Canadian vs. American Health Care Systems: Whose Got The Cure?
Here is an interesting analysis and comparative study of the Canadian health care system vs. the American one (if you want to call that a coherent system). It seems that Canadians have become healthier than Americans over a thirty year span in the controlled social experiment of public vs. private care.
Publicly funded health care has its problems, as any Canadian or Briton knows. But like democracy, it’s the best answer we’ve come up with so far.
Should the United States implement a more inclusive, publicly funded health care system? That’s a big debate throughout the country. But even as it rages, most Americans are unaware that the United States is the only country in the developed world that doesn’t already have a fundamentally public–that is, tax-supported–health care system.
That means that the United States has been the unwitting control subject in a 30-year, worldwide experiment comparing the merits of private versus public health care funding. For the people living in the United States, the results of this experiment with privately funded health care have been grim. The United States now has the most expensive health care system on earth and, despite remarkable technology, the general health of the U.S. population is lower than in most industrialized countries. Worse, Americans’ mortality rates–both general and infant–are shockingly high.
Read the complete report in Yes! Magazine
