RE: Man Uses $1m Win To Finally Visit Doctor, Gets Terminal Cancer Diagnosis, Dies
February 4, 2018 at 5:49 pm
(February 4, 2018 at 5:38 pm)Tizheruk Wrote: Both Canada and the US ration health care
http://evidencenetwork.ca/how-healthcare...ed-states/
[url= https://www.susanrosenthal.com/articles/...-rationing[/url]
Yes, of course they do. With modern technology, no country could afford all possible health care for every single person.
Quote:All your bullshit myths refuted
https://www.aarp.org/politics-society/go...-care.html
Uses 15-year-old data: "Source: “,” Health Affairs, May 2002."
https://www.denverpost.com/2009/06/04/de...are-myths/
This one is from 2009, and is one person's opinion without references to any facts.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/fact...e6af4e8446
Per this one: "But when it came to specialists, 29 percent of adults waited two months or longer, compared with 6 percent in the United States. In Canada, 18 percent of adults waited four months or longer for an elective surgery, compared with 7 percent in the United States." You should really read further than the headline.
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/michelle-co..._23290639/
Per this one: "The true ideological problem of Canadian health care is our fondness for pretending we don't already have a two-tier system. Data on health outcomes indicates that people wealthy enough to live in, or drive to, the city have much better access to health care than those who don't. With the continued dismantling of rural hospitals and concentration of services in urban centres, this slippery slope of a trend will likely continue."
Do we need to continue?