Peter St. Onge: Canadian health care: A warning, not a beacon
All Americans, regardless of political party, want access to timely, high-quality health care. The question is how to get there. Do we harness the power and innovation of the private sector, or do we hand it to the government and hope for the best?
Alas, Sanders's sanitized version of Canadian health care doesn't remotely fit the facts.
No more out-of-pocket expenses? In reality, Canadians' out-of-pocket health costs are nearly identical to what Americans pay -- a difference of roughly
Keep in mind these are only the beginning of the financial hit from "Medicare for All."
As a result, public health spending in
More serious than the financial burdens is what happens to quality of care in a government-run system.
The system also cuts corners by using older and cheaper drugs and skimping on modern equipment.
Predictably,
Seeing a specialist can take a shockingly long time. One doctor in
Canadians have found a way to escape the rationing, the long waits and substandard equipment. They go to the
Every year, more than 50,000 Canadians fly to get their surgeries here because they can get high-quality care and fast treatment at a reasonable price. They willingly pay cash for care that, for the vast majority of Americans, is covered by insurance, private or public.
Far from being a model of government-run health care,
In
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