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TOPIC: "Would you rather get sick in Canada or the U.S.? " (TheGlobeAndMail.com, 5/18/10)


Diamond

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"Would you rather get sick in Canada or the U.S.? " (TheGlobeAndMail.com, 5/18/10)
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Good article here at TheGlobeAndMail.com

Would you rather get sick in Canada or the U.S.?



Excerpt:

Cost: The American system will cost you more any way you “slice it.” For a Canadian to travel south for knee or hip replacement surgery, it would cost upward of $70,000. The actual cost incurred by a U.S. hospital for that hip replacement is approximately $12,000, compared to $6,000 in Canada. Accordingly, per-capita spending for health care in Canada was $3,678 compared to $6,714 in the United States, as of 2006.

Waiting times: While it will cost you more, you won’t wait as long. According to a 2007 Commonwealth Fund study, 42 per cent of Canadians had waited two hours or more in the emergency room during a visit in the previous two years, versus 29 per cent in the United States. And 57 per cent had waited four weeks or more to see a specialist, versus 23 per cent in the United States.

For that $70,000 knee replacement, recent Canadian statistics show that depending on the province, the median presurgery waiting time ranges from 112 to 291 days. In the United States, it can be a matter of days. U.S. patients have the second-shortest wait for specialists worldwide. As for more general consultations, the median wait time to see a specialist physician in Canada is a little over four weeks. A 2009 study found that the average wait to see a specialist in the United States is 20.5 days. Long waits are also more likely in Canada, with 27 per cent of patients waiting more than four months for elective surgery, compared to just 5 per cent in the United States.

Survivability: Where are you safer? Canada has lower rates of unadjusted in-hospital mortality (1.4 per cent versus 2.2 per cent in the United States). If you are over 65, the United States has slightly higher surgery mortality rates. If you have colorectal cancer or childhood leukemia, or are getting a kidney or liver transplant, you chances are better in the United States, but if you have breast cancer, you are better off in Canada.

Infections: Hospital-acquired infections are a major problem in both countries, and have recently risen significantly in recent years. While there are few comparative studies, rates of drug-resistant Staphylococcus, a leading killer, are higher in Canada, were there are 5.2 cases per 1,000 hospital admissions, versus 3.95 in the United States.

Satisfaction: Will you be happy with your care? It’s more likely in Canada. An OECD study found that more Canadians were satisfied with their health system than Americans, and another showed that 44 per cent of U.S. citizens were “not very” or “not at all” satisfied with their system, compared to 36 per cent of Canadian citizens.

Continues at TheGlobeAndMail.com

Reader comments at that link are also worth reading - very informative.

-- Edited by Sanders on Tuesday 18th of May 2010 07:23:24 PM

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Moderator

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Lots of food for though from that article.

I'm figuring that if I live a few more years, the "let the old folks die!' policy will kick in, and I won't have to worry about getting medical care, regardless.

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It was we, the people; not we, the white male citizens; nor yet we, the male citizens; but we, the whole people, who formed the Union.... Men, their rights and nothing more; women, their rights and nothing less.  ~Susan B. Anthony

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