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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

21. Canadian Medicine: Tom Douglas
medicine was not due to a medical skill or great discovery, but as the father ofCanadian health care. He introduced socialized medicine (statesponsored and
http://www.mta.ca/faculty/arts/canadian_studies/english/about/study_guide/doctor
Canadian Medicine: Doctors and Discoveries Part III The Nature of Health Care Delivery What medical services are available to a society? How does one secure such medical services and/or treatments? Who pays for this? The system in which health care is delivered affects how medicine is practiced and how the sick are treated in any country. Throughout history, doctors and patients have negotiated and shaped the delivery of medical care. In Canada, it was a politician from Western Canada, Thomas C. "Tommy" Douglas, who led the movement towards universal health care, a government-sponsored system that ensured open and equal access to medical services for all Canadians. Thomas C. Douglas:
"The Father of Canadian Health Care"
Thomas C. Douglas (1904-1986) was not a doctor; he was a politician from Saskatchewan. His contribution to Canadian medicine was not due to a medical skill or great discovery, but as "the father of Canadian health care." He introduced socialized medicine (state-sponsored and salaried-physician medical care) to the province of Saskatchewan during his 44-year political career. Douglas envisioned and worked towards a universal system of health care that moved beyond provincial to national enactment, and today has become the envy of most countries in the world. Douglas entered politics in the 1930s in Saskatchewan as a member of the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation (CCF), the

22. Canadian Medicine: Study Guide
T or F; Wilder Penfield's open brain surgery caused the patient much pain.T or F; The canadian Medical Care Act is a form of socialized medicine.
http://www.mta.ca/faculty/arts/canadian_studies/english/about/study_guide/doctor
Canadian Medicine: Doctors and Discoveries Study Guide
Note the vocabulary word, true/false or answer cue: when you click "Back" you may have to scan text to find your place again. Vocabulary
pathology:
the scientific study of a disease: its causes, processes, development, and consequences
suffrage:
The right or privilege of voting
meager:
deficient, scanty
bloodletting
the removal of blood as a therapeutic measure.
hypothesis
an assertion from which a conclusion is drawn; an assumption used as the the basis for action
unequivocal
clear; not open to misunderstanding
endocrinology
the study of the endocrine or "ductless glands" (those glands which secrete directly into the blood stream.
ambiguity
the state of being doubtful, uncertain, open to many interpretations
Socialism
a social system in which the producer possesses both political power and the means of producing and distributing goods.
Fascism
a system of government that advocates a dictatorship which merges state and business leadership together with aggressive nationalism
thoracic
having to do with the thorax: the part of the body between the neck and the diaphragm partially encased by the ribs; the chest

23. CET Archives: Re: Socialized Medicine -- Calling All Canadians!
socialized medicine calling all canadians! Date Mon, 12 Jun 2000 015439 0400.Jumping in late here (sorry) with some long rambling thoughts on canadian
http://www.cin.org/archives/cet/200006/0086.html
CET Archives Return to CET Table of Contents
Re: socialized medicine calling all Canadians!
New Message Reply About this list Date view ... Author view From: Kathleen Murphy ( murphyk@travel-net.com
Date: Mon Jun 12 2000 - 12:54:39 From: "Kathleen Murphy" < murphyk@travel-net.com Jumping in late here (sorry) with some long rambling thoughts on
Canadian health-care.
The personal anecdote side: I am Canadian and at 34 I'm young enough to
have never known anything but tax-paid health care. However, I remember
being told various horror-stories of families depleting their savings
and selling their furniture and even houses to pay for the medical
expenses of sick relatives in the days before. My brother is an

24. CET Archives: Socialized Medicine -- Calling All Canadians!
So, what do y'all think of socialized medicine? Is the canadian systemas bad as it is said to be? Are there no good examples of
http://www.cin.org/archives/cet/200006/0016.html
CET Archives Return to CET Table of Contents
socialized medicine calling all Canadians!
New Message Reply About this list Date view ... Author view From: Christopher Zehnder ( lamission@tminet.com
Date: Mon Jun 05 2000 - 04:12:25 From: "Christopher Zehnder" < lamission@tminet.com Today I was talking to two folks who had moved from British Columbia to
California some months past. One of the things in Canada they complained of
is the government supported medical system. They complained of inefficiency,
of the political control of doctors (specifying that they must perform such
procedures as abortions), of the long waits (sometimes years) for surgery,
of the exorbitant tax burden arising from the system. I have never been a

