"As the current bombardment of misinformation being shared about Canada's universal health care system heats up, I feel the need to speak up."
By Kimberley (A Canadian)
Co-contributor, Linda (Blue Roses)(US Citizen living in Texas)
Tue at 8:01 am
Thank you Linda for providing the estimated comparison costs for the US. If anyone has information on costs for the unknown items, please let me know.
Kimberley, The figures I've given you for the United States are actual bills that have been incurred for me and/or my son since 2003. The costs fluctuate from state-to-state according to Google Searches.
Kimberley, The figures I've given you for the United States are actual bills that have been incurred for me and/or my son since 2003. The costs fluctuate from state-to-state according to Google Searches.
I know that there is a delicate sense of American pride, and I have a real Canadian propensity to not want to brag or dictate, but I've watched so many of my friends suffer needlessly, physically and financially as a result of not having adequate health services.
I am not talking only of those with no health insurance, but also of those who pay hundreds of dollars a month for coverage.
People who have to sell cars and household items just to pay premiums.
People who consider high risk alternatives in order to treat themselves.
People who all too often have to choose between groceries or a visit to the doctor.
People who manage to get care, only to lose everything they've worked a lifetime to achieve.
People who have to just go home and wait for their life to end because they can't afford the treatment they need to sustain their life.
People who die too early.
People who live with pain.
From where I sit way up North, Americans have been conditioned to fear and hate the word socialism and all if its derivatives. I have come to the conclusion that inciting fear and distrust serves people of a certain economic stature well and provides a distinct disservice to the rest, while pitting human beings against other human beings for nothing more than varied ideological perspectives.
So, without further adieu, based solely on facts alone, let me share with you the real cost of the past five days of living in a country that has the all-too-often-feared reality of socialized medicine.
This covers the services my son, myself and my father and his wife have had over the past 5 days. I consider this pretty typical. My father has a chronic illness, my step mother accidentally fell from standing on a chair and broke her leg, my son is getting fitted for his first hearing aid and I've had routine care.
CDA: 3 Dialysis sessions $0
US: Physical Therapy @ 3 X wk $300.00
(dialysis costs in the US are estimated at $144 to 172 per session)
CDA: Dietitian services $0
US HealthCare Premiums per month for 2:
$250.00 ($3000.00 annually)
CDA: Paramedic services $0
US: (Charged $350.00 in addition to Ambulance Services)
CDA: Emergency surgery $0
US: Shoulder Surgery $37,000.00 billed
Severe hand burns from firecrackers: $5000.00 (2003)
CDA: 5 day hospital stay $0
US: 2 day hospital stay Pediatric ICU $12,000.00 (2002)
CDA: Regular Dr's visit $0
US: Co-pay $35.00/Drs fee $250.00
CDA: Specialist Dr's visit $0
US: Co-pay $35.00/Specialist fee $350.00 plus
CDA: Extensive lab work $0
US: Lab tests/Blood tests for Diabetes (3) $150.00+
CDA: CT scan $0
US: $450 - $2000
CDA: X-rays $0
US: $200.00 minimum, MRI: $3000.00 to $5,000.00 per
CDA: Hearing aid fitting $0
US: Glasses Exam $150.00
CDA: Hearing aid (for child) $0
US: Glasses (adult) $450.00+
CDA: Blood transfusion $0
US: Orthopedic Boot/short $450.00 billed
CDA: 45 minute ambulance ride $50 (with 80% to be reimbursed)
US: Ambulance Service $350.00 (2003)
CDA: Prescription $20 (with 80% to be reimbursed)
US: Rx copay $10.00 to 25.00
CDA: Travel to dialysis $0
US: patient covers complete cost
-------------------------------------------------
CDA: Grand total (after reimbursement) $14 for 4 people
US: Approx. $71,000.00 for 2.
In addition my father, because he's blind receives an abundance of additional services, and technical supports to assist in maintaining his Independence.
