Duel of Fates wrote: Fly, I wonder though, when we asked you about Canadian Healthcare early on, you had no complaints about the system. (And I believe you answered honestly as far as you knew.) Now there are these news reports after the US has jammed this behemoth of a bill down the throats of the American citizens? Does anyone else find that timing to be a little hinky?[/color]
Actually, your memory needs a little refreshing. Every time that I've ever addressed this subject I always point out that I am very concerned about how healthcare is "rationed" here in Canada. Of course, it is "rationed" in the US system too.... In the US it is rationed based on whether you have money and/or insurance (i.e. ability to pay). In Canada, it is rationed based on limited services and how severe and curable your situation is.
I have been in Canada for about 7 or 8 years now and I still do not have a family doctor that will take me as a continuing patient. I had one briefly and then he "quit" all his patients and started up a walk-in clinic practice where they look after immediate needs but do not provide long-term care/relationship. I believe I have mentioned my neighbor (and older lady) that needed cataract surgery and was on the waiting list for nearly 2 years before she went "around the system" and got it done by paying out of their own pocket. Her situation was that she was on a waiting list that always had her scheduled for the surgery maybe a few months away.... But new patients with more severe conditions kept bumping her continually down the waiting list.
My co-worker who had torn cartilege in his knee. The doctor here (walk-in clinic I believe) told him something like take aspirin...you are old. He went to the US on a business trip for a week, saw the doctor on monday, surgery on wednesday, on a plane back to Canada on Saturday. Now, there are bad doctors in the US too... and that isn't the point of this story. The point is that even *IF* the doctor had suspected something more serious, he would have waited many many months before it was taken care of here. But he was fortunate enough to have US coverage too and got it down within a few days time.
Other co-worker walked around with torn ACL (anterior cruciate ligament) for over a year waiting for surgery to be scheduled. He didn't have torn cartilege that was giving him trouble so he just had a "weakened" knee joint that prevented him from physical activivity but still allowed him to walk...so his surgery wasn't urgent.... hence over a year wait time for the surgery.
Yet another co-worker that has his own consulting firm had knee issue (torn ACL again). He explained to me that he could wait ~ 12 months and do it normally through the system, or he could claim it was an occupational injury (or something like that) and use the fact that he was a business owner/self-employed and somehow hop in front of the line by paying for it out of his business expenses. I never pursued the exact details, not sure how "shady" it was or not..... but it was another example of the wonderful system at work here...
Now.... there are good aspects. Nearly everybody can get in to see a walk-in clinic if you have any sort of immediate need and the cost is covered by government run healtcare/insurance. So....if you only have mild things and are relatively healthy, it isn't a bad place to be. But.... if I ever get cancer or something major...I'll be on the first flight down to the US to get myself taken care of (I have insurance in both places).
Note that each of these stories are not just hearsay..... I personally know the name and situation of each person I've mentioned....