25. Socialized Medicine
coverage, in The Freeman, March 1989, pp. 96100 socialized MedicineThe canadian Experience by Pierre Lemieux The An essay
http://www.artinthehills.org/maranatha-christian-academy.htm

26. Essays And Essays Writing Essays On Canadian Studies - 043-021
call to address the general sense of inequality in the canadian Legislature. The NeedFor socialized medicine In The United States send me this essay Long
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We have thousands of essays in this area! Below is a list in order of relevance to your search query. All of the following documents are ready for delivery TODAY and priced at only $ /page with a free bibliography! Use the Send Me This Essay link to access our fast, easy order form and receive any essay on this list TODAY!!!... Papers On Canadian Studies
Page 22 of 27 The Eskimo Spirit in Death
send me this essay

(6 pp). One of greatest human fears is death. We superstitiously think that if we don't talk about it, we do not have to deal with it, but according to Purnell's Model for Cultural Competence, mourning, death and its attending rituals are commonalities which all humans share. This discussion will examine death and its rituals among Eskimos . Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Filename: BBeskimo.doc
The First Nations People
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5 pages in length. These two interesting books that depict the First Nations People of Canadian descent are "The Loons" by Margaret Laurence and "Borders" by Thomas King. While the settings in each story are different at the same time they have the same agenda, and that is the problems faced by Indians of Canada and what their heritage is, including the problems it can cause for them. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: JGAloons.wps

27. Archive | September 1996 | Need Does Not Create Right -- Socialized Medicine Mus
Need Does Not Create Right socialized medicine Must Go. regulate an entire industryas vital as medicine. Under the current canadian Medicare system, doctors
http://www.enterstageright.com/archive/articles/0996medicine.htm
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Need Does Not Create Right Socialized Medicine Must Go
By Gord Gekko
web posted September 1996 That being so, does the government have the right to mandate what a doctor will charge for their services? The answer, in a free society, is no. Under the current Canadian Medicare system, doctors do not have the right to charge their own rates based on market conditions and their own ability. The government effectively decides how the Medicare system will be run and who gets access to it. Doctors do not have the right to open private clinics even if they choose to opt out (which cannot be done) out of the system. The argument used often enough in support of Medicare is that the average person cannot afford health care without a collectivist program. This is complete balderdash. Who is paying for health care now? The average person. If the current load of social programs were to be cut completely, as would be morally proper, the average person could pay for their own health care or purchase what level of insurance they wished to cover health costs. The second problem with Medicare is the very coercive nature of the program. If one does not wish to be a part of the Medicare system, one has no recourse. Your taxes pay for the institutional slavery of doctors and patients whether you support it or not. At the barrel of a proverbial gun you are told that you must be a part of Medicare because it is good for you and society.

28. Archive | April 24, 2000 | Socialized Medicine Leaves A Bad Taste In Patients' M
advertisement Click Here socialized medicine leaves a bad taste in patients' mouths. Lastfall, a colleague of mine visited the canadian province of Manitoba.
http://www.enterstageright.com/archive/articles/0400socmed.htm
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Socialized medicine leaves a bad taste in patients' mouths
By Lawrence W. Reed
web posted April 24, 2000 Hospital food is rarely mistaken for gourmet cuisine anywhere, but at least in Michigan it is not an issue over which major political campaigns are waged. In Canada, however, it isand the lesson it provides for American health care is profound. Last fall, a colleague of mine visited the Canadian province of Manitoba. With just a few days left before the elections, political campaigning there was at a fever pitch. My friend was astonished to observe that the dominant issue was indeed hospital food. The patients of Manitoba's hospitals had complained for months about the introduction of "re-thermalized food"cut-rate meals prepared 1,300 miles away in Toronto, then frozen and shipped to Manitoba where they are nuked in microwaves and served. Peter Holle, president of the Frontier Centre for Public Policy in Winnipeg, explained that re-heating meals was a cost-saving "innovation" of government bureaucrats employed by regional health authorities. "Never mind that they taste like cardboard," says Holle. "Never mind that individual tastes and circumstances might dictate decentralized food services. Re-heated meals became a symbol of efficiency for the supposedly compassionate do-gooders in government. Why pay hundreds of workers in dozens of Manitoba kitchens when we can just zap up frozen dinners from Toronto?" As it turned out, the incumbent government in Manitoba and many of its supporters went down to defeat. Vile victuals were a key reason.

