well Canada is only about the size of California population wise but its huge in terms of land mass so you don't have an MRI machine in every hospitol
but ask yerself if Boston really needs all those MRI machines/personel/ yada, and who is paying for it all with money that is perhaps better spent elsewhere because if we look at life expectancy more money does not mean people live longer and the USA is still neck and neck with Cuba
Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know
My father had a quite a few medical issues like stroke/ brain surgery/heart attack but it was all taken care of woith no bills, it might have been the brain surgery where upon a visit to the GP they called an ambulance and my father went pretty much straight from the doc's office to the OR
The MD it is assumed is pretty smart and has been to like grade 27 or sft so he makes the decisions not an insurance company ... cuz there is no insurance company
but Geriatric medicine is different in Canada ... we just put them out on an iceflow
Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know
If its life threatening it gets done immediately and the non-life threatening gets pushed back. Brain surgeons don't usually have wait times as everything is life threatening in their line of work so no need to book for anything.
thats how it is in Aus which is pretty much the same as Canada.
My wife is a nurse in public long-term care. There is a waiting list for placement in her facility, and they come from as far as a few hours drive away. She has worked in the private palliative system, and both have similar challenges with respect to service delivery and care resourcing. But the private care does have larger, more modern buildings with flashier gardens and font common areas. Public palliative care is covered under the same fed/prov insurance regime. With current demographic trends, there are significant funding and staffing challenges, but that is not unique to Canada or its health care system.
^^Thanks, I appreciate the info BCMountainHound and XXX-er.
That's pretty much it. If you show up at the ER broken or bleeding you'll be seen pretty quick. I went to the ER when I broke my hand, and they had me booked in for surgery at 630am the next morning. Got bumped to the afternoon because a more serious case came in. When I broke my wrist at Whistler the clinic got me a referral to a specialist in Van 2 days later. We scheduled surgery 2 days after that. Stuff like torn ACL or hip replacement aren't urgent and tend to have wait times to see a specialist initially. Sometimes after that there is another wait for surgery, sometimes you can pretty much pick your date. It can depend a lot on where you live too. Rural areas have fewer doctors and specialists so you wait longer. My mom waited 18mos to see someone for her knees. The wait would have been much less if she'd been willing to travel to Vancouver.
For things like MRI there will be waits too and it is definitely the result of there being fewer machines. The flipside is they are highly utilized which is a good thing cost-wise, but I'd bet most people would say spending some $ to bring in more machines would be money well spent. The link below says recent wait times in Canada for an MRI have been 11 weeks on average, or much longer in BC. Down here I had an MRI two days after the initial visit with my surgeon. Had a choice of many time slots over the course of the next week. With that many open slots and five other machines within a 15 min drive from my work, those things can't be getting used very efficiently so it's not surprising they charge a lot to help cover their costs. They must make money though or there wouldn't be so many of them. In Canada it is more a political decision - how much of the budget goes to healthcare, then hospitals have to allocate funds according to needs. If people really wanted to hold the gov'ts feet to the fire there would probably be more machines available. But on the other hand taxes would go up. We all know how much people love taxes.
2017 wait time report from the Fraser Institute: https://www.fraserinstitute.org/site...-turn-2017.pdf
The premium is on top of it. I have a high deductible HSA plan this year so my share of the premium is $20 per paycheck. Employer pays the rest, not sure how much. They also contributed $750 in free money to my HSA to start with, and I can contribute another $2700 in pre-tax funds this year. So that might be worth $1k itself. The $4k is my out of pocket cost including deductibles and copays for all the other items mentioned. I rented some equipment to keep my knee in motion right after surgery, and that was not covered by my insurance so I had to pay it out of pocket ($300) but was well worth it. Knee braces and everything else were covered. Insurance limited me to 16 PT appointments but they were all covered. I had the same limitation on PT in Canada. I won't have out of pocket expenses for any more follow up visits or any other treatments this year since I've hit the maximum, unless I go out of network. Need to check what other work I need done...
Very true. It is far from perfect but I'd take it over the US system in a heartbeat. Sometimes you have to wait, but there is so much less drama and you can focus on getting better rather than battling it out with providers and insurance co over bills. I can't imagine the stress people go through who have chronic conditions or long hospital stays or have poor insurance plans. I handled HR and benefits at my last company and even though we had one of the best plans available I still heard no end of stories from staff. One guy was approved for surgery by insurance co, had the surgery, and then they retroactively decided it wasn't approved after all. Then he had providers coming after him for the full bill, not the insurance co discounted deal. Another guy's wife had a baby and after some paperwork went missing the insurance co was refusing to add the baby to the plan for a while. A third guy was stuck because the insurance co sent a payment to the provider, but not their current billing address. They cashed the check of course, but didn't credit it to his account. Insurance wouldn't help because they had paid it, and provider was adamant they hadn't been paid, and sent it to collections. I could go on all day. Most were settled ok in the end but only with a lot of effort and frustration on the part of the patient. This is the kind of shit you don't have to deal with in Canada.