Contrary to the fear-mongering ads appearing now on television, there were no waits, no one piled up in the hallway of hospitals awaiting substandard care.
I have family members in the health profession and they all have more than adequate salaries that support a high standard of living and neither I, nor anyone I am personally aware of has ever had to wait for emergency, life saving health care. The only waits that I have seen have been for elective procedures.
I can't and won't tell you what is best for you or your country, but I felt it was important to give you the correct information that seems to be elusive on the airwaves of American television.
In my humble opinion, you deserve so much better than what you are currently getting. Health care should not be an option, but a right -- available equitably to all, and wellness should never be attached to an economic scale.
Demand better, you are entitled.
Rant concluded.
CDA: Paramedic services $0
US: (Charged $350.00 in addition to Ambulance Services)
CDA: Emergency surgery $0
US: Shoulder Surgery $37,000.00 billed
Severe hand burns from firecrackers: $5000.00 (2003)
CDA: 5 day hospital stay $0
US: 2 day hospital stay Pediatric ICU $12,000.00 (2002)
CDA: Regular Dr's visit $0
US: Co-pay $35.00/Drs fee $250.00
CDA: Specialist Dr's visit $0
US: Co-pay $35.00/Specialist fee $350.00 plus
CDA: Extensive lab work $0
US: Lab tests/Blood tests for Diabetes (3) $150.00+
CDA: CT scan $0
US: $450 - $2000
CDA: X-rays $0
US: $200.00 minimum, MRI: $3000.00 to $5,000.00 per
CDA: Hearing aid fitting $0
US: Glasses Exam $150.00
CDA: Hearing aid (for child) $0
US: Glasses (adult) $450.00+
CDA: Blood transfusion $0
US: Orthopedic Boot/short $450.00 billed
CDA: 45 minute ambulance ride $50 (with 80% to be reimbursed)
US: Ambulance Service $350.00 (2003)
CDA: Prescription $20 (with 80% to be reimbursed)
US: Rx copay $10.00 to 25.00
CDA: Travel to dialysis $0
US: patient covers complete cost
-------------------------------------------------
CDA: Grand total (after reimbursement) $14 for 4 people
US: Approx. $71,000.00 for 2.
In addition my father, because he's blind receives an abundance of additional services, and technical supports to assist in maintaining his Independence.
Contrary to the fear-mongering ads appearing now on television, there were no waits, no one piled up in the hallway of hospitals awaiting substandard care.
I have family members in the health profession and they all have more than adequate salaries that support a high standard of living and neither I, nor anyone I am personally aware of has ever had to wait for emergency, life saving health care. The only waits that I have seen have been for elective procedures.
I can't and won't tell you what is best for you or your country, but I felt it was important to give you the correct information that seems to be elusive on the airwaves of American television.
In my humble opinion, you deserve so much better than what you are currently getting. Health care should not be an option, but a right -- available equitably to all, and wellness should never be attached to an economic scale.
Demand better, you are entitled.
Rant concluded.



Salon.com
Comments
Canada is definitely cheaper for health care than the US, but it's not quite appropriate to say the total cost of your 5 days was $14 ... that was your out-of-pocket cost, but the actual cost is more than that.
But a quick excerp for you:
"Canada and the U.S. spend about the same on public health care – around 7 per cent of GDP according to the OECD. But in Canada public health care covers everyone and in the States it covers just one-third of the population. In fact, when you add in the costs of private care, Canada spends 10 per cent of GDP on health care and the U.S. spends 16 per cent. That's $2,500 less per capita – and in Canada everyone is covered!"
More Americans who have REAL experience with the Canadian healthcare system, like you, need to speak up-- loudly and often -- until this war is won.
We don't call it socialism here in Canada; we call it compassion. It makes me insane when I hear all the LIES being spewed by lobbyists who are being paid hundreds of thousand per year by the big pharmas and insurance companies in the US.
