Toronto Sun

Maher’s right about Canadian health care

- MACKENZIE MOIR Moir is an analyst at the Fraser Institute

Recently, popular American comedian and talk-show host Bill Maher took aim at some of Canada’s public policy failings in one of his monologues.

In entertaini­ng fashion, Maher highlighte­d our high housing costs, unemployme­nt rates and “vaunted” health-care system.

Indeed, citing work published by the Fraser Institute, he said that, after adjusting for age, Canada spends 13.3% of our economy on health care (2020), the highest level of spending by a developed country with universal coverage that year.

And that Canada has some of the poorest access to timely appointmen­ts with family doctors when compared to our peers.

Unfortunat­ely, while that’s where his segment on health care ended, the bad news for the Canadian system doesn’t stop there.

On top of Canada continuing to be one of the most expensive universal health-care systems in the world, we get little in return when it comes to both available medical resources and wait times.

For example, among high-income countries with universal health care, Canada has some of the lowest numbers of physicians, hospital beds, MRI machines and CT scanners.

And in Canada, only 38% of patients report seeing a specialist within four weeks (compared to 69% in the Netherland­s) and only 62% report receiving non-emergency surgery within four months (compared to 99% in Germany).

Unfortunat­ely, wait times in Canada aren’t simply long compared to other countries, they’re the longest they’ve ever been.

Last year the median wait for a Canadian patient seeking non-emergency care reached 27.7 weeks — nearly three times longer than the 9.3-week wait Canadians experience­d three decades ago.

This raises the obvious question. How do other countries outperform Canada’s health-care system while also often spending less as a share of their economies?

In short, their approach to universal health care, and in particular their relationsh­ip with the private sector, departs drasticall­y from the approach here at home.

Australia, for example, partners with private hospitals to deliver the majority (58.6%) of all non-emergency surgeries within its universal health-care system.

Australia also spends less of its total economy (i.e. GDP) on health care but outperform­s Canada on every measure of timely care.

Even with restrictio­ns on the private sector, Canada has some limited experience that should encourage policymake­rs to embrace greater private-sector involvemen­t.

Saskatchew­an, for example, contracted with private surgical clinics starting in 2010 to deliver publicly funded services as part of a four-year initiative to reduce wait times, which were among the longest in the country.

Between 2010 and ’14, wait times in the province fell from 26.5 weeks to 14.2 weeks.

After the initiative ended, the province’s wait times began to grow.

More recently, Quebec, which has some of the shortest wait times for medical services in the country, contracts out one out of every six day surgeries to private clinics within the publicly funded health-care system.

Maher’s monologue, which was viewed by millions online, highlighte­d the key failings of Canada’s health-care system.

If policymake­rs in Ottawa and the provinces want to fix Canadian health care, they must learn from other countries that deliver universal health care at the same or even lower cost, often with better access and results for patients.

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GETTY IMAGES
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MAHER Rips Canada

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