home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: comp.os.os2.advocacy
- Path: sparky!uunet!uunet.ca!rose!usenet
- From: robert.heuman@rose.com (robert heuman)
- Subject: Is Microsoft the next
- Organization: Rose Media Inc, Toronto, Ontario.
- Date: Thu, 31 Dec 1992 16:12:08 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Dec31.161210.1218@rose.com>
- Sender: usenet@rose.com (Usenet Gateway)
- X-Gated-By: Usenet <==> RoseMail Gateway (v1.70)
- Lines: 68
-
-
- Date Entered: 12-31-92 11:09
- rsrodger@wam.umd.edu (Yamanari) wrote, in
- Message-ID: <1992Dec31.140006.5472@wam.umd.edu>
-
- R(> Or do you mean the Canadian system--you know,
- R(> the same one that has it's patients coming down to the US
- R(> to get CT scans, MRI's and bone scans done because Canada
- R(> has insufficient hardware?
-
- I cannot let this slur pass. It is a blatent falsehood. Every time
- someone needs a CT Scan or MRI, or bone scan, it is available. In
- case of an EMERGENCY, it is available in minutes. Otherwise the
- doctor is expected to call and schedule it. I saw a US news show that
- suggested that this was not the case. However, the doctor in that
- case waited until the last minute and then decided he wanted an MRI
- done. He had almost a year and had he made the decision earlier (even
- a few DAYS earlier) he would have had his MRI performed. That much
- was clear from all of the statements made during the show.
-
- I will note, however, that there is a substantial difference between
- the US and Canada when it comes to MRI and other high-tech, high
- expense facilities. In Canada ALL treatment hospitals are PUBLIC and
- are expected to share high-cost facilities, rather than buy their own
- where the volumes do not warrent. In the US there are a lot of high
- tech set-ups, but primarily at PRIVATE hospitals, and the charges for
- their use are exorbitant. Check out the PUBLIC hospitals and see if
- the ratio of MRIs and CTScanners is any higher than in Canada. I
- rather doubt it.
-
- I speak from experience. My son has had an MRI or CT Scan every time
- the doctor ordered it, within hours or days, depending on whether it
- was an EMERGENCY or not. Often he has had to wait an extra hour or
- so while an emergency patient was put into the facility before him,
- but never has a diagonostic tool his oncologyst or surgeon wanted been
- denied or unavailable.
-
- There is one last point to be made. Canada is larger than the US with
- approximately 10% of the population of the US. In addition, most of
- that population is within 160 kilometres of the US border. As a
- result, I will agree that patients in the far north do have difficulty
- getting MRIs and CTScans. The same applies to patients in remote
- parts of Alaska, Hawaii and similar locations scattered throughout the
- US. The machines are concentrated where the population is in BOTH
- countries. However, I have seen accident victims flown in by
- helicopter from 100's of miles away for needed treatment, including
- MRIs, when required, at a cost of C$25.00 for the ambulance service.
- I have yet to hear of any such incident in the US at that price.
- Canada does NOT have insufficent hardware, the US has a SURPLUS and
- most of it is way underutilized. That is the real difference.
-
- BTW, my son's total treatment for osteogenic sarcoma cost me C$56.00
- including 4 operations, regular MRIs and CTScans, chemotherapy,
- artificial limbs, wheelchair and almost 5 years of follow up check-ups
- and treatment. I suggest that anyone in the US without the best
- possible insurance would be bankrupt by now. Even with good
- insurance at the start, their employer, particularly if small, would
- have been dropped from a group plan insurer within a year or so,
- leaving the parent or patient without coverage. Seems to happen with
- a fair degree of regularity in the US.... CANNOT happen in Canada.
-
- and then there is Medicaid....
-
- Bob
-
- ---
- RoseReader 1.70 P001886: This Canadian has an Opinion...His Own!
- RM 2.00 : RoseNet<=>Usenet Gateway : Rose Media 416-733-2285
-