Socialized healthcare, again
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Socialized healthcare, again
In a discussion about socialized healthcare this guy started spouting horror stories about the canadian systems and gave these following links.
http://www.angelfire.com/pa/sergeman/is ... /wait.html
http://www.liberty-page.com/issues/heal ... anage.html
http://www.liberty-page.com/issues/heal ... first.html
Does anyone have any more info on this and their reliability? I mean here we got all the horror stories. Long waiting lines, people being turned away for being to old and so on. Any truth to these or are they being severely misrepresented?
http://www.angelfire.com/pa/sergeman/is ... /wait.html
http://www.liberty-page.com/issues/heal ... anage.html
http://www.liberty-page.com/issues/heal ... first.html
Does anyone have any more info on this and their reliability? I mean here we got all the horror stories. Long waiting lines, people being turned away for being to old and so on. Any truth to these or are they being severely misrepresented?
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My suggestion would be to look at the broader picture. These are individualised cases and not neccessarioly representative of the whole of the system. Look for some horror stories of the private system, I daresay there are a few.
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EBC - "What? What?" "Tally Ho!" Division
I wrote this:The British Avengers fanfiction
"Yeah, funny how that works - you giving hungry people food they vote for you. You give homeless people shelter they vote for you. You give the unemployed a job they vote for you.
Maybe if the conservative ideology put a roof overhead, food on the table, and employed the downtrodden the poor folk would be all for it, too". - Broomstick
The individual stories might be correct, but you have to wonder how much of this is just people complaining because they *think* they're not treated fast enough. IIRC the MRI scan waiting list only exists for elective cases; if you need the scan quickly you're bumped up. Can't quote a source, this just came up in a previous discussion on another board.Does anyone have any more info on this and their reliability?
I'd also be wary of only using pages from something called "The Freedom Page"
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According to the article, Canada actively discourages a private health system. In Australia we allow both, if you can't be bothered waiting for the public system, then go to a private one if you are willing to pay. Otherwise you will get seen based on urgency.
Unfortunately when the number of patients is high relative to the number of medical staff, there is going to be a wait.
That being said, I find it strange that someone needed to wait 3 months for an electrocardiogram. Its a pretty straight forward test. I suspect there is a bit more than that, (? maybe its an exercise stress test which involves more than just the ECG) but I can't tell from the article.
Another thing is, how a family doctor refuses to see a patient because of age. I fail to see how that is related to socialised medicine, since a private doctor could likewise reject them as well on the same grounds (ie his reason was he was trying to make room for young families moving into the community).
Unfortunately when the number of patients is high relative to the number of medical staff, there is going to be a wait.
That being said, I find it strange that someone needed to wait 3 months for an electrocardiogram. Its a pretty straight forward test. I suspect there is a bit more than that, (? maybe its an exercise stress test which involves more than just the ECG) but I can't tell from the article.
Another thing is, how a family doctor refuses to see a patient because of age. I fail to see how that is related to socialised medicine, since a private doctor could likewise reject them as well on the same grounds (ie his reason was he was trying to make room for young families moving into the community).
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I live in a city filled with aging, frail people, few young and healthy people, where almost all of our doctors seem to have immigrated from South Africa here. Not the best situation for health-care, you would think.
But both last year and this year, when I needed surgery on my right arm, I had it within four days.
My grandfather had only been a poor farmer in his life, but he had constant care throughout his last 2 years struggling with brain cancer from helpful doctors.
Public health care kicks ass.
But both last year and this year, when I needed surgery on my right arm, I had it within four days.
My grandfather had only been a poor farmer in his life, but he had constant care throughout his last 2 years struggling with brain cancer from helpful doctors.
Public health care kicks ass.
I agree, I've got a relative who works as an ECG technician. I do know ECGs are often used for mental patients, as a simple litmas test since it is so damn cheap and quick.mr friendly guy wrote:That being said, I find it strange that someone needed to wait 3 months for an electrocardiogram. Its a pretty straight forward test. I suspect there is a bit more than that, (? maybe its an exercise stress test which involves more than just the ECG) but I can't tell from the article.
For someone who has an ongoing mental disorder who isnt life threatening or a periodic checkup, I could easily see multi-month long wait.
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Yeah, in AU the public system provides competition and lowers the cost of private care. That's my theory on why private care here doesn't cost the massive piles of money it does in the US - literally anyone, even people on welfare, can afford private cover if they're careful.
The wait on some things can be long - or so I hear from tabloid news services - but it's free. Who cares? It's better than the 'lolz you go into massive debt now' system in the US.
The wait on some things can be long - or so I hear from tabloid news services - but it's free. Who cares? It's better than the 'lolz you go into massive debt now' system in the US.
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I heard someone say recently that the opposite is better - that bankruptcy is a small price to pay for being healthy.Stark wrote:The wait on some things can be long - or so I hear from tabloid news services - but it's free. Who cares? It's better than the 'lolz you go into massive debt now' system in the US.
Don't be obtuse. Serious cases are rushed: people from car accidents aren't put in a months long waiting line. Further, those car accident victims won't have to pay tens of thousands of dollars for lifesaving surgery.
And thanks for ignoring the 'trivial to get private health care due to public competition' thrust of my post.
And thanks for ignoring the 'trivial to get private health care due to public competition' thrust of my post.
Elective just means that the problem is not immediately life threatening and they can schedule it for another day, not that it's some minor thing. Cataract surgery is considered "elective", IIRC.Bounty wrote:The individual stories might be correct, but you have to wonder how much of this is just people complaining because they *think* they're not treated fast enough. IIRC the MRI scan waiting list only exists for elective cases; if you need the scan quickly you're bumped up. Can't quote a source, this just came up in a previous discussion on another board.Does anyone have any more info on this and their reliability?
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Yeah, when compared to not paying anything and not being healthy. Such a thing doesn't apply to socialised health systems since the cost is minimal and you are still healthy. The only drawback is the wait for non-emergency cases.Natorgator wrote:I heard someone say recently that the opposite is better - that bankruptcy is a small price to pay for being healthy.Stark wrote:The wait on some things can be long - or so I hear from tabloid news services - but it's free. Who cares? It's better than the 'lolz you go into massive debt now' system in the US.
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Countries I have been to - 14.
Australia, Canada, China, Colombia, Denmark, Ecuador, Finland, Germany, Malaysia, Netherlands, Norway, Singapore, Sweden, USA.
Always on the lookout for more nice places to visit.
Countries I have been to - 14.
Australia, Canada, China, Colombia, Denmark, Ecuador, Finland, Germany, Malaysia, Netherlands, Norway, Singapore, Sweden, USA.
Always on the lookout for more nice places to visit.
And in some instances - childbirth for instance - the public health system offers a wider range of services. It might be more comfortable giving birth in a private hospital, but if something really screws up, you want to be in a public hospital, because they're the ones that'll be equipped for these low-probability occurences.
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He's obviously an idiot.Natorgator wrote:I heard someone say recently that the opposite is better - that bankruptcy is a small price to pay for being healthy.Stark wrote:The wait on some things can be long - or so I hear from tabloid news services - but it's free. Who cares? It's better than the 'lolz you go into massive debt now' system in the US.
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—Abraham Lincoln
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Oil an emergency?! It's about time, Brigadier, that the leaders of this planet of yours realised that to remain dependent upon a mineral slime simply doesn't make sense.
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