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in article , Scott Weiser at
wrote on 3/26/05 3:09 PM: A Usenet persona calling itself KMAN wrote: in article , Michael Daly at wrote on 3/25/05 9:36 PM: On 25-Mar-2005, Scott Weiser wrote: HOSPITALIZATION and SURGERY. It does not, by law. Which law? Provide proof. The supplemental policies _do_ provide for hospitalization and surgery. It is you who is too ignorant to accept the truth. Mike What's he trying to say Mike? That we can't have health insurance? Or that it can't be used for hospital care? Neither. I'm saying that no amount of health care insurance in Canada will get you into a hospital or surgical suite ahead of anyone higher on the priority list than you. That it may cover all sorts of things that Canada's socialized medical system doesn't cover is beside the point. If you cannot use your insurance to guarantee you a room or surgery when YOU need it, not when the government decides to provide it to you, it's nothing more than palliative and gives you nothing more than a few perks in the hospital, provided you don't die waiting to be admitted. If you are saying that supplemental health care insurance in Canada won't allow me to skip ahead of some other person in the emergency room, that is quite true. My old medical insurance provided that I could go to any hospital in the world and get immediate treatment, including admission and surgery as necessary, without any delay, without any permission from anybody, and it would pay the bills. You only get to go into the hospital if some government bureaucrat decides you "need" to do so You don't have a clue. I can go to the hospital right now and see a doctor. But it would make more sense to go to one of the nice GP clinics unless it's a serious emergency. and you "need" to do so more urgently than somebody else. Well, yeah, like any hospital, there are only so many doctors on duty. If a busload of kids crashes and they are coming in with burns and severed limbs and I am there with my sprained ankle, you are right, I will probably have to wait. If they don't think you "need" to be admitted, or if they don't have room, you're ****ed, and you have to come to the US and pay the full price for your care. Having lived here for 30+ years I have yet to meet one person where this has ever happened. I have read about a small number of cases where people have sought specialized treatment in the US. Have you ever been to Canada? If so, where? Did you ever visit a doctor's office, clinic, or hospital? Most people here have a family doctor that they see regularly. I have one. His office has an after hours service as well. If it is regular business hours, I can get an appointment with him pretty much whenever I want one. If it is after hours, I can see one of the other doctors that he shares his practice with for after hours care. About two blocks from his office is a nice hospital, where I have been, and friends and family have been, for everything from what turned out to be stomach flu to one of my best friends that had cancer (with the help of many fine doctors he beat it). |
in article , BCITORGB
at wrote on 3/26/05 3:19 PM: KMAN: ============= I was quite surprised to find more slightly more smokers in Canada. I bet a lot of Canadians would be surprised by that, although I remember encountering "smoke free" shopping malls in areas of the US long before most places in Canada caught on. I know the gap is only 2% but it still surprised me. =============== I too was surprised by that stat. Interestingly (my anecdotal observation only), the further east one travels in Canada, the more one is likely to encounter smoking. Here on the left coast, smokers are definitely an anomaly. Wilf Yes, but there is more spandex. |
rick reckons:
============== By the way you've been reasoning that means making sure that everyone again waits weeks, months, years for teatment. ==================== Not at all. How do you figure that? rick again: =================== If you were aware of the exceptions, then why have you been arguing like there were none? =============== Where did you see me arguing as though there were none? Everyone (in BC anyway, if they follow media reports) is aware of the WCB exemptions, and many are opposed to it. As I said: a flaw, so let's fix it. frtzw906 |
rick reports:
============ Despite the jingoistic spewing of others, here is a ase of a man, not a teen, waiting for new knees. 2 1/2 years. It's so bad that it is now bone on bone and his pain meds have been upped to morphine. http://www.pentictonherald.ca/?nopic...ate=2004/09/15 This guy isn't willing to wait. Why would you support that he has to? ================ rick, that's an interesting article that presents us with a number of factors to consider. First of all, we're not exactly talking an urban setting here. Penticton is a small town which has only one orthopedic surgeon. THIS surgeon's waiting list is 290-plus. Further, let's examine why there might be that many on the waiting list. Penticton is not only an orchard/vineyard agricultural center, but it is also a preferred retirement center for many Canadians. Hence, there are a great many older, retired folk in this community. Net result: high demand for joint replacements. I suspect the man in question, in this article, could get referred to orthopedic surgeons in other centers (perhaps Vancouver) where there are likely to be more orthopedic surgeons (greater supply, hence less waiting). The guy in question, however, is unwilling to shut down his business for a few days to have the procedure done elsewhere. At this point, I take a Scott Weiser approach to him: "Tough ****!" I think it unrealistic, living in a nation as sparsely populatd as Canada, to expect every medical convenience in every nook and cranny of this huge nation. For purposes of efficiency and economies, some services (medical and otherwise) are only going to be available in major centers. This guy bemoans the fact that shutting down his business, to have the surgery done elsewhere, will cost him $220/day. Hey, I live in an urban center, and just on house values alone I'll bet I spend $400-$500 more per month on my mortgage than he does. The Weiser sapproach again: "Suck it up buddy, and take a trip to Vancouver and get your surgery done." An interesting quote: "Binfet said it would cost $45,000 US to have the surgery done in Bellingham, Wash., and that's for one knee only. "I can't afford it," he said." Hey the guy needs two knees done. That's $90,000. He can't afford it. The bottom line is, I thinks there's much more to the story than just the headline. Interesting, nonetheless. frtzw906 |
rick:
============== http://www.ices.on.ca/file/14_CVA_Chapter12.pdf . ================= Thanks also for this very informative source: Some key points: Urgent Coronary By-pass surgery done almost immediately... semi-urgent had a wait of about 5 days... elective about 55 days... that doesn't seem bad to me... Waiting List Mortality for Cardiac Surgery in Ontario: 0.5 percent (I have no idea how that compares with stats around the world - it's cardiac surgery, i guess there'll always be people dying...) Perhaps there are medical professionals out there who could answer: should the people of Ontario be concerned by those numbers? frtzw906 |
KMAN commenting on less smoking on the Left Coast:
=============== Yes, but there is more spandex. ================= True, but also more people who can actually wear the stuff and look good doing so. That would, however, not include me GRIN. Make mine a double latte, eh. Wilf |
On 26-Mar-2005, Scott Weiser wrote:
She's credible. You aren't. Just because you believe anything you read doesn't make the writer credible. Canadian health care statutes and policy guide. Be specific. Otherwise, we'll know you're just bull****ting again. Mike |
On 26-Mar-2005, "rick" wrote: They do get to step out of line and go to private surgical clinics instead o waiting like the rest o the minions... This is bull**** as well. There are a lot of folks that can go to private clinics and avoid lines. The health care ministers pretend that this doesn't happen. Mike |
On 26-Mar-2005, Scott Weiser wrote: No, your doctor recommends that you be admitted. The government determines where you fall on the priority list. Bull****. No government agency sets the priorities. Yup. While at the same time, teenagers who need knee surgery have to wait three years. Prove it. Oh, they're there, you just don't see them. They work behind the scenes prioritizing patients and sending letters to people telling them to wait, and apologizing if they die in the process Paranoid fantasies on your part. Not if you're not critical they don't. Bull**** again. You make this up as you go along. Mike |
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