True, JK - but the population counts, in my mind (30M vs 300M) is one of the things that makes it much harder for the US. We'll do it though. I'm sure of it.
I once had to stay in the hospital for month, my mother had to pay for it out of her retirement savings, and if it weren't for her I would have also been homeless because I lost my job and my apartment during that time and was not able to graduate college. And the sad thing is that because I now have a disabling condition I probably won't ever be able to afford to take care of her when she needs it, the way she did for me. So my health problems affect her long-term ability to provide for herself. I don't think most people consider these hidden consequences to health problems - like whole families losing financial stability, homes, jobs, and opportunities for advanced education.
Each of the 10 provinces has a Ministry of Health (or equivalent) that funds and administers provincial health insurance as it deems proper. The Minster of Health is an elected member of the provincial government and part of the cabinet. The Minister is thus responsible to the electorate, unlike U.S. state health department secretaries, who are appointed, not to mention private insurance company CEOs, who are responsible only to profit-seeking shareholders.
Canada does NOT have "socialized medicine" — it has socialized health insurance. Some provinces have modest annual premiums (the non-payment of which does not preclude receiving care); others are entirely funded through tax revenues.
Physicians, nurses and health professionals are not employees of the government, nor does the government own most hospitals and clinics. Provincial medical associations negotiate physician fees with the Ministry; the Ministry has a lot of leverage but does not dictate fees.
Once the fees are agreed, care decisions are between the physician and the patient. The job of health ministry bureaucrats is then just to support the minister in setting policy, funding education and research, monitoring public health issues, verifying compliance with the law, and paying bills submitted by physicians for patient care, which patients never see.
There are a handful of principles that apply nationwide (portability, universal access, etc.), but the feds in Canada fund only around 12-18% of the whole bill (maybe even less than that now).
And apparently it'll be a warm day on Baffin Island before any of these facts about the Canadian system inform the U.S. debate.
How people such as these are allowed on the air to spew lies is beyond me. I wish I could make your article a must-read for every ditto-head. However, I can Digg, Reddit, etc. so I can get the word out to as many people as possible.
Anyone who is in imminent risk goes to the very top of the list. People have to wait for procedures such as hip replacements etc and that is not how the system was originally envisioned. But no one will lose their house or go bankrupt because they get sick. Certain drugs that are experimental or not approved here may have to be paid out of pocket, but that is true anywhere.
Those ads made me sick and I ranted about it at length as a couple of my roommates will attest.
And thanks to extragent for explaining how a complicated system really works.
In addition to the insurance coverage issue, the cost of health care in the US is a huge problem.
I recently saw a TV program dealing with this, in which they devoted a segment to a California woman who needed an unspecified operation. Her local physician and hospital estimated that the cost would be above $170,000 USD.
She went to India and had it done in a hospital which appeared to be the equal of any US facility. The cost to her - $12, 700. Of course she also had travel and accommodation expenses, but I'm willing to bet they didn't make up the $157,300 difference.
You could save Baffin Island, you know, if you'd consider stirring the pot on HuffPost, NYT, and other high profile publications. These facts need to be heard and understood by many more than are reading here.
"I could not believe the flat-out lies. At first I thought the woman who claims that she would have died of a brain tumour if she hadn't gone to the States for treatment -- no fees were ever mentioned of course -- was American, but it turns out she's a Canadian liar and shill. I literally could not believe it."
Makes me wonder how much she got paid to set that up? We can only guess by whom. It's amazing the lengths the Oppositionists and the No-Party are going to try and stop Health Care Reform, isn't it?
I am very much for universal healthcare, but I do wonder: what problems do Canadians feel that their system has?
Living near an urban centre helps of course, but here is the number one thing all of us can do to help ourselves: take care of ourselves and go to the doctor quickly if you suspect that something is wrong.
No one knows our bodies better than we do.
