digskat
<font color=darkorange>Got Goldendoodle?<br><font
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2005
- Messages
- 2,038
I don't have any problem with two tiered health care. Canada already has a tiered health care system, if you consider that the availability of health care in the "have" provinces vs the "have not" provinces. To be able to walk into a clinic any day of the week, most nights until 9 or 10 PM, and be able to get bloodwork and xrays is a perk of living in a big city in Ontario that is not available in small town Nova Scotia or Newfoundland. That is a fact. If somebody wants to open a private facility and let people who can afford it pay cash, by all means. That means less people in the public system and shorter wait times for treatment. I don't see it as buying better treatment, I see it as buying faster treatment, which ultimately pays off be speeding up treatment times and freeing up facilities for everyone else.
Want to borrow my glasses?
That is hardly a two-tiered system, it is just a further example of how have-nots get shafted, and it has nothing to do with a public/private split in Ontario. Would you like another straw to grasp at?
You never answered the question. If you were offered more money to work in a more controlled environment, would you take it? It has already happened with alot of Doctors and Nurses, who ran for the money in the states. If the government opened up this option, their would be an exodus of doctors and nurses from the public system, lured by better money, and more control. The lines in the public system wouldn't shorten, because the lack of providers would even out the reduced seekers. It would just create another have/have not situation. We already have this in our legal system, the better the lawyer, the more money they can charge. If a wealthy person commits a crime, they get the best lawyer money can buy (and usually get minimal consequences), but if a 'have not' commits a crime, they get a legal aid defender, usually a fresh faced kid or a lawyer who can't get clients. We have it in other clinical fields, where clinicians flock from public service to private practice, because the money is better. The two-tiered system we have for geriatric care has worked wonders for the have-nots, government run facilities are under-staffed and under-funded, with the same waiting lists, while private run facilities for the 'haves', are much better.
By the way, the government doesn't regulate the hourly rate for lawyers, counsellors, etc, and don't limit the monthly costs of private nursing homes. Call me silly, but I don't agree with benfits for the wealthy, at the cost of the average Ontarian.