captainj said:
Guys get with the program. Yes care is guaranteed full stop and while the health care system does its level best we are generally well looked after. Our Med plan compared to the lions share is heads and above most out there.
And the fact that our 'system' is somewhat better than most (in Canada) is supposed to be some sort of recommendation? Good, indeed excellent medical support is an
operational requirement. The taxpayers have a
right to a fit, healthy army; one in which most soldiers are ready and able to fight. The aim ought to be to return wounded soldiers to duty as soon as possible or make them ready to rejoin the civilian world in as productive a capacity as humanly possible. If the
system is not achieving its
required levels of performance then perhaps it needs more and better resources or, perhaps, we can just lower the standards again - so as not to get too near the level of care afforded the careless bricklayer.
captainj said:
The CF has a difficult enough time attracting Med people both Doctors and Nurses let alone keeping them in. How can you possibly expect a Doctor/Nurse to hang around when there is so much to offer outside. My wife has been offered outrageous $$$$ to move to the states (Oncology aka Cancer). It just isn't realistic to expect what you guys are advocating. Another thing to note is yes the US has the biz in Germany (I have seen it first hand as a AO) But all those great Doctors and Nurses are for the most part Reservists. Guess what when you take from one to add to the other the civilian side looses out. But heck they only look after careless bricklayers
Captain J
The civilian system has exactly the same difficulty: too few doctors and nurses willing to work in substandard facilities, for too little money as part of an overly bureaucratic
system.
The solution is simple: let the market do its work. It cannot do any worse than the bureaucracy.
The
law of supply and demand is absolutely immutable in any and all human endeavours.
Captain J's anecdotal evidence re: his wife proves that. The major obstacle to an adequate health care system (I will not even wish for a first rate one) is Canadians' attitudes. Canadians object to the reasonable sorts of salaries which a free market
requires for health care professionals because Canadians are driven by greed and envy - they envy the high salaries
earned by doctors and, simultaneously, they want 'free' health care from a large but lowly paid corps of medical professionals. If hospitals and provinces and, yes, DND pay
going market rates for medical professionals the shortages will disappear and the
system will start to work better. That isn't the only thing needed but it is
the key to the shortage of doctors and nurses. It's not going to happen any time soon because Canadians remain willfully ignorant of the facts of life. (And anyone who thinks that supply and demand is not a fact of life is willfully ignorant.)
I fail to see what the fact that US military medical people are reservists has to do with anything. Does that make their
system inferior? I don't think so. Is the fact that many US reservists have been called to service creating the sorts of shortages in US hospitals which are the norm in Canada? Of course not: the US civilian system, which obeys the
law of supply and demand to maintain its own, internal requirements can, quickly and easily, hire Canadian doctors and nurses.
Remember the other law, the one expressed by Pogo: "We have met the enemy and he is us."
We are our own worst enemy because accept a third rate national health care regime (down at the bottom of the list of OECD nations when either value or performance (outcomes) are measured) and then congratulate ourselves when the military
system is only slightly less hapless. That we do so indicates that we are second rate citizens.
Edit: structure - "The major obstacle to an adequate health care system ..."