The healthcare disaster in Canada

After more than a decade of public healthcare with mandatory coverage, so many Canadian doctors have left the practice and so many young people have entered other fields that Canada ranks 26th of 28 developed nations in its ratio of physicians to population. Once, Canada ranked among the leaders in the number of physicians — but that was before government healthcare drove doctors out of the practice in droves.

The fundamental fact is that we cannot cover 36 million new patients without more doctors and nurses, much less with the declining census of medical professionals the Canadian experience points to.

A recent survey of doctors by the Pew Institute found that 45 percent of all practicing doctors would consider retiring or closing their practices if the Barack Obama healthcare bill passes. This scarcity of medical personnel heightens the likelihood of draconian rationing, lengthy waiting lists and lower quality medical care for all of us, particularly for the elderly.

This physician shortage leads to massive and never-ending waiting lists. In 1993, for example, there was an average wait of 9.3 weeks from the time a patient got a referral from a general practitioner to the time he could see a specialist in Canada. By 1997, the wait was up to 11.7 weeks. Now it’s 17.3 weeks — over four months just to see a specialist.

In Canada, unions control the entire healthcare process. In Manitoba, for example, there is an eight-month wait for colonoscopies, yet the unions do not permit weekend or evening procedures, thereby extending the waiting lists.

The unions are doing to healthcare in Canada what they have done to education in America — stifling creativity, reinforcing bureaucracy and extending waiting times.

Because of these long waits for colonoscopies, there is now a 25 percent higher incidence of colon cancer in Canada than in the United States. And, because the leading drugs that we routinely use to treat the malady in the U.S. are banned in Canada because of their high cost, 41 percent of Canadians who get the cancer die of it, compared with only 32 percent in the United States. Overall, the cancer death rate in Canada runs 16 percent higher than in the United States. Cancer does not wait for waiting lists to clear.

The potential of healthcare changes to shrink the doctor population, exacerbating scarcity and extending waits, is even worse now that it is apparent that we have overestimated the number of doctors in the U.S. Where we once thought there were 840,000 doctors, the total is now estimated to be only 760,000.

The proposed $400 billion cut in Medicare raises the probability that more and more of those doctors who do practice will refuse to accept Medicare patients, aggravating the doctor shortage among the elderly, the population that needs them the most.

As Obama’s program moves through Congress, despite the fierce opposition of a majority of American voters in virtually all the polls, it becomes clear that those moderates who vote for it will face harsh retribution at the polls from their outraged constituents.

A kind of suicide-pact mentality is gripping the Democratic majorities in Congress, akin to that which came over it when Congress passed President Clinton’s tax package in 1993.

This disregard for the will of the marginal voter may make sense for those who come from safe districts — it makes none for those who come from swing districts. For them, suicidal conduct leads to political demise.

[Dick Morris, former political consultant and pollster, writes a nationally syndicated political column and provides commentary for Fox News.] COPYRIGHT 2009 DICK MORRIS AND EILEEN MCGANN; DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM

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suggarfoot's picture
Submitted by suggarfoot on Thu, 11/12/2009 - 6:56pm.

"Political consulting
As of August, 2009, Morris lends his name and assistance to the League of American Voters, a group targeting seniors to try to defeat the Obama health care reform. He has been described as America's most ruthless political consultant in the BBC documentary Century of the Self Episode 4,[17] which chronicled how he brought lifestyle marketing to politics for the first time. Morris told Clinton the way to winning was to throw out all ideology and treat politics as a consumer business—to target the swing voters and identify their personal desires and whims and then promise to fulfill them. (Century of the Self Part 4 ~36:00). Targeting the worries of the swing voters became all that mattered and issues such as the V-Chip were the issues that became relevant. American suburbanite voters were running America's domestic policy and some of its foreign policy in the 1990s as the Clinton administration developed their political stance and strategies based on popular opinion polls, for example, the bombing of Bosnia. (Century of the Self Part 4 ~41:00).

Why are the 90s dates all mentioned?...did anyone tell this bunch it is 2009..?

BIG BUCKS ON THE TABLE HERE GUYS...THEY ARE YOURS...LOOK WHAT PEOPLE ARE PAYING TO COME AFTER THEM AND CHEAT YOU!!!!!


The Wedge's picture
Submitted by The Wedge on Thu, 11/12/2009 - 10:26pm.

I see this way too often-- Advise - to give guidance, as an advisor
Advice - information that is deemed helpful in nature. Advise = verb; Advice = noun . Have a good day Smiling


suggarfoot's picture
Submitted by suggarfoot on Thu, 11/12/2009 - 7:06pm.

he didn't know we excisted till the health care/Omaba deal came on the scene.
Morris the lobbyist...ok thank you so much...why do I feel like meal time for the sharks?


bad_ptc's picture
Submitted by bad_ptc on Thu, 11/12/2009 - 8:07pm.

nowhere did you try and refute what the author wrote. You attacked the author and not the article.

So, can you refute any of what he wrote or are you just going to dodge the issue and pound on the table and hope no one notices?


S. Lindsey's picture
Submitted by S. Lindsey on Thu, 11/12/2009 - 10:43pm.

SF cannot.. That's her style.. Attack, Smear and RUN.. never arguing her points.. Just once I would love to pin her down where she would actually have to defend her point of view.. Oh well.. It would never happen.

"A Government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have." Thomas Jefferson


Submitted by ptc_golfer on Fri, 11/13/2009 - 2:24pm.

I worked with several 20-30 yr olds from Canada doing consulting work in the US and they love their system. On the other hand I have also worked with 50-60 yr old Canadian consultants and they hate their system. Seems a good system for the young and healthy, but not for the elderly. Looking at our rising age in population, does not seem like a good idea.

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