29. Canadian Conservative Forum - Quotations
how much we wish to receive. Feb. 1999 from socialized medicine- One Size Fits None , published in canadian Lawyer magazine.
http://www.conservativeforum.org/quotelist.asp?SearchType=5&Interest=70

30. The Dangers Of Socialized Medicine - Chapter 3
For example, in 1989 the average American spent about 40 percent moreon health care than his canadian counterpart $2,354 versus $1,683.
http://www.amatecon.com/etext/dosm/dosm-ch03.html
A Free Market for Health Care
by Sheldon L. Richman
Concerned about rising costs and the number of Americans without medical insurance, nearly everyone is worried these days about health care. Not a day goes by without a presidential candidate or a magazine calling for something drastic to be done. Each advocate maintains that his plan will bring skyrocketing costs under control, make health care accessible to low-income people, and bring health insurance within the reach of the 34 million Americans who currently do without it.
But the American people are being handed a Hobson’s choice between a government takeover of the medical insurance industry and mandatory provision of insurance by the nation’s employers, with the government as insurer of last resort.
There is a real alternative—a solution that relies on competition in the open marketplace. That solution recognizes that the undesirable aspects of the current system are not the result of the free market, but rather are the outcome of decades of governmental intervention in the health-care industry. Elimination of that intervention would shift power and responsibility from impersonal bureaucracies to consumers. The resulting free market, characterized by prudent consumers spending their own money, would control costs and let the American people have the kind of medical care they want.
Those who call for greater governmental involvement are fond of comparing how much Americans spend on health care with how much is spent in other countries. For example, in 1989 the average American spent about 40 percent more on health care than his Canadian counterpart: $2,354 versus $1,683. The West Germans, French, Japanese, and Britons spent even less. The 12 percent of gross domestic product that the United States devoted to health care in 1991 ($650 billion) is double the portion so devoted in Great Britain. By the year 2000, total spending is expected to reach $1 trillion or 15 percent of gross domestic product. Costs are increasing at 15 percent a year, much more than the general rate of price increases. The cost of employer-provided medical insurance increased 21.6 percent from 1989 to 1990.

31. CoCo9: Student Links
Enjoy! Nicole Savickas on Fri Feb 6 181324 1998 wrote socialized medicine Thecanadian Experience An article discussing the canadian system of healthcare.
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~coco9/s_links.html

Course information

Course schedule

Reading list

Discussions
...
Course links

Student links
Extra links

This page contains a selection of links that students in the course have been collecting over the term. They are sites relevant to the course topics. Each entry lists the student's name, the site name linked to the site, and a brief description of the site. The list will be expanding throughout the term. Students can also use this page to add a link
Wilson Liu on Wed Jan 14 19:05:51 1998 wrote:
The American Medical Student Association
The site contains information on AMSA; it states their objectives, descibes current projects, and also has many other items of interest. Nicole Savickas on Fri Feb 6 12:09:23 1998 wrote: A Hard Lesson About Socialized Medicine This is an article that talks about the problems of socialized medicine in Europe, and relating them to the American system, namely, Medicare. Nicole Savickas on Fri Feb 6 12:12:30 1998 wrote: Socialized medicine deemed unhealthy A commentary on healthcare as a human right. Whoops...

32. NCPA - Health Issues - Socialized Medicine Canada Style: Nobody Likes It
government onethird of their gross income over $251,000 canadian (US$183,700 Amongthe other results of Canada's system of socialized medicine the government
http://www.ncpa.org/health/pdh36b.html
Health Issues
Socialized Medicine Canada Style: Nobody Likes It
To hold down skyrocketing costs and still comply with mandates of the Canadian Health Care Act which requires universal health coverage from the government the province of Ontario passed a so-called Savings and Restructuring Act earlier this year. It attempts to attack the problem of out-of-control costs by rationing and price controls.
  • Over the past five years, increases in Ontario's mandated physicians' fees have been restricted to less than 1 percent a year.
  • Doctors have been required to return to the government one-third of their gross income over $251,000 Canadian (US$183,700) , two-thirds of their gross income over C$276,000, and three-fourths of their gross income over C$30l,000.
  • Their net income after expenses, but before taxes, is 40 percent to 50 percent less than their gross income.
  • In spite of these measures, physicians' total billings are increasing by 13 percent a year.
In June 1995, after four years of socialist rule during which the provincial government's debt load doubled Ontarians elected a conservative government which drastically reduced spending. In January, Ontario passed the Savings and Restructuring Act. Although aimed at cutting costs it has had these results:
  • Ontario physicians have become civil servants although without pensions or unemployment insurance.

