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Sabine Nolke's avatar

I am the beneficiary of universal healthcare in Canada. I've had a bone tumour removed, a c-section, four joint replacements, multiple MRI and CT scans, and several minor surgeries. The most I ever spent on any of those things was $10 in parking fees and once, $15 for a bedside TV. Yes, the Canadian system brings wait times - if/if your treatment is not an emergency. The time I presented with stroke-consistent symptoms I was inside an MRI drum within 15 minutes and my husband, who is on blood thinners, has been admitted for potentially life-threatening nosebleeds (!),

The reason the US system is so much more expensive is that an enormous percentage of the money spent on it does not go to health outcomes, but instead funds shareholder profits, corporate infrastructure, brokers/middlemen, and adjuster salaries. None of these are necessary in a taxpayer funded system. We do have assessors in Canada, but only for instances where treatments are hugely expensive or to determine whether otherwise elective surgery is justifiable and necessary, e.g. for mental health or other reasons. Systemic efficiencies are gained through prevention, including fully funded vaccination programs (Covid, flu shots), education, and post-operative rehab (which I had for my knee and hip replacements).

The reason for US reticence to go "universal" is industry lobbying and the weaponized language Republicans deploy whenever an initiative threatens to benefit society at large: "SoCiALiZeD mEDiCine!!!" You are collectively being had.

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M Gazelle's avatar

Well said! I am in total agreement with everything you said. The want to either keep us sick for profit or have us die because we cost too much. What is wrong with these people where enough is never enough?

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