Lost, you are a gentleman to debate/discuss with.
Likewise.
Too many people get lost in all the rhetoric and are unwilling to debate the actual issues.
Unfortunately, that is the standard and not the exception. As you likely know, we have two main political parties here. Bad and Worse. Even the party we have which one would most associate with Peace, Love, and Happiness is rife with intolerance and insular thought. All the more galling because they loudly proclaim their progressiveness. All's peachy unless, of course, you're not toeing the party line. Its opposition tends to be little better.
We have a very very different health care system in Canada from what you have in America. It is completely a single payer system, otherwise known as 'socialist'
I could handle socialism. Or communism. Or any of the other -isms. If I thought they worked as well as CAPITAL-ism and democracy. They tend to look great on paper, but fail (often miserably) in practice. Yes, I know the -isms are already at work in the USA, and have been for a very long time. We are not a true democracy, and that's OK with me. So long as we keep what works, and jettison what doesn't.
Most people seem to like the fact that the health care bill disallows the use of pre-existing conditions to deny coverage. I think it would be fair to say that most think this is the best part of the bill.
The requirement to purchase healthcare (individual mandate) is least liked as it takes away the freedom for one to have the individual freedom to decide whether they would like to have it or not.
What I don't think has been communicated effectively is that you cannot have one without the other...
Some would argue that alone is reason enough not to pass this bill. I don't necessarily count myself in that group, but it does trouble me.
If insurance companies are no longer allowed to deny coverage for pre-existing conditions, then there is no point for any one to get insurance until they actually get sick enough to need it. It is much cheaper to pay for regular doctors visits, the odd treatment and so on. When you need insurance is when you have a condition that is going to cost a lot of money.
Besides, there are ways I think you could work around that problem. You could make it available only in "blocks" of time. You want in, great, but you're locked in for 5 years at a time. So no getting that bypass surgery, and then cancelling your plan. Smarter folks than I could probably think of even more workarounds to this problem.
Each province administers its own public health insurance system. Doctors, X ray clinics, pathology labs etc. are private operations which simply bill the province's health insurance when you need their services. In Ontario, the public insurance is called OHIP (Ontario Health Insurance Plan).
"Administers?" Smells like beurocracy. Which begets waste, increases hassle, runs up cost, and generally upsets my digestive tract. From my experience, the things "administered" by the government have been poor cousins to their closest "real world" counterparts. Poor in respest to their effectiveness, not necessarily cost. Perhaps they have been more successful in Canada?
Do you have any means of independent confirmation that the Canadian system has been successful at delievering on its promises? That the populace, as a whole is happy or unhappy with healthcare there?
One very key difference between our systems is that in Canada you cannot as a patient decide to go see a specialist. You must be referred by your family doctor. Consequently, in Canada the ratio of of GPs to specialists is 3:1
Some plans here are the same. Or at least, have been in the past. Required a visit to your primary care provider as a "doorkeeper" before you could see a specialist. The downside is it might actually increase the overall cost in some cases. For example, if you have a hernia, who else would fix it other than a surgeon. Yet, you still must see the primary provider for "clearance" to see the surgeon.
Do you have any information as to whether the physicians there are happy with their chosen career and the system of healthcare?