S
SoCalRC
Guest
Actually, this is a very good point. For all the rhetoric, Canada’s health care system is poorly understood. It is not nationalized health care, it is basically 10 national health insurance plans.Contrary to popular belief health insurance is affordable.
It may not be great coverage but catastrophic insurance is affordable.
When faced with $1800 Cobra payment, I got coverage for my two children for $ 240.00 per month. It came with a $ 6250 deductable then 100% coverage.
The idea of the co-payment is what makes insurance unaffordable. When Molly gets a sniffle just give the Dr. his $85 and go home. If she goes deathly ill it’ll cost you $6250.![]()
Doctors are still private businesses and the system does not even use HMO type care approval mechanisms. The system has problems, but most can be traced to a few factors. First, by our standards, the risk pools are very small. It is essentially like a single western US state dividing up into 10 county run health systems. So planning can be difficult. For example, it takes 10 years or so to fully train some radiation specialists, so two Canadian provinces mis planned themselves into a shortage. Second, downsizing is difficult to undue. In the 90’s Canada had it’s own binge of massive tax cuts and deficit spending (with massive health system cuts to offset) so a fair number of health care professionals left. Like radiation experts, these are holes that take a long time to fill - and the cuts themselves discourage a relatively small population from starting the career path to begin with.
But, for all its problems, we have to look at the results. For the simple overhaul of using a group insurance model, with universal coverage in lieu of the normal private profit, Canada manages to rank 6-10 spots higher then us on all rankings of health care systems - all while spending a fraction of what we do.
On a different note - don’t just consider the deductible, you can ultimately go up to the total ‘out of pocket’, which I suspect is significantly higher. In addition, insurers can also just deny service as ‘experimental’ (or whatever). Sure, you can fight it, but if, God forbid, your child needs a $250,000 operation, chances are good that an insurance company can drag out a legal battle until the expenditure itself becomes moot.
We just saw the poor girl with the liver transplant, but the staff at St. Joseph’s here in Burbank has protested insurance company decisions quite a few times. As a speaker at a fundraiser my wife and I attended for Children’s in Los Angeles noted just before start of Advent, “Anyone who thinks we are not already rationing health care in this country is dreaming.”