There are problems with waiting lists for elective surgeries but some of those claims are greatly exaggerated, too. I had elective surgery a few years ago and my operation was cancelled once because the doctor had an emergency, but it immediately rescheduled and went ahead two weeks later without a problem.
NO system is perfect, and with a right-wing federal government in power, there have been cutbacks (also provincially) but that is the same as every other western nation with a huge, and aging boomer population.
we are so stupid here as a general population that we believe all the
crap spewed by those who stand to not quite make as much money
So, single payer will never happen and now, if we don't have health insurance, guess what? We can be fined. Amazing. Sometimes I wonder what would happen if the majority of the US citizens just said, 'Fuck you' and stopped buy the product. It's crossed my mind.
"What you've shown us, after all is said and done, is that Canadians are a great deal SMARTER than US persons."
Add 300 million people to your general census and see if the problem is so easily solved. Three hundred million more.
So, when we finally DO get universal Health Care in this country, what you're saying is that we, the US, then will be smarter because we will have overcome greater obstacles? Cool. ;)
Last year I read an article saying that if you go to India for medical care you are more likely to have a British or American trained doctor than if you have the same treatment in Britain or America.
OPM (Other People's Money): Charge Americans ten times more at home so pharma can use that capital (instead of their net profits) to subsidize "developing" countries.
I'm afraid I can't do a follow-up about those supposed waits. My input on this piece was from the US standpoint.
I believe emma addressed that issue in one of her comments, as did Kimberley in her numerous illustrations in the post.
"Anyone who is in imminent risk goes to the very top of the list."
What I can add from the US side, though, is that there have been many times that I have had to wait several weeks and sometimes months to see a specialist (orthopedic).
It's been mentioned that the American population is much greater than ours and so it wouldn't be as simple as all that to provide universal single-payer coverage. I'm not quite sure why - same system, larger scale, why wouldn't that work? And, as also mentioned, some money comes from the feds here, but the direction of the money to health care is done by the provinces (under some federal conditions). So, in the U.S., the individual states could direct the distribution of the money - I don't see the problem (ignoring for this discussion the fact that some of the states are run by people like Jindal).
The system you currently have is very complicated - inplementing something resembling our system would surely streamline things.
Hopefully what seems clearly to be the will of the population will prevail over the machinations of the congress and house.
My guess is that US is on the move toward full-care, regardless of how it goes the next couple months. Once Obama is more the war-president, it'll get done. What indeed is ahead for Canada, I wonder?
Thank you for posting this :)
"My guess is that US is on the move toward full-care, regardless of how it goes the next couple months. Once Obama is more the war-president, it'll get done. What indeed is ahead for Canada, I wonder?"
I'm with you on that, Patrick. It seems to be different this time with so many more on board than ever before.
What's ahead for Canada? The only thing I know for sure is that 'the recession' is over there, or so they've announced recently.
Why is it that I feel this overwhelming urge to link Swift's "A Modest Proposal?"
Thank you to everyone for the feedback. Its important to debunk the myths being created via the media by vested interests. Discussion is always welcome and essential, but the facts should always be on the table --- the commercials I have seen air do not represent Canadian health care in an honest, up front fashion. Anything less is a disservice to the decision making process.
Many families pay $800.00 to $1000.00 per month in premiums.
I buy my meds from an Indian Pharmacy - http://www.squaremeds.com/
I recently bought
BACTRIM 410/90 mg (100 tabs) $7.99 - price at Drugstore.com $126.69
GLYCERYL TNT 500 mcg (30 tabs) $4.99 - price at rx-med.net $22.88
Shipping cost were low, and cheapest shipping took eight days.They have excellent customer service at a 1-800 number (girl I spoke with had an American accent) and you can order online or by phone.
Although both the drugs I bought would require a prescription in the states, none was required there.
Monte
Blueroses, in all seriousness, I had to come back to this. I was trying to recall if I have ever heard of any country that is trying to copy the US Healthcare model. All around the world, people look to mirror the best aspects of the Canadian, UK and various European country's systems, but I have never heard of a single country trying to emulate the US version. I wonder why that is.
