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         Canadian Socialized Medicine:     more detail
  1. Supply and migration of Canadian physicians, 1970-1995: why we should learn to love an immigrant doctor.: An article from: Canadian Journal of Regional Science by Hugh Grant, Ronald Oertel, 1997-03-22
  2. French health-care reform: 30,000 uninsured: France's experience offers a caution to Canadians seeking similar health-care reform.(WORLD): An article from: Catholic New Times by Tom Sandborn, 2006-05-21
  3. Senate Committee study on Canada's health care system.: An article from: Canadian Parliamentary Review by Jeffrey J. MacLeod, Howard Chodos, 2003-03-22
  4. Pay attention to values.(Canadian health care system)(Editorial): An article from: Catholic New Times
  5. Caring for profit: how corporations are taking over Canada's health care system.: An article from: Labour/Le Travail
  6. Etude du systeme de sante canadien par le Comite senatorial.: An article from: Revue parlementaire canadienne by Jeffrey J. MacLeod, Howard Chodos, 2003-03-22

81. Department Of Fine Arts, Okanagan University College
A canadian Bill of Rights is approved. socialized medicine is introducedin Saskatchewan (July 1), leading to a doctors' strike.
http://www.ouc.bc.ca/fiar/his_1967.html
Department of Fine Arts, Okanagan University College
Important Moments in Canadian History
1945 TO 1967
Compiled by Robert J. Belton
Louis St. Laurent succeeds Mackenzie as prime minister (Nov. 15).
Joey Smallwood brings Newfoundland into Confederation (Mar. 31). Canada joins NATO. Canada's Supreme Court replaces Britain's judicial committee as the final court of appeal.
Volunteers in the Canadian Army Special Force join the United Nations forces in the Korean war.
Census shows population as just over 14 million. The Massey Royal Commission reports that Canadian cultural life is dominated by American influences. Recommendations include improving grants to universities and the eventual establishment of the Canada Council (1957).
Vincent Massey becomes the first native-born Governor General. Canada's first television stations begin part-time broadcasts in Montréal and Toronto (Sept.).
The National Library is established in Ottawa (Jan. 1). The Stratford Festival opens (July 13). The Korean War ends (July 27).
The post-war boom is briefly interrupted by an economic slump. The first Canadian subway opens in Toronto (Mar. 30). Viewers of the British Empire games in Vancouver see two runners break the four minute mile in the same race. Marilyn Bell is the first person to swim across Lake Ontario (Sept. 9). Hurricane Hazel kills almost seven dozen people in Toronto (Oct. 15).

82. Science Fiction Writer Robert J. Sawyer: Challenging Destiny
From Issue 5 (1998) of Challenging Destiny, a new canadian SF magazine. and a lotof flak from Americans over the prosocialized-medicine position taken in
http://www.sfwriter.com/archalle.htm
You Are Here: SFWRITER.COM About Rob Challenging Destiny HOME
About Rob

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I Support:
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Robert J. Sawyer
From Issue 5 (1998) of Challenging Destiny , a new Canadian SF magazine. I was interviewed at length in person by the editors, but theys sent me these two follow-up questions in June 1998: Challenging Destiny: Could you tell us about some of the responses you've received to the ethical points you've made in your books? Robert J. Sawyer: A. By and large the reaction has been extremely positive. I expected to take some flak from people on both sides of the abortion issue for what I said in The Terminal Experiment The Terminal Experiment banned because it did not, in her view, support organ donation; of course that's utter nonsense, but there's very little you can do when confronted by someone who is clearly out of touch with reality. I suppose the comment I get most often about the ethical issues I raise in my novels is, "I don't necessarily agree with you, but you did make me think." I can't ask for anything more than that. Challenging Destiny: In Far-Seer , you talk about how the Quintaglios need to undergo a rite of passage as a race, and in Starplex , Keith comes to realize the same thing about humans. What rite of passage do you think our civilization will go through next? Should go through next?

