Literally the same health plan I just linked, with different eligibility requirements for Military.
Nowhere does it say anything about bypassing public healthcare.
If you are in Quebec you call up a private clinic and see the doctor. You can often get same day appointments. You see the doc and pay the bill. If you have insurance you can make a claim. I use these clinics when in need to see a doctor when I am visiting Canada. Pretty good.
I don't think you understand how our healthcare system works.
Most doctors (GP's) run a private practice, and aren't on the government payroll. Your bill is just submitted to provincial health insurance as a standard visit. Any treatment decisions between you and the doctor are confidential.
Doctors are just risk adverse when it comes to off-label treatments. If you got sick from ivermectin, you could sue them for malpractice.
Just ask the next Jamaican or Haitian you meet out on the street. They will show you the next voodoo doctor.
Or go to a strip mall and ask the Punjabis there if they know some "alternative health clinics".
No we don't idiot. It's supplemental health insurance, i.e Dental and Eye care.
Because you're a fucking retard?
https://www.canada.ca/en/treasury-board-secretariat/topics/benefit-plans/plans/health-care-plan.html
Literally the same health plan I just linked, with different eligibility requirements for Military.
Nowhere does it say anything about bypassing public healthcare.
Yes, and it's all for shit not covered under the provincial health plans.
It's supplemental. It doesn't replace public health care.
Not a chance retard.
I'll try to respond to this later.
Most important is, if you have kids, or even for yourself, know what's truly life-threatening or an emergency, and what isn't.
If you are in Quebec you call up a private clinic and see the doctor. You can often get same day appointments. You see the doc and pay the bill. If you have insurance you can make a claim. I use these clinics when in need to see a doctor when I am visiting Canada. Pretty good.
I don't think you understand how our healthcare system works.
Most doctors (GP's) run a private practice, and aren't on the government payroll. Your bill is just submitted to provincial health insurance as a standard visit. Any treatment decisions between you and the doctor are confidential.
Doctors are just risk adverse when it comes to off-label treatments. If you got sick from ivermectin, you could sue them for malpractice.