There are a few Conservatives and shills paid for by Big Pharma who are trying to create a two tiered system in Canada, but you'll never hear the Joe on the street signing up for that one.
So there it is. If the US system is so great, why isn't the world beating a path to your doorstep to implement the same?
You wrote “but the population counts, in my mind (30M vs 300M) is one of the things that makes it much harder for the US”
I’m going to give you some points to consider that run counter to that argument. I volunteer to be on the board of an alliance of local hospitals, and can tell you that lack of population actually is a bigger problem than greater population.
Example 1: We have to run and staff 4 emergency departments at 4 hospitals (because of the geography covered) 24/7. These departments sit idle for most of the nights shifts because of population density and this severely impacts the cost per patient in a negative way.
Example 2: We have to keep a minimum supply of drugs on site for obvious reasons. Many drugs have life spans. Due to smaller populations the chances of using some drugs before their expiry is decreased and the cost per patient treatment goes up.
Example 3: The unit cost of supplies goes down with volume purchases. This was one of reasons why we formed the alliance amongst the local hospitals. Higher patient density equals lower cost of supplies.
I could go on with other examples, but I think you get the point.
If the US system is so great, why isn't the world beating a path to your doorstep to implement the same?
Why indeed. Not only isn't the world beating a path to the U.S. doorstep to implement an American-style system, but Canada and the UK (if not other countries) have had public demonstrations against anything that smacks of an American-style system, especially its costs and inequalities.
Your question points out a key fact, but one that is easily dismissed by recurring to American Exceptionalism (cf. isolationism): the U.S., having been "settled" differently and being geographically removed from the rest of the world by two oceans (excluding, ahem, Canada and Mexico), is so essentially "unique" that it must evolve a health care system specific to its circumstances. Other countries, the reasoning goes, can't transplant it to suit their circumstances, just as the U.S. can't import "foreign" systems and expect them to work.
Strange but true. Here's something even stranger:
The term "single-payer system" was coined in the late 1980s by American health care reform advocates to replace "Canadian-style system" and thereby eliminate the "foreign" reference to calm American xenophobia. Right-wing opponents had been zeroing in on the reference to Canada to discredit the model.
I've had Canadians ask me what exactly a single-payer system is, not realizing that it's a term progressive Americans devised to describe the Canadian model without mentioning Canada.
Why isn't this on the cover?
"As someone who responds to everything unusually, it scares me that healthcare might be d0led out on the basis of what works for the majority."
I'm afraid that's already happening in the US. Physicians bill everyone based on what Medicare will pay - at least that's been my observation, however limited.
The billing companies know that insurance companies will only pay a percentage forcing them discount the original amount after payment. Example: An orthopedic surgeon billed my insurance company $450.00 for a little boot several months ago. $450.00.......When I questioned them about it, they said, "Oh, we know they won't pay, but in order to get 100% payment, the price has to be inflated."
They get paid 100%, the consumer is billed a discounted difference. Go figure.
So, how do we know in the US what the REAL costs are?
"A few weeks ago, Glen Beck made a statement that Canadians had to use a lottery to get health services."
Glen Beck is an idiot. I wonder if there is a place for Americans to apologize for commentators of his ilk? If so, I'll be the first. Bleh.
"Exactly so! I pay over $8000 dollars a year just to have substandard health care here in the US. When someone speaks to me about taxes or long waits (which I have experienced here in the US on a repeated basis), I laugh hollowly. I'm certain I'll never be paying $8000 in taxes for single payer, if it should exist. I'm certain I'll never be paying $8000 plus another $15,000 PER PERSON should I exceed my health care because of a bad health problem. "
What I'm hearing ( and may be totally wrong) is that the cost to each will edge toward 12% of your annual income. Most already pay 10% or more in premiums, so what's another 2% for full care?
