of 11 developed countries shows that Canada was in last place for wait times (tied with Norway) and also scored quite poorly on the availability of doctors during nights and weekends. This means that Canadians have the highest rate of emergency room usage out of the 11 countries surveyed.

As it turns out, these numbers are actually an improvement since the last time the survey was conducted.

The survey found that only 43 per cent of Canadians were able to secure same-day or next-day appointments with their primary-care physicians, a tie for last place. Still, that figure was an improvement over the last time the Commonwealth Fund asked the question in 2013, when only 38 per cent of Canadian patients said they could see their doctors right away.

In top-performing Netherlands, 77 per cent of respondents reported snagging a same-day or next-day appointment the last time they were sick, followed by New Zealand (76 per cent) and Australia (67 per cent).

Only 34 per cent of Canadians said it was easy or somewhat easy to get medical care outside the emergency department on evening or weekends. Only Sweden fared worse.

Clearly, this isn’t a good thing. It’s a sign of how the actual care received by patients may be exemplary, that doesn’t exactly matter if there are no doctors available. This is not to say the U.S. system is perfect–it’s clearly not–but we still have access to some of the best doctors in the world without a long wait. Canada has considerably worse cancer survival rates than similar countries–it’s not too big of a stretch to say that earlier access to doctors would probably help fix this issue.

In the lead-up to the passage of the Affordable Care Act, there were many comparisons to our neighbor to the north’s healthcare system. But it’s important to remember that the grass often isn’t any greener on the other side.

We’ve seen the beginnings of that with Obamacare with wait times and curbed networks of doctors, hospitals, services, and medications.  Government restrictions (via law and regulations).  Which brings me to the question: why is Government rationing any better than what the Progressives have mantra’d for years that healthcare insurers have been rationing?

If I don’t like the insurer, I can get another one.  Does this mean we really get to use Article 10 and get another Government if we don’t like it?

Freedom.  Choice.  Thanks to the new administration, it is looking like WE will have both of those back again – in addition to not having $1300/month and $15,ooo deductibles (which for most middle class people makes healthcare unusable and they’ve become mere ATM machines for the Progressive wealth redistribution machine).

We dodged a bullet – if Hillary had won, we’d have been sunk.  Socialized medicine is a single payer system – all the love from the IRS and the efficiency of the DMV.
(H/T: Townhall)

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