33. NCPA - Daily Policy Digest - The Sorry Plight Of Canada's Socialized Health-Care
In Canada, health care is a state monopoly socialized medicine called universalcare than any other country with a similar system, canadian health care
http://www.ncpa.org/iss/hea/2002/pd090302b.html

Policy Issues
NCPA Publications Both Sides Editorial Opinions ... Audio/Visual
NATIONAL CENTER FOR POLICY ANALYSIS
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The Sorry Plight of Canada's Socialized Health-Care System Daily Policy Digest
Health Issues / Socialized Health Care
Tuesday, September 03, 2002 In Canada, health care is a state monopoly socialized medicine called "universal care" that has developed a deservedly bad reputation, observers say.
A new study from the Vancouver-based Fraser Institute documents the system's failures:
  • Despite spending more money per capita than any other country with a similar system, Canadian health care ranks on a par with that of Turkey, Hungary and Poland. Canada ranks 18th in access to MRIs, 17th in access to CT scanners, eighth in access to radiation machines and 13th in access to lithotripters, which are used for treating kidney stones. Canadians do somewhat better in terms of health-treatment outcomes but that is due in part to their option to come to the U.S. for services that would be unavailable or dangerously delayed at home. All of the countries that beat Canada in outcomes have parallel systems of private health insurance and care delivery operating alongside the government system.

34. Canadian Medications, Canada Medicine, Canadian Prescription Drugs, Medicine Fro
Canada is a socialized medicine nation which means the government sets the prices.Therefore, there is little difference in price from one canadian pharmacy to
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35. Alberta Pharmacy,Alberta Prescription Drugs,Alberta Medicines, Canadian Medicine
canadian Prescription Services. Medications are cheaper in Canada because the country’ssystem of socialized medicine tightly controls pharmaceutical costs.
http://www.a2zimaging.com/mdi.htm
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36. Analytical Essays - Help Writing College Essays On Canadian Studies - 043-016
call to address the general sense of inequality in the canadian Legislature. The NeedFor socialized medicine In The United States send me this paper Long
http://www.essaypros.com/categories/043-016.html
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Page 17 of 21 The Descent of the Fraser River: A Critical Analysis
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7 pages. Simon Fraser was an explorer who discovered what was thought to be the Columbia River but is now known as the Fraser River. The harrowing and dangerous experiences this explorer and his men went through are almost beyond belief. This paper gives an assessment of Simon Fraser, his character, and evidence supporting this viewpoint. Also discussed is how this event would be told from the point of view of a Native American. The conclusion drawn from these assessments gives us a true look at whether history is an accurate study or simply an inference biased by point of view. This draws some interesting and challenging questions on the subject of teaching history. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: JGAfrasr.rtf

37. Report From The States: Washington State Battles Socialized Medicine --- Again
Washington State Battles socialized medicine Again. as long as the governmentadmits and come to US border towns either under canadian government contract
http://www.haciendapub.com/report2.html
Report From the States
Washington State Battles Socialized Medicine - Again Thomas J. Mueller, MD
Describing what is currently happening in Washington State can be categorized as the good, the bad, and the ugly. First the not so good news: If you're in a state bordering with our neighbors to the north it doesn't take much effort to determine that the single payer (Medicare) system of Canada is faltering in a number of areas. Physicians are leaving Canada in droves and settling in many northern locations like Bellingham, Washington. Patients can escape the clutches of the statist system where waiting lists are typically twice as long as the government admits and come to U.S. border towns either under Canadian government contract or the totally private system of our fee-for-service model. Yet with the plethora of examples indicating how stifling the Canadian medical system is, there are a growing number of physicians here in Washington State who want to import that same system. The group sponsoring the initiative to turn all Washingtonians into the same medical slaves as those in all of Canada were at the recent Washington State Medical Association (WSMA) House of Delegates meeting held in Spokane. There they argued for their effort to create the utopian government model of the ages, giving not only all private insurance monies to an "accountable TRUST" but also all public monies as well, including Medicaid and Medicare, thus requiring fundamental changes in both state and federal legislation before their system can be implemented. Thankfully, arguments against their initiative abounded. But they haven't disappeared. They will merely regroup and resurface in time to put their initiative out and try to have it placed on the November 2000 ballot. Can you imagine the entire