For many of us in the US, it will be like getting a raise......
"Thank you for this. It is imperative that Americans see such first hand information laid out clearly. If only CNN would broadcast this...wait...if you put it on Twitter we might have a shot."
This piece, written intially by Kimberley R and without the US figures, has been linked and/or sent to multiple news agencies.
The last time I checked there were over 800 views.
Thank you for coming back on this piece. The main focus is getting the word out about the true costs/expenses incurred by two real people in both countries. It's an attempt to dislodge the propaganda and oftentimes, untruths.
Let's Compare Public and Private Health Care Costs, Eh?/a>
Thanks for linking to your posts. Those figures there are staggering as well. Putting the numbers side-by-side makes a huge difference.
BR
I find the tax comparison in general terms a little misleading in the media. When a straight comparison is done of across the board income-after-taxes comparison there is little difference between the US and Canada (.09%) Its the distribution of tax dollars that differs between the two countries, and I would guess confidently that the US has a much larger military budget for example. That said -- your figures still indicate the cost of universal health care results in dollars saved and health care delivered. How can that be a bad thing, right? :)
The BIGGEST problem in the States is as a result of the various lobbies, they own the politicians that are voting against any form of Reform, not that they take money into their pockets per say but the way the Lobby works here is that they put MILLIONS into the campaigns of these so called 'people's representatives' and they defeat what a true democracy is all about.
Anorther problem here, I use Advair and did in Canada also. Same drug, same maufacturer, same container, same packaging, $65.00 in Canada and $265 PLUS a fifty dollar co pay here. Something that no one is talking about aside from hospitals that chagre $10.00 for an aspirin, are what doctors charge and is a reason for the docotr shortage in Canada. Canadian trained docotrs are heading for the States where "Do no harm" seems to have been taken out of the hypocratic oath, isnt harm when u tell someone without insurance that you will not treat them unless they give a $250.00 deposit?? I swear that is posted in most of the doctors offices that I see. An ENT getting $1150.00 for a 12 minute appointment? Yep, all of this is personal experience along with, 4 days in hospital bringing own drugs??? $168,000.00.
My husband and I have decided, once he retires, we will be returning to Canada, we will be more than happy to spend our retirement income in a place that cares for its citizens. Where good health is a right, not a priveledge.
I am glad that you enjoyed the article. I also wrote a few others that cover the topics Deborah discussed above. They are called “Health Care Comparison Parts I, Ia, and II.” Based on my experience, I actually paid more taxes (income and sales) in Canada than here (see Part I). Even with this difference, I still prefer by far the health care system up north, although it is not perfect. In any case, got to go back finishing writing academic papers…
Regarding US vs Canada population differential:
"So, in the U.S., the individual states could direct the distribution of the money - I don't see the problem (ignoring for this discussion the fact that some of the states are run by people like Jindal).
The system you currently have is very complicated - inplementing something resembling our system would surely streamline things."
The problem comes when 33 out of 50 states plan to invoke the 10th Amendment to our Constitution if the plan that is finally devised at the federal level does not suit *their* liking. Many have already passed bills such as Oklahoma (leader of the pack), NH and Georgia for starters.
It may be an exercise in chain-rattling, but they have every intention of stifling this reform.
In my state, the infamous Governor Rick Perry who is right in the middle of that opposition, does not speak for me. How can any of these governors usurp the wont of millions within their constituencies? It's split here as surely it must be in all 33 of those oppositionist states. It's a mess.
Notice from the drs office is that they 'wrote off' the $36,000.00. Now, there is a whole lot wrong with this picture, but the main thing is that the billing office, nor the doctor have any record of the initial $37,000.00 bills sent out in January.
Huh?
I know these things because I've gotten written statements. Who benefits by this atrocious over-billing and how? Isn't it enough to gouge the patient with the bill? Taking that write off filters even more benefits.
Mine is just one case. One.