If you followed the story you would know that Brandon Hospital correctly diagnosed his condition and prescribed the same treatment as doctors in Bismark, the only difference was the doctor in brandon did it without a flouroscope, and the surgeoon (he didn't need) had the weekend off
this is a terrible one-sided example - is my point
I hate that in the US, we have basically written off private healthcare as being bad and the only way to go is to go the Sweden route. Like, for starters, how about we stop limiting the amount of doctors that can be employed at a time? How about we get rid of Certificate of Need which requires a government body to tell you whether you can build new healthcare facilities, expand those facilities, and buy new equipment (I thought this was America????). How about we stop making every profession require a super expensive license that requires four different 900 question exams (exaggeration ofc) and if you so much as move to a different state, you have to do ALL of that over again?
No? The only answer to expensive healthcare is government? I'm sure it'll work out fine.
TL;DW: Canada is free, but quality of care is much worse.
Calling the hospitals free is generous.
Significantly worse. Our health care nearly ended Brock Lesner's career. Theyd be sued into the ground if it wasnt socialized garbage practically exempt from its own incompetence.
If you followed the story you would know that Brandon Hospital correctly diagnosed his condition and prescribed the same treatment as doctors in Bismark, the only difference was the doctor in brandon did it without a flouroscope, and the surgeoon (he didn't need) had the weekend off
this is a terrible one-sided example - is my point
“Free”, but everything costs more in Canada. Gas, cars, houses, clothes, electronics, etc.
I hate that in the US, we have basically written off private healthcare as being bad and the only way to go is to go the Sweden route. Like, for starters, how about we stop limiting the amount of doctors that can be employed at a time? How about we get rid of Certificate of Need which requires a government body to tell you whether you can build new healthcare facilities, expand those facilities, and buy new equipment (I thought this was America????). How about we stop making every profession require a super expensive license that requires four different 900 question exams (exaggeration ofc) and if you so much as move to a different state, you have to do ALL of that over again?
No? The only answer to expensive healthcare is government? I'm sure it'll work out fine.