38. Socialized Medicine And National Health Care
Illinois is considering a canadian version of socialized medicine that would prohibitinsurance companies from providing insurance for Illinois residents after
http://doctordurante.com/Socialized_medicine.html
Socialized Medicine and National Health Care : Prescription for a Fool's Paradise" "Government Watch: "Government Watch: Americare More Poison Offered as Cure" "Government Watch: in U.S. Health-Care Reform Proposals" Links to groups fighting socialized medicine and national health care Salvatore J. Durante's home page: index.html Salvatore J. Durante's publications: Publications.html "National Health Care: Prescription for a Fool's Paradise" The Freeman, April 1991; reprinted in Prices and Price Controls, in the series The Freeman Classics, 1992. Suppose I promise you health-care like you've never had before. When you visit a doctor or a hospital, all you'll have to do is show a card, and someone else will foot the bill. You'll never have to fill out another insurance form or wait for another reimbursement to come in. And, I promise, you'll get the same quality of care you get now, and won't have to pay more taxes for it. Would you vote for me? Most people would. Would you get what I promised? No, because it's impossible to deliver. This is the promise of those who advocate "national health-care" or "universal health insurance" (on either the state or national level). In either case, what is involved is extensive or complete government control of health-care: control of who pays for services, who provides them, and who receives them. We have, before our eyes, an example of a very similar system that has been operating now for 26 years: Medicare. We aim to demonstrate here, by a detailed look at Medicare, that such government interference in health-care is harmful from the first to buyers and providers of health-care, and in the long run is disastrous. Government medicine, on the national or the state level, is a prescription for a fool's paradise.

39. School Reports - Research Reports And Papers On Canadian Studies - 043-015
Papers On canadian Studies Page 16 of 18. The Need For socialized medicine In TheUnited States send me this paper Long before President Bill Clinton ever
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Page 16 of 19 The History of Lacrosse: From the Native American Stickball Game to the Game We Know Today
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A 9 page overview of the game Lacrosse. Traces the game from its origin among the Native Americans to the present day. Details the spiritual meaning of the game to Native Americans as well as its history among the non-Natives in their relations with Natives. Outlines the evolution in gear, rules, and playing fields. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Filename: PPlacros.wps
The Hotel Business in Canada
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This 5 page paper focuses on employees in Canada's hotels. Union and non-union laborers are compared and issues such as wages , job security and scheduling are discussed. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: SA014Ho.wps
The Importance of Satellites to Canada send me this paper A 10 page overview of the importance of satellite connection to the widely scattered and often remote communities of Canada. Includes information about educational and business applications including teleconferencing, distance learning, and other opportunities which this technology has made available. Identifies Canada as one of the most progressive nations in satellite technology. Bibliography lists 7 sources.

40. Re: Canadian System (06/07/00)
Subject Re canadian System. Julia Winter wrote Hmmmm, well, we might presumethat state controlled socialized medicine is the best way to allocate
http://www.pcc.com/lists/pedtalk.archive/0006/00043.html
To: Subject: Re: Canadian System From: Date: Wed, 07 Jun 2000 23:53:06 -0400 References: Reply-To: Hmmmm, well, we might presume that state controlled "socialized" medicine is the best way to allocate health care resources because every other first-world country has socialized medicine. The more privatization is allowed, the more inequity resultswe can see this in England before and after the reign of Margaret Thatcher. . . Although I will grant that free markets can lead to fair prices, this argument has an assumption of educated consumers and honest sellers. My husband (at the Haas School of Business) calls it "perfect information." Medicine is not a commodity that can be controlled by a free market. Mostly because the decisions to be made are so complex, it is impossible for a consumer to know whether they're getting the best deal, but also because many decisions related to medical "purchases" are not made calmly and rationally. cleaner... http://www.pcc.com/lists/ " To unsubscribe: mail with "unsubscribe" in the body of the message.

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