Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Danny Williams was released from a U.S. hospital on Friday after having to flee his own dysfunctional government-run health care system in order to obtain a critical heart surgery. While the procedure Williams needed does exist in Canada, it is widely unavailable.
http://www.examiner.com/x-35976-Cons...-after-surgery
What does it say about the state of Canadian health insurance when Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Danny Williams chooses to have his heart surgery in the U.S.? Some pundits say it means nothing, while others have insisted the premier could have obtained his medical care somewhere in Canada.
But the details of Premier Williams’ case are irrelevant to the main question, which is: If it is OK for a Canadian politician to get private medical treatment in America, why is it illegal for regular Canadians to get private medical treatment in Canada?
In other words, why do provincial governments make it illegal for Canadians to spend their own money to preserve and improve their own health? Why are ordinary Canadians forced to wait in a government-imposed queue for access to necessary medical care?
Danny Williams’ decision is not unique. According to the most recent Fraser Institute estimate in 2009, Williams would be only one of approximately 41,000 Canadians who annually seek non-emergency medical care outside of Canada. Consider how absurd it is that the only way for Canadians to pay privately for better or quicker medical care is to leave their own country.
http://thechronicleherald.ca/Columnists/1166914.html
http://www.examiner.com/x-35976-Cons...-after-surgery
What does it say about the state of Canadian health insurance when Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Danny Williams chooses to have his heart surgery in the U.S.? Some pundits say it means nothing, while others have insisted the premier could have obtained his medical care somewhere in Canada.
But the details of Premier Williams’ case are irrelevant to the main question, which is: If it is OK for a Canadian politician to get private medical treatment in America, why is it illegal for regular Canadians to get private medical treatment in Canada?
In other words, why do provincial governments make it illegal for Canadians to spend their own money to preserve and improve their own health? Why are ordinary Canadians forced to wait in a government-imposed queue for access to necessary medical care?
Danny Williams’ decision is not unique. According to the most recent Fraser Institute estimate in 2009, Williams would be only one of approximately 41,000 Canadians who annually seek non-emergency medical care outside of Canada. Consider how absurd it is that the only way for Canadians to pay privately for better or quicker medical care is to leave their own country.
http://thechronicleherald.ca/Columnists/1166914.html
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