Nationalized Health Care In Canada

| | Comments (0) | TrackBacks (0)

The Wall Street Journal has an article this morning about the success of Canadian Health Care.  Canada is a relatively wealthy county similar to the United States in many ways, so we should be able to learn from their experiences with nationalized health care.  Here are a few from the article:

"In Ontario, Lindsay McCreith was suffering from headaches and seizures yet faced a four and a half month wait for an MRI scan in January of 2006. Deciding that the wait was untenable, Mr. McCreith did what a lot of Canadians do: He went south, and paid for an MRI scan across the border in Buffalo. The MRI revealed a malignant brain tumor.

Ontario's government system still refused to provide timely treatment, offering instead a months-long wait for surgery. In the end, Mr. McCreith returned to Buffalo and paid for surgery that may have saved his life.

Shona Holmes, another Ontario court challenger, endured a similarly harrowing struggle. In March of 2005, Ms. Holmes began losing her vision and experienced headaches, anxiety attacks, extreme fatigue and weight gain. Despite an MRI scan showing a brain tumor, Ms. Holmes was told she would have to wait months to see a specialist. In June, her vision deteriorating rapidly, Ms. Holmes went to the Mayo Clinic in Arizona, where she found that immediate surgery was required to prevent permanent vision loss and potentially death. Again, the government system in Ontario required more appointments and more tests along with more wait times. Ms. Holmes returned to the Mayo Clinic and paid for her surgery.

On the other side of the country in Alberta, Bill Murray waited in pain for more than a year to see a specialist for his arthritic hip. The specialist recommended a "Birmingham" hip resurfacing surgery (a state-of-the-art procedure that gives better results than basic hip replacement) as the best medical option. But government bureaucrats determined that Mr. Murray, who was 57, was "too old" to enjoy the benefits of this procedure and said no. In the end, he was also denied the opportunity to pay for the procedure himself in Alberta."

Read the entire article to see how routine doctor's visits are handled.  It's not a good system.  Nationalized health care may give us cheaper health care, but the above examples are not rules I want to live with.  Any senior citizen who supports nationalized health care needs to realize that it will be rationed and a senior citizen's chances of getting the care he needs will diminish as he gets older.  The system we have now is far from perfect, but the Canadian (and British) systems are even worse.

0 TrackBacks

Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: Nationalized Health Care In Canada.

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://www.rightwinggranny.com/mt/mt-tb.cgi/519

Leave a comment

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Granny G published on February 9, 2009 4:32 AM.

Do You Have The Right To Protect Your Property? was the previous entry in this blog.

Government Spending And Unemployment is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.