83. Nationalized Health Care Is Beneficial
that nationalized health insurance is NOT socialized medicine, but socialized servicesthat the US has socialized such as we will use the canadian health system
http://pa.essortment.com/nationalizedhea_rtqq.htm
Nationalized health care is beneficial
Studies by Census Bureau, New England Journal of Medicine, University of Michigan and Notre Dame show that poor people are more likely to be sick. Because these people are poor, they often don't have access to health insurance and are more likely to be forced to pay for medical care out-of-pocket. There are two things poor people can do at this point. One: get needed medical care and suffer huge financial losses thus being driven further into poverty. Two: they opt to forego treatment because the costs are prohibitive. The health of those who forego treatment deteriorates, they become less productive, missing days of work, losing human capital, and becoming even poorer. Sometimes the people who choose to forego care reach a critical point where they must get medical help. The cost of this treatment impoverishes them even more. The following example illustrates this viscious cycle of impoverishment. Although government data on this subject is poor, a review of the last 300 bankruptcy cases in Arkansas showed a medical bill in half of them. According to the New York Times, bankruptcy lawyer Danielle Walker estimates that 40% of her clients have medical problems that caused them to file. This is direct evidence of high health care costs forcing people into poverty. bodyOffer(19604) A nationalized health insurance program would solve this problem by providing health care for everyone regardless of their ability to pay.

84. PNHP News And Updates: Articles Of Interest Archives
2001 World Trade Organization Targets canadian Health Care System by Stuart LaidlawMarch 9, 2001 A Conservative Convert To socialized medicine by David
http://www.pnhp.org/news/archives/cat_articles_of_interest.php
Physicians for a National Health Program
29 E. Madison St., Suite 602
Chicago, IL 60602
Phone: 312-782-6006
Fax: 312-782-6007
E-mail: News and Updates Healthcare Information Take Action About PNHP Join and Contact Us ... News and Updates Articles of Interest Archives document.write(""); Articles of Interest Archives March 28, 2003: Med student to lead rally on insurance
March 27, 2003: Longtime activist died deciding whether to call for help
March 24, 2003: Top scientist warns of "sickness" in US health system
March 20, 2003: Quentin Young Responds to Chicago Tribune Commentary
March 18, 2003: Suggested testimony for Democratic Party Hearings
March 14, 2003: State Sues Drug Companies, Claiming Price Gouging March 13, 2003: Living sicker, dying sooner with no health plan Getting medical coverage to all March 12, 2003: Real terror: no health insurance March 11, 2003: Need stitches on that gash? Try living without health insurance March 1, 2003: Wrong diagnosis, wrong Rx February 26, 2003: L.A.'s critical condition February 19, 2003: WTO/Bush prevent poor countries from obtaining generic drugs February 12, 2003:

85. Socialized Medicine Scholarly And In-Depth Studies
A directory of Scholarly and InDepth Studies on socialized medicine. Advocates of subsidized medicine often claim that the but moving American medicine in this direction would
http://www.enterpriseeconomy.com/resources/bycategory/in-depth/T8.1
resources directory : Scholarly and In-Depth Studies : Socialized Medicine Socialized Medicine Scholarly and In-Depth Studies
  • Global
  • United States
  • Mid-Atlantic and Southeastern US
  • Southwestern and Western US ...
  • Africa
    Global
    A high price for patients: an update on government health care in Britain and Canada
    Source: The Heritage Foundation
    Author: James Frogue
    Country: United States
    Advocates of subsidized medicine often claim that the U.S. health care system should be more like the government-run health care in Canada and Britain, but moving American medicine in this direction would be a terrible mistake, resulting in long lines for treatment, substandard technology, frustrated doctors and patients, and government rationing of care. (9/26/00)
    The structural problems of single-payer systems
    Source: Heartland Institute/Healthcare News
    Author: Richard Teske Country: United States
    The promises made by proponents of a single national health system always sound so much better than the reality. That is the Faustian bargain of all socialized economic systems. Those systems may start out in different places, but they always end up in the same place: price controls, rationed access, and second-tier quality. (08/01)
    The structural problems of single-payer systems Source: Heartland Institute/Healthcare News Author: Richard Teske Country: United States
    The promises made by proponents of a single national health system always sound so much better than the reality. That is the Faustian bargain of all socialized economic systems. Those systems may start out in different places, but they always end up in the same place: price controls, rationed access, and second-tier quality. (08/01)
  • 86. CL9902-- Socialized Medicine--One Size Fits None
    And it’s the albatross of socialized medicine around our necks that makes us SupposeCanadian law permitted the hospital to say to the Sawatzkys, Okay, we
    http://www.nextcity.com/go/KarenSelick/CL9902.html
    Socialized MedicineOne Size Fits None
    An edited version of this article first appeared in the February, 1999 issue of Canadian Lawyer . For permission to reproduce this article, contact me
    Socialized MedicineOne Size Fits None Andrew Sawatzky, the elderly Manitoba man whose wife went to court to fight the "Do Not Resuscitate" order placed on his hospital chart, is probably part of a fairly small minority. His wife says he wants resuscitation if he has another stroke, even though the attempt might fail or leave him permanently unconscious. I discuss these life-and-death issues frequently with clients when preparing powers of attorney. The vast majority recoil from the thought of becoming brain-dead husks on permanent life support. Most say that if their doctors pronounce further treatment futile, they would rather accept the verdict and "die with dignity." But what’s right or wrong in cases like this can’t be determined by public opinion poll. It doesn’t matter what 99 people would choose, if the hundredth person wants something different. The question still remains: what should be done about Mr. Sawatzky? To me, the ethical principles that should be applied are simple. Everyone should be free to conduct his life however he pleases, so long as he leaves others free to do the same. It’s wrong to use force—including the force behind our court system—to bend someone to your will, except to enforce a contract the other person previously agreed to.

