Willard wrote:
Well, since Americans now have the privilege of dying of cancer while waiting on a government health care list just like Canadians, we'll be needing our guns to end our misery.
Oh,
that old piece of ill-informed propaganda.
Last time I checked, there was nothing in US health care reform about rationing services. Come to that, last time I checked, there was no rationing of services in this country, either. It must be understood that the public sector offers no health services in this country (other that limited services to the Armed Forces, Public Service, Penitentiary inmates and Aboriginal people). The public sector is a single source purchaser of services from private sector service providers (hospitals, clinics, physicians, nurses, and other professionals). Since the public sector is only purchasing these services, not providing them, the public sector is in no position to dictate who gets treated when--that is a medical decision taken by the service provider.
Now, that being said, supply and demand for services do create pressures, but these are not issues of government control of access, but rather private service providers managing the demand for their services, the time available to provide services and the medical necessity of their patients. Meanwhile, provincial governments are being confronted with the political and legal challenges posed by wait times, and are making some headway in adding the infrastructure necessary to meet the service demand. It is by no means perfect, but it is hardly the circumstance that you describe.
As for cancer, given that our cancer mortality rates are lower than the US (148.2 vs. 160.5 per 100,000 for women, and 215.1 vs. 234.1 per 100,000 for men), perhaps our oncology services are just as good as yours. Our incidence rates are also lower, but I will grant you that while some of that may also be attributable to differing approaches to detection, which makes the mortality statistic the much more reliable evaluator of health services delivery with respect to cancer.
Oh, and our mortality rate from firearms: 4.78 per 100,000, as opposed to 11.66 per 100,000 in the US. (While your overall rate is a little over double ours, your firearms homicide rate is almost five times ours, which suicide and unintentional mortality are only about double our rate). Perhaps if your ERs weren't so busy with gunshot wounds you might be able to close that cancer gap.
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--James