D'rok
Free Barbarian on The Land
- Joined
- Dec 29, 2006
- Messages
- 6,399
For perspective, here are some personal anecdotes about wait times in the Canadian system. Take them for what they are worth:
Wait times are a problem, but don't draw the wrong conclusions from the numbers. Wait lists are priority lists. If you are waiting for an MRI for the knee that you sprained in your beer league game last weekend, you may wait a while. (This very situation exists in a team I play on). But, If you are a cancer patient, you will be bumped up the queue ahead of the weekend warrior with the knee problem.
I lost my grandmother (mother's side) and mother to breast cancer. Both went through all the stages of treatment in the Canadian system - lumpectomy, radiation, chemo, masectomy, bone marrow transplant etc. Their lives were extended for years by the treatment they received. At no time where they forced to wait unreasonable amounts of time for service or to see a specialist.
I have a father-in-law who is a dialysis patient and is currently hospitalized with the latest in a series of serious health problems related to his illness. He has had to undergo several serious operations for which he did not have to wait.
In the Canadian system, anecdotally from my experience, if you need treatment you will get treatment. If you can wait, you probably will.
And no...you will not have to wait in the emergency room if you have a broken neck. Get real.
Wait times are real and can be very frustrating. Perhaps even people with serious conditions slip through the cracks now and again. Various governments have been promising to fix the situation for some time now with no results. A previous government created the problem in the first place by slashing health care transfer payments to the provinces. (Health care is managed provincially and funded jointly).
Here's an anecdote from the American system:
I spent a summer in Ketchikan Alaska many years ago. While I was there, a rockslide destroyed a local beauty salon crushing the owner's legs in the process. She was uninsured, so she was struck by fate (boulder) and bankruptcy at the same time. I was repeatedly called a communist by the locals for being appalled by the situation.
Anecdotes, anecdotes....but still...give me an imperfect public system over an unjust private system any day.
Wait times are a problem, but don't draw the wrong conclusions from the numbers. Wait lists are priority lists. If you are waiting for an MRI for the knee that you sprained in your beer league game last weekend, you may wait a while. (This very situation exists in a team I play on). But, If you are a cancer patient, you will be bumped up the queue ahead of the weekend warrior with the knee problem.
I lost my grandmother (mother's side) and mother to breast cancer. Both went through all the stages of treatment in the Canadian system - lumpectomy, radiation, chemo, masectomy, bone marrow transplant etc. Their lives were extended for years by the treatment they received. At no time where they forced to wait unreasonable amounts of time for service or to see a specialist.
I have a father-in-law who is a dialysis patient and is currently hospitalized with the latest in a series of serious health problems related to his illness. He has had to undergo several serious operations for which he did not have to wait.
In the Canadian system, anecdotally from my experience, if you need treatment you will get treatment. If you can wait, you probably will.
And no...you will not have to wait in the emergency room if you have a broken neck. Get real.
Wait times are real and can be very frustrating. Perhaps even people with serious conditions slip through the cracks now and again. Various governments have been promising to fix the situation for some time now with no results. A previous government created the problem in the first place by slashing health care transfer payments to the provinces. (Health care is managed provincially and funded jointly).
Here's an anecdote from the American system:
I spent a summer in Ketchikan Alaska many years ago. While I was there, a rockslide destroyed a local beauty salon crushing the owner's legs in the process. She was uninsured, so she was struck by fate (boulder) and bankruptcy at the same time. I was repeatedly called a communist by the locals for being appalled by the situation.
Anecdotes, anecdotes....but still...give me an imperfect public system over an unjust private system any day.