    87. Kelley Ross For State Assembly, Oh! No!
    Medicare was always, and was always intended, as a Trojan Horse for a British orCanadian kind of socialized medicine. What socialism does is drive up prices.
    http://www.friesian.com/ross/ca40/ohno.htm
    Kelley Ross for State Assembly, Oh! No!
    Abortion
    Whether abortion is right or wrong, making abortion illegal again is giving the state too much power . What goes on inside our bodies is so intimate and private that, if the state really is given responsibility over wombs , it must be given police powers far beyond anything that it can safely be trusted with. Anti-abortion efforts, also, should be seen as part of attacks on parental rights , since the impulse to intervene on behalf of other people's children does not stop when babies are born. Excesses in "child protection" have today resulted in parents, both mothers and fathers, being put in jail over trumped-up charges of child molestation in hysterical and witch-hunt-like circumstances. Some consistency would be nice. Parents, in general, are going to have greater interest in their children than anyone else. Bureaucrats, judges, and do-gooders, whether "pro-lifers" or children's "advocates," can congratulate themselves on how caring they are, but they are rarely able to assume the responsibility for individual children that they may decide should not be exercised by the parents. How such people generate child abuse may be seen, for example, in

    88. Term Papers - Help Writing College Term Papers On Canadian Studies - 043-006
    Papers On canadian Studies Page 7 of 7. BACK, The Need For socialized MedicineIn The United States send me this paper Long before President Bill Clinton
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    89. No Wonder Seniors Buy Canadian Drugs
    canadian drug prices are so much lower because the country's system ofsocialized medicine keeps a tight hold on pharmaceutical costs.
    http://www.commondreams.org/views/120600-105.htm
    Home Newswire About Us Donate ... Sign-Up Featured Views Share This Article With Your Friends Published on Wednesday, December 6, 2000 in the Omaha World-Herald No Wonder Seniors Buy Canadian Drugs Editorial The Canadian cross-border trade in pharmaceuticals continues to expand with the opening of a Web site for doctors willing to act as go-betweens for their elderly patients. That helps increase the pressure on the drug industry as well as Congress to address the problem of high costs. Some older Americans have for years headed across the United States' northern border to buy the medicines they need but can't afford. Drug prices there can be half or a quarter of prices in the United States. Canadian drug prices are so much lower because the country's system of socialized medicine keeps a tight hold on pharmaceutical costs. In addition, U.S. drug prices are high because companies add the cost of research and development as well as the price of lobbying and expensive advertising campaigns. Senior citizens, many of whom are on fixed incomes and use more drugs than other Americans, feel the pinch. Horror stories abound: A Vermont woman who paid $95 a month for the tamoxifen that kept breast cancer at bay now goes to Canada, where the drug costs her $125 a year. An older couple who were paying thousands of dollars a year for medicines were able to cut that expenditure in half by a regular northward journey. Some charitable organizations sponsor drug-buying trips, and a small industry has sprung up to help seniors. Chartered buses operate on a regular schedule from many areas within a day's drive - or sometimes more - of Canada. Once there, seniors see sympathetic Canadian doctors or U.S. doctors with licenses to prescribe drugs in both the United States and Canada. Pharmacies near the border accommodate Americans gladly; some even offer amenities such as free sandwiches while customers wait.

