We went once to the US and it was $523 for one session.
...sounds a bit like some of the bizarre and incorrect myths that were perpetrated in the U.S about the Canadian medical system when much fear mongering about " socialized" medicine was at its peak.
Socialized medicine does two things - it reduces the amount of treatment available, and forces everyone to get "average" access.Those of us who are fortunate enough to get great access to top tier facilities through employer insurance and/or medicare are losers if the system gets socialized, as the current system puts us ahead of the uninsured, or people with fewer resources. Those who now have below average access and get some of the appointments previously granted only to those who can afford them are winners.Any change to the system will create winners and losers, and it is unrealistic to pretend this duality does not exist.
This is confusing.... this just sounds like it gives everyone a level playing field... which, doesn't sound that bad to me...
anything else besides the treatment itself was extra
Quote from: monrein on April 18, 2015, 02:59:57 PMSo Noahvale, are you thinking that we have no choice or say or input over which doctor we see? This has not been my experience. When I need a specialist, I get a referral from my family doc or my nephrologist or gynaecologist or whatever. Then, if I find out during my research that there is someone that I would like to see over the one I'm referred to then I say so and I can go to them. I had a back surgery a number of years ago and asked for a surgeon that I had heard very good things about. My husband needs a knee replacement and he will check around and request a referral to a specific surgeon. Now of course, one might have to wait to see the surgeon of choice if he/she is really busy (I imagine this is also the case in the US) but no one tells me who I have to choose. I have friends who have been dissatisfied with their family doc and they have asked around, found another who is accepting new patients and changed over. I live in a big city and as a result feel that I have a lot of control over my care. The same may not be true for a person living in a remote area, smaller town etc but that is likely true where you are also. The government does not tells patients who their doctor must be and I'm not sure why you have this perception.Obviuosly, you live in a wealthy, densely populated province."Already a destination for its beaches, palm trees and Disney parks, Florida can now add medical tourism to its list of attractions as more and more Canadians visit for surgery.Long wait times are increasingly driving patients south, including two Albertans who underwent surgery on the same day last month, and commiserated about feeling abandoned by an ailing system back home."http://www.calgaryherald.com/news/calgary/Long+Canadian+wait+times+send+patients+south+surgery+Video/9702357/story.html"When it comes to waiting for health care, Canada is last in lineA major international survey says Canadians wait longer for health care"http://www.macleans.ca/politics/when-it-comes-to-waiting-canada-is-last-in-line-2/From a different perspective. Comparing Canada to other universal-access health care programs.http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/nadeem-esmail/canada-free-health-care_b_3733080.htmlThose who have the longest wait times in the States, are those who get care through the Veterans Administration. Ironically, our country's version of a single payer, government run healthcare system. Plus, veterans do not get to go outside the VA system unless the needed services are not offered or they wish to pay out of pocket.
So Noahvale, are you thinking that we have no choice or say or input over which doctor we see? This has not been my experience. When I need a specialist, I get a referral from my family doc or my nephrologist or gynaecologist or whatever. Then, if I find out during my research that there is someone that I would like to see over the one I'm referred to then I say so and I can go to them. I had a back surgery a number of years ago and asked for a surgeon that I had heard very good things about. My husband needs a knee replacement and he will check around and request a referral to a specific surgeon. Now of course, one might have to wait to see the surgeon of choice if he/she is really busy (I imagine this is also the case in the US) but no one tells me who I have to choose. I have friends who have been dissatisfied with their family doc and they have asked around, found another who is accepting new patients and changed over. I live in a big city and as a result feel that I have a lot of control over my care. The same may not be true for a person living in a remote area, smaller town etc but that is likely true where you are also. The government does not tells patients who their doctor must be and I'm not sure why you have this perception.
Quote from: monrein on April 14, 2015, 11:26:48 AM...sounds a bit like some of the bizarre and incorrect myths that were perpetrated in the U.S about the Canadian medical system when much fear mongering about " socialized" medicine was at its peak.I'm fully supportive of universal healthcare for the US. But recently I've learned there is zero space for holiday dialysis in Ireland until June at the earliest. So that makes me wonder if centralized medicine is the driving factor and they are under built for dialysis in Ireland. Also my coordinator told me a NHS center in London was closed down because the NHS is trying to get everyone on home hemo to save money. So I could see how that type of situation like in Ireland and the UK could be turned into fear mongering...