Bloomberg: Canadian Health Care, Even With Queues, Bests U.S.
Bloomberg’s Pat Wechsler writes of how Canadian health care is not as scary as many of the myths floating about suggest. In fact, Canadian public healthcare is quite good by most indicators and better than the U.S. by pretty much all indicators. It is a great overview of what the Canadian single-payer system has to offer in comparison to the U.S. private health insurance model:
The U.S. spent $7,290 on health care for each person in 2007, 87 percent more than Canada’s $3,895, according to the latest OECD data. The U.S. also devoted the highest percentage of gross domestic product to health care, 16 percent, OECD numbers show. Canada’s expenditure was 10.1 percent.
Canadians live two to three years longer than Americans and are as likely to survive heart attacks, childhood leukemia, and breast and cervical cancer, according to the OECD, the Paris- based coalition of 30 industrialized nations.
Deaths considered preventable through health care are less frequent in Canada than in the U.S., according to a January 2008 report in the journal Health Affairs. In the study by British researchers, Canada placed sixth among 19 countries surveyed, with 77 deaths for every 100,000 people. That compared with the last-place finish of the U.S., with 110 deaths.










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