Evidence shows private MRI tests won't cut the wait - Winnipeg Free Press - 0 views
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Last week, Health Minister Kelvin Goertzen suggested he was "willing to look" at copying a Saskatchewan initiative that allows people to pay for MRI tests at private clinics to relieve pressure on the public system. In exchange for being able to charge directly for a scan, private MRI clinics have to provide one free scan to someone on the public waiting list.
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In question period Friday, the NDP lashed out at Goertzen for his interest in a program the federal government has deemed illegal under the Canada Health Act. Two-tier health care remains a flashpoint between the right and left wings of the Canadian political spectrum, as was witnessed in the Manitoba legislature last week.
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NDP critic Matt Wiebe put it bluntly. "This is the first step in (the Tory government’s) plan to create a two-tier health system, where the size of your wallet determines your care."
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Many within the system believe allowing private, for-profit options is a potential solution. Government has always relied on private facilities such as walk-in clinics, X-ray clinics and laboratories to provide insured services within the public system. Perhaps it’s time to allow Canadians to purchase medical services on the open market.
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Although a province may have an oversupply of surgeons, it has a shortage of the other disciplines. The hours nurses and anesthesiologists work in the private system would come at the expense of the hours they can devote to the public system.This is a key caveat on the argument in favour of allowing more private, for-profit health care options: it is difficult to create a private tier that does not ultimately weaken the public tier. In fact, it is tough to find examples where increased private options relieve pressure on the public system and reduce wait times.
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There is some evidence of this in Saskatchewan, where the government has been allowing private, for-profit MRIs for about 10 months. To date, Saskatchewan claims it has taken 2,200 patients off public wait lists for MRIs. And yet, its wait times in the public system have not gone down.
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In fact, during the first six months Saskatchewan allowed residents to purchase their own MRI tests, the government’s own website shows wait times went up.