    90. Broadband » Remark
    If 50% of US residents want it but can't get it, then how is Canadianculture which has socialized medicine the same as the US?
    http://www.broadbandreports.com/forum/remark,5183425~root=news,23976~mode=flat
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    (Premium) Joined 03-03-2002 Location: S. Jersey Comcast There is no separate Canadian culture Why the big uproar over the potential contamination of Canadian culture by the American media First of all there is no separate Canadian culture to contaminate. There is a North American culture shared by US and Canada. There are only 2 differences that are apparent. The first is socialized medicine. But more than 50% of US citizens support socialized medicine but can't get it into law because our politicians have been bought by the pharmaceutical and AMA lobbies. So even that difference is illusory. The second is the 25% of Canadians that are French speakers as a first language and who want their own separate country. They are not part of Canadian culture but a long time Francophile holdout hoping that one day the UN will let them form their own country or become French provinces. So why not accept the inevitable. Canada adds about 6 more states to the USA and the wacko Frenchies get their own country out of what's left.

    91. Search - 043-003
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    92. Canadian Medicine And Canadaian Drugs
    Welcome to The FreeMed Connection canadian medicine Store. 1. Due to the SocializedHealth Care System in Canada, the canadian Government purchases bulk
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    FreeMed FAQ's Welcome to The FreeMed Connection Canadian Medicine Store . Our mission is to be your one and only connection to the best pharmacies in Canada. U.S. citizens can now save 50% and more on U.S.-approved brand name and generic prescription drugs through licensed Canadian pharmacies and have them mailed directly to your home You don't have to put up with this anymore!! Ordering with us is as easy as: Check Prices -Save 30-80% on Canadian prescriptions and have them delivered to your door by Express Mail! Order -Canadian prescriptions have never been easier to order than now. All you need to order Canadian prescriptions is a mailbox, fax machine or computer. Refills Your Canadian prescriptions are filled by licensed Canadian pharmacist at an established Canadian pharmacy and are delivered to your door by Express Mail. Saftey Quality Reliability Why buy Canadian?

    93. BCCKEFGHIJKMPQRS
    have a working knowledge of a contrasting healthcare system of socialized medicineas is Your overall knowledge in the US and canadian systems made you a more
    http://www.gsu.edu/~wwwche/webquest5h.htm
    UNITED STATES
    HEALTHCARE
    A SYSTEM IN NEED OF AN OVERHAUL
    Introduction: The United States Healthcare Delivery System is coming under increased scrutiny
    and criticism. Healthcare in the United States is becoming increasingly difficult to
    obtain, due mainly to increased cost, thus, becoming unreachable for certain
    segments of society. Many people see the need to restructure the entire
    healthcare industry, while others see the solution in a continuing free enterprise
    and market system. The Task: You are part of a bipartisan Healthcare Advisory Group (HAG), whose purpose is
    to examine all aspects of the United States Healthcare System. After completing
    a thorough examination of the system currently in place, your task is to recommend
    any changes necessary to make healthcare more affordable and accessible to
    all Americans. In order to complete this Web Quest you will need to answer the following questions: What role does the government play in healthcare? What do MEDICARE and MEDICAID provide?

    94. Let's Decriminalize Health Insurance, By Pierre Lemieux (socialized Medicine)
    The canadian system’s originality lies in the scarcity of specialized privateclinics (and “private” often means “run by private doctors,” not
    http://www.pierrelemieux.org/arttwotier.html
    Article published in the National Post , November 18, 2000, p. D-11
    Let's Decriminalize Health Insurance
    by
    Pierre Lemieux
    S trangely, or perhaps conveniently, the political debate on public health insurance has ignored the system’s fundamental feature: private insurance (other than complementary insurance for uninsured public services) is forbidden by law. For reasons we will see, many people don’t believe this, or don’t believe it matters. Let’s look at a sample of provincial health insurance laws adopted in the late 60s or early 70s. – Ontario Health Insurance Act, section 14, subsection 1, titled “Other insurance prohibited”: “Every contract of insurance … for the payment of or reimbursement or indemnification for all or any part of the cost of any insured services … performed in Ontario for any person eligible to become an insured person under this Act, is void and of no effect in so far as it makes provision for insuring against the costs payable by the [Ontario Health Insurance] Plan and no person shall enter into or renew such a contract.” Non-government insurance is only permitted for non-insured services. “Insured services” are defined in section 11.2(1) as “prescribed medically necessary services” which are paid for by OHIP. – Alberta Health Care Insurance Act, section 17, subsection 2: “An insurer shall not enter into, issue, maintain in force or renew a contract or initiate or renew a self-insurance plan under which any resident or group of residents is provided with any prepaid basic health services or extended health services or indemnification for all or part of the cost of any basic health services or extended health services.” As defined by subsection 1, “self-insurance” basically means private insurance. An exception is made in subsection 4 for supplementary insurance “over and above the benefits payable by the Minister.”

