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Kafka's Nightmare (Canada's socialist healthcare system)
CFP ^ | December 16, 2004 | Klaus Rohrich

Posted on 12/16/2004 8:53:40 AM PST by MikeEdwards

Question: What do you call a line of people 495 km long, stretching from Trenton to Windsor?

Answer: Canadian health care.

Picture 815,000 people standing in line waiting for medical treatment. A war? A cataclysmic natural event? An epidemic? Yes, anywhere else one or more of these might be the case. However, in Canada it’s business-as-usual health care, yet our per capita expenditure on health care is third highest in the world. At $4,000 per man woman and child, I think we could buy just about everyone in Canada a private insurance policy that would cover all eventualities with little or no waiting for treatment.

More and more Canadians are beginning to take their health into their own hands, as clearly, public health care is collapsing under its own weight. Many are seeing private physicians outside the country, while a large number of Quebecers, including our own prime minister are purchasing medical care at local medical clinics. Many provincial governments have begun to de-list certain medical procedures, such as regular eye examinations, chiropractic and physiotherapy care and some dermatological procedures, to name a few, in efforts to control spiraling costs.

Do our politicians and those who insist our health care system is what defines us as Canadians realize that we are essentially defining ourselves nationally in terms of a failure? Why is it so important that our health care system, which has clearly arrived in hell in a badly battered hand basket, be kept as a publicly funded, government administrated, not for profit white elephant? We have heard all the arguments about "US style" health care and how our system is morally and fiscally superior to theirs. However, when the waiting lines for a medical procedure are longer than the bread lines in the former USSR. . . . .

(Excerpt) Read more at canadafreepress.com ...


TOPICS: Canada; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: canada; care; health; healthcare; medicine; socialist; socializedmedicine; system

1 posted on 12/16/2004 8:53:41 AM PST by MikeEdwards
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To: MikeEdwards

This article hits the nail right on the head. Government health care doesn't work, it destroys the market forces that provide the most efficient use of resources. Everyone in Canada could have a private health insurance policy for the price of the national program...but can't.


2 posted on 12/16/2004 9:03:31 AM PST by mak5
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To: mak5

God bless those who risked their careers in the senate to stop Hillary Care. With the passage of time it was predictable that the Canadian and European systems would collapse.


3 posted on 12/16/2004 9:08:07 AM PST by winner3000
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To: MikeEdwards

"Do our politicians and those who insist our health care system is what defines us as Canadians realize that we are essentially defining ourselves nationally in terms of a failure?"

Um, yes. We've been doing this for years: trumpeting the deterioration to the lowest common denominator of everything in this great country and calling it great success. These people are so out of it, they don't even know the damage they've done, and continue to do.


4 posted on 12/16/2004 9:11:10 AM PST by Conservative Canuck (The Voice of One Crying in the Wilderness)
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To: winner3000

We've got a ways to go before we roll back the US system to where it is really market driven.


5 posted on 12/16/2004 9:11:22 AM PST by Eric in the Ozarks
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To: MikeEdwards
Jim Robinson's Master List Of Articles To Be Excerpted.....





Kafka's Nightmare - Klaus Rohrich

Question: What do you call a line of people 495 km long, stretching from Trenton to Windsor?

Answer: Canadian health care.

Picture 815,000 people standing in line waiting for medical treatment. A war? A cataclysmic natural event? An epidemic? Yes, anywhere else one or more of these might be the case. However, in Canada it’s business-as-usual health care, yet our per capita expenditure on health care is third highest in the world. At $4,000 per man woman and child, I think we could buy just about everyone in Canada a private insurance policy that would cover all eventualities with little or no waiting for treatment.

More and more Canadians are beginning to take their health into their own hands, as clearly, public health care is collapsing under its own weight. Many are seeing private physicians outside the country, while a large number of Quebecers, including our own prime minister are purchasing medical care at local medical clinics. Many provincial governments have begun to de-list certain medical procedures, such as regular eye examinations, chiropractic and physiotherapy care and some dermatological procedures, to name a few, in efforts to control spiraling costs.

Do our politicians and those who insist our health care system is what defines us as Canadians realize that we are essentially defining ourselves nationally in terms of a failure? Why is it so important that our health care system, which has clearly arrived in hell in a badly battered hand basket, be kept as a publicly funded, government administrated, not for profit white elephant? We have heard all the arguments about "US style" health care and how our system is morally and fiscally superior to theirs. However, when the waiting lines for a medical procedure are longer than the bread lines in the former Soviet Union, it’s time to look at other options.

I recently had occasion to experience first-hand how private health care in Canada is so far superior to the public system that it defies comparison. Many clinics that offer self-pay medical procedures are starting to open throughout the country to take up the slack left by the public system. What an experience to call an eye clinic, get an appointment the next day and be scheduled for a procedure the day after that. In addition, the person making the appointment treats one with dignity and respect because they know that the patient is paying their salary. Why is it that the public system is incapable of delivering a similar seamless experience to their clients? Presumably they are being paid the same amount of money as those working in a private clinic. I think the difference is that in a private clinic the staff see patients as sources of revenue, whereas publicly funded clinics and hospitals see patients as a drain on their budgets.

There are American doctors advertising in Canada to disaffected Canadian patients tired of waiting an average of 3.5 months to receive treatment from a specialist.

It’s true that health care once made us famous. The Americans were envious of us as the government saw to all our boo-boos. The system worked much better when patients were asked to contribute a monetary stipend to their care and clearly Americans had cause to be envious. No more. Now it’s the other way around; we should be the ones that are envious, as all Americans are enjoying a much better standard of care than we are - even those who cannot afford to pay. I’m all in favour of privatized medical care. It’s an inevitability, which the government is unable to control. I say: the sooner, the better!
6 posted on 12/17/2004 7:29:18 AM PST by ConservativeStLouisGuy (11th FReeper Commandment: Thou Shalt Not Unnecessarily Excerpt)
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To: MikeEdwards

Good find on this article, by the way....I am finding all this to be true here in Canada (long lines)....I am from the US and have gotten an up-close look at the Canadian "healthcare" system....LOTS of room for improvement needed here....


7 posted on 12/17/2004 7:30:35 AM PST by ConservativeStLouisGuy (11th FReeper Commandment: Thou Shalt Not Unnecessarily Excerpt)
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To: MikeEdwards

The Ontario Liberals under Dalton McGuinty nationalized the few private hospitals and banned private care in the Province. Only way you can get care is from a friendly public hospital nearest you.


8 posted on 12/17/2004 7:32:11 AM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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