IME what happened is they take whatever yearly income the patient shows to pay for the long term care and the system makes up the rest so the Fam is not hit with a big bill, mom payed more for the home cuz she made too much money from investments, we always told mom she was showing too much income and at he age of 90 she should give it all away and show NO income but even if she could hear... she didn't listen
Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know
FWIW, the people who do healthcare economics point to the MRI spending as an example of waste. We have way the fuck more MRI machines per capita than say, Canada, Japan, or Singapore, and we are definitely paying a shit-ton for them. But it's not like people in Japan are all hobbling around on undiagnosable soft tissue injuries: they're healthier than we are!
I had the pleasure of interacting with both systems following a crash at mach looney that sent me into a snowmaking tower. Fuck that sucked.
I had excellent care in Vermont. A CT and Surgery within an hour of arriving at the hospital and an MRI two days after. Thank god I had travel insurance, I didn't pay a cent.
I was transferred to Ottawa 5 days after the crash and where I spent 3 weeks and had another surgery. Total bill for the 3 weeks in the hospital that included surgery and a CT and treatment for pulminary embolisms: $0. I had routine care at home, including rental of hospital beds, INR testing and in home physio. That was also covered.
My impression is that the quality of medical care between Vermont and Ottawa were easily comparable. The quality of service however, Vermont was way better. The nursing staff seemed to have way more time to care for the patient, the food was so much better and it was a private room with "free television". In Ottawa you pay per day for TV, the food fucking sucks and the nursing staff, while fantastic, seemed to be busier. I would imagine that in Canada you need to be a stronger advocate for your own care because of this, but that is just speculation.
I was able to get physio coverage for 8 months as part of my rehab. In retrospect I should have sought more PT but I was dealing with a lot at the time.
You can pay for a lot of TV and Sysco meals for $2 Trillion.
Probably still can't get HBO though.
All those MRI machines are using up the helium I'd otherwise be using for my balloon habit.
Remind me. We'll send him a red cap and a Speedo.
In the US for senior care you'll end up on a waitlist at most facilitys because empty beds don't make money. If you are reliant on significant state support for paying for your facility the number of facilitys that will take you is smaller and the waitlist possibly longer. Recent family experience. Note though that the generosity of the US state the facility is in and how it chooses to administer programs can effect these things as well.
Palliative care is the easiest to define for the system, determining that one is no longer able to perform the basic personal care functions is relatively easy for our system to address. It is the lead into end of life care that is the more difficult part. Being able to manage your own care to some level will place the burden of your housing and support on you (or your spouse/family). We are fortunate that both my wife and parents are reasonably well off and will have options for senior community living, assisted living, and the like as they approach the possible need for palliative care. Many do not, and their options are far more limited. But that is maybe beyond the scope of this conversation.
I would gladly pay $3967 extra dollars to not give up the better part of a year of my life waiting to get an ACL fixed. Combine that with Iceman's comments on the lack of motivation to innovate, upgrade equipment etc and you know exactly why universal isn't coming to the USA.
Live Free or Die
His out of pocket was 4k. The rest was hospitals and insurance doing their dance no?
It comes down to out of pocket costs for pretty much everybody. I'm sure there are folks who would balk at paying 3967 for 9 months of physical activity, but I doubt it is the majority. No one really gives a shit if the hospital marks it up so they can mark it down.
Live Free or Die
How I read it was 56->13k was the dance. Insurance covered 9k and he paid 4. But that 9k isn’t just free money. That cost and more gets passed on to you by the insurance company through premiums and other fees. So the true cost is at least the 13k that was finally billed.
That $4k doesn't include his premiums.
You don't get out much, do you? A sizeable portion of the US population would never leave the couch if given the option. A torn ACL also generally doesn't impede basic mobility much, and if your job depends on it or there are other extenuating circumstances you will generally get treated more quickly. Regardless, with the Canadian system the option to trade money for time is available; you can wait and get it done for free or if you have the means you are free to travel the US or elsewhere and get it done ASAP. That choice is not available in the US.
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