OHIP is fairly straightfoward. You go to a health care provider (doctor, hospital, E.R.), they bill OHIP directly. OHIP pays the bill. You don't have to be pre-approved for procedures that your doctor GP/specialist asks for. In that sense, it is not bureaucratic. I frankly don't know what the experience is at the doctor's end. The bureaucracy might well show up at their end of the experience.
I like simplicity for the consumer. Go in, get your service, go home. A certain amount of bureaucracy on the provider's end is acceptable. So long as it is not too cumbersome.
OHIP openly lists what is covered and what is not. You are free to purchase additional insurance for things above the basic healthcare that OHIP provides, or pay for it e.g. no chiropractic care is provided, if you are hospitalized, basic OHIP care is for a ward room that you share etc. etc. OHIP sets rates of remuneration for procedures and visits
This would boil down to just how "basic" the basic healthcare is. If it covers the vast majority of what is commonly needed in delivering quality healthcare, then I would argue its acceptable.
Typically, most insurance here will net you a roomie during hospital stays, unless ,as examples, you have a highly communicable disease, or are there for labor and delivery. I think this is perfectly acceptable.
I am assuming there's no outcry from physicians about the rates of remuneration. So far, so good.
On balance, our doctors make a lot less money than your doctors. A good friend of mine is an accountant. He has about 10 GPs that are his clients. He says on average they make $300000 per year. Specialists make $800000 to $1000000 a year. Based on these figures, I would say they are not underpaid.
I'm not sure what the exchange rates are these days, but the numbers you're quoting are
way more than average physician pay here. To the tune of 30-50%. If these numbers are acorrect, you may have to teach me how to sing O Canada!
Unless the cost of living is dramatically higher in Canada, I don't know how those numbers could be accurate.
Yes there are wait times for things. My wife just had an MRI done on her knee. It was three weeks after the doctor asked for it. It was not an emergency. I don't consider it unreasonable.
Nor would I, for the majority of cases. While true, if you need an MRI in my area, I could probably get you seen for a non-emergent one within 72 hours (and an emergent one instantly). What if your injury were severe enough to keep you on crutches and prevent you from working on an assembly line, but not urgent enough to avoid the three week wait?
On the plus side, basic coverage exists for everyone. If you need heart surgery, you get it. If you want a tummy tuck - then its on your tab

.
Good luck finding an insurance plan here that covers cosmetic surgery. Unless, that is, it is required to restore function after burns/trauma/etc. Would the Canadian system provide cosmetic surgery in cases like this, or would that exceed "basic" care?
On balance, I would say it is a relatively decent system that does need improvements. I would like to see an approach that is more customer oriented. I don't like the fact that the nurse staff are unionized and thus the best ones get pay raises equal to the worst. I'd like to see more private delivery of health care through the public system i.e. more for-profit hospitals, MRI clincs etc. There is nothing that prevents this as X Ray, Ultra sound clinics are privately run but the bill is sent to OHIP and OHIP pays for them so long as your doctor asked for the procedure. I'd like to see hospitals compete with each other and I believe that they will do this best if they are for profit institutions. The funding rates can continue to be set by OHIP. Procedures can still be paid for by the public insurance plan.
I'm not sure what you mean by "customer oriented". Are you saying that when being treated you essentially feel like "just another number"?
As far as unions, well, it's a lot like healthcare, there's good and bad. Part of the bad is, yes, you see the bad rewarded with the good. I don't think I can go down that path without grossly violating the site's rules, so, let's just say I know what you're saying.