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Roy Brander's avatar

If Mr. Ruess can link us to a Canadian of any prominence who has stated that it's the "best in the world", then we aren't talking about a strawman argument...but I don't think he can.

We aren't the best, but we aren't bad. Not just outcomes, but costs must be compared. The use of ordinals ("ranked 16th", "30th best") is statistically worthless. What if the 15 better were better by meaningless amounts? Don't use ordinals.

A clearer story is told in "The Spirit Level", about income inequality. Nearly all healthcare outcomes relate more-closely to your GINI number than to any specifics of your health care system. The US has the worst, by far, because they really are exceptional in the area of income inequality. Canada has worse income inequality than most of the health care systems at the top of the charts (France, Italy).

Remarkable health-care outcomes for comically small outlays of money are being realized by Costa Rica, including amazingly good pandemic results, because they made a focus on public health first. The public health visits leading to more critical care, early on, rather than a crisis-response model where health care becomes aware of you when you stagger in. (See The Atlantic for the article, "Why It's Better to be Poor in Costa Rica")

Here's a thing to get upset about, though. I screwed up, the other day, liking a National Post comment so much I copied it - and forgot to save the name of the commenter. He's a physician from rural Nova Scotia:

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When I came to Canada in 1985 from the UK, to be a rural physician in a post no Canadian had been willing to fill for the two years it had been advertised, I ran, with one other doctor, a 29 bed rural hospital, with 24 hour ER, lab and X-ray. We had one administrator, the board in charge were local worthies (unpaid) and the budget was just over 1mCDN/year.

...Now it has eight beds, the 'urgent care' is open 7 hours a day, but not every day, it has no lab and X-ray availability is sporadic. And it's run by five docs, two NPs and we were up to 14 administrators when I quit in 2015. Goodness knows what the budget is now, but it's whatever is spared us by the large and greedy regional hospital (75 beds and 4 admins in 1985, 50 beds and 70 admins when I quit). They also make all decisions for us and there is no local control.

Seems to me the old ways, before the government decided to reign in health care spending by appointing managers for everything, were cheaper and far more effective.

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...that tracks with things that happened in my career, totally different industry, but the takeover of the professional administrators proceeded similarly, with comparable effects on productivity.

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Marylou Speelman's avatar

During the campaigns for the last two elections the candidates barely even discussed our healthcare, our loss of standing on the world stage, the abysmal flow of capital out of this country, or our debt, to which has only multiplied. These are the things most politicians concentrate on for the welfare of the country. With the Government of the day they are too busy virtue signaling, demeaning and dividing people while destroying the economy and indebting generations of Canadians. They have no time to consider healthcare so they will will throw money at it by adding another layer of bureaucratic waste to do further studies. It will amount to the usual government rhetoric, virtue signaling, promises, but zero change and higher taxes. I have lost any faith in this Government, our institutions, and the country as a whole.

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