Google Groups Home
Help | Sign in
Message from discussion OT: How is Canadian health care worse than US again?
The group you are posting to is a Usenet group. Messages posted to this group will make your email address visible to anyone on the Internet.
Your reply message has not been sent.
Your post was successful
Francis A. Miniter  
View profile
 More options May 16, 6:40 am
Newsgroups: rec.arts.mystery
From: "Francis A. Miniter" <famini...@comcast.net>
Date: Thu, 15 May 2008 16:40:34 -0400
Local: Fri, May 16 2008 6:40 am
Subject: Re: OT: How is Canadian health care worse than US again?

momca...@hotmail.com wrote:
> One of the most often cited "horrors" is that Canadians may have to
> wait for health care access, which the citers apparently think doesn't
> happen in the US, I guess?  After calling around to the several
> dermatology clinics in this area and explaining that a blemish on my
> face that I've had for several years has begun to turn black in the
> last week, I've been offered appointments in September and January.
> We don't seem to have any dearth of doctors here-- 5 dermatology
> practices alone-- as this is an area where people come to play golf
> and bitch about how they did things different & better where they
> moved from until they die. I don't, however, have a "regular doctor"
> because, unlike those silly people who have that awful universal
> health care who go to the doctor when they don't need to, I haven't
> seen a doctor since the six week checkup after my daughter was born in
> 2000 because we can't afford it.

Sorry to hear about your predicament.  Keep calling doctors
in neighboring areas.  Sooner or later you should find
someone.  Failling that, go to an emergency room.

One measure of the effectiveness of a health care system is
the average life expectancy of the citizens of a country.
By that measure, Canadians live to be about 80.3 years old
(14th in the world) and Americans to be about 78 years old
(45th in the world).  Source: CIA World Factbook.  The World
Health Organization also uses this measure of health.
http://www.who.int/whosis/whostat/en/

By another WHO measure, physician density per 1,000 of
population, Canada has 2.14 and the US has 2.56, giving the
US a slightly better coverage.  And Canada has 36 hospital
beds per 10,000 while the US is at 33.  However, health
expenditures as a % of GDP run 15.4% in the US and only 9.8%
in Canada.

Francis A. Miniter


    Reply to author    Forward  
You must Sign in before you can post messages.
To post a message you must first join this group.
Please update your nickname on the subscription settings page before posting.
You do not have the permission required to post.

Create a group - Google Groups - Google Home - Terms of Service - Privacy Policy
©2008 Google