    95. The Heritage Foundation: Press Room: News Releases: NR092900: British, Canadian
    NR092900 British, canadian Experience Shows Folly of SocializedMedicine, Analyst Says.
    http://new.heritage.org/Press/NewsReleases/NR092900.cfm
    site map help contact us The Heritage Foundation ... News Releases NR092900: British, Canadian Experience Shows Folly of Socialized Med. Daily Briefing News Release Archive Commentary Archive Heritage Experts ... Return Home British, Canadian Experience Shows Folly of Socialized Medicine, Analyst Says WASHINGTON, Sept. 29, 2000— Even as some Americans head north to get cheaper prescription drugs from Canada, many more Canadians are heading south—to buy the drugs and vital medical services they can’t get at any price under their country’s highly touted system of government-run health care. Lack of access to prescription drugs—an inevitable result of the rationing that occurs under nearly every form of socialized medicine—is only one of the problems patients encounter with the so-called "universal health coverage" found in Canada and Britain, a new Heritage Foundation paper says. Vice President Al Gore recently predicted the United States would adopt such a system "within this decade." But according to Heritage healthcare expert James Frogue, that means U.S. patients would be forced to suffer the same fate as their counterparts in Britain and Canada: long waiting lists, government rationing and substandard care. The waiting lists for treatment in both countries, even for serious conditions, are notoriously long, Frogue says. One Canadian cardiologist, Dr. Richard Davies, recently wrote in the

    96. 2002_03 | Some Lessons To Be Learned From Canadian Health System
    Search this site. MANAGED CARE March 2002. ©MediMedia USA. SOCIALIZEDMEDICINE. Some Lessons To Be Learned From canadian Health System.
    http://www.managedcaremag.com/archives/0203/0203.canada.html
    Search this site SOCIALIZED MEDICINE
    Some Lessons To Be Learned From Canadian Health System
    Our neighbors to the north deliver care that is cheaper, but there are disputes concerning quality and growing unrest with irrational rationing.
    By Marlene Piturro, PhD, MBA Resources are finite. Demand is infinite. The United States and Canada have built health care systems that attempt to reconcile the irreconcilable imbalance between supply and demand differently. Adjacent geographically, the two nations often seem worlds apart on health care financing and delivery. Canada publicly finances and privately delivers universal health care coverage with 10 provincial and 2 territorial governments linked through adherence to federal standards. Each provincial plan must adhere to the Canada Health Care Act of 1984's stipulations that it be publicly administered, comprehensive, universal, accessible, and portable. In contrast, the U.S. relies on a mix of public and private payers that leaves over 40 million uninsured, some underinsured, and some with too generous coverage. Canada's system is fee for service; there are no copayments, deductibles, or third-party intermediaries controlling utilization.
    Canada, U.S. at a glance

    97. Term Papers On CANADA .. More Model Term Papers On Canadian Studies
    touted as one of the major advantages in being a canadian citizen. The Need For SocializedMedicine In The United States Long before President Bill Clinton
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    Canada / Economy and Politics An 8 page research paper exploring Canada: its history, natural resources, economy, and politics. Essay concludes with a recommendation as to whether or not to invest in the country. Bibliography lists 7 sources. Canada2.wps The 18th Century Fur Trade Furtra.wps Canada and the American Revolution A 5 page essay on the difference in attitudes between the U.S. and Canada instigated by the American Revolutionary War and holding ever since. The writer posits that while Canadians are generally distrustful of the U.S., the same attitude does not hold in the reverse. Bibliography lists 5 sources. Candarev.doc The Rebellions of 1837-1838 A 15 page essay on the nineteenth century rebellions in which Canada broke away from British rule and which, subsequently, prompted reforms. Bibliography lists 10 sources. Reb1837.wps

    98. Term Papers And More Model Term Papers On Canadian Studies
    In this 6 page research paper, the writer presents arguments in favor of socializedmedicine detailing all of Click Here For Papers On canadian Literature.
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