US🇺🇸 vs. Canada🇨🇦 Healthcare…Which one’s better?

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  • čas přidán 29. 11. 2022
  • In Canada you'll never have to worry about going bankrupt if you break your leg, but might wait a bit for it to get fixed!
    This has lawyas been an ongoing debate about which Healthcare system is better, the US or Canada. Both have their good and bad. Having used both, my personal opinion is that you can't buy the kind of peace of mind free healthcare comes with, so I choose Canada. But which do you prefer?
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Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @jokes4days
    @jokes4days Před rokem +3012

    No 🧢 I waited 3 hours in a emergency room with like 3 other people only 1 of the lady's were literally crying in pain, some homeless guy then walked up to her and said throw yourself on the floor they'll help you immediately never had so much respect for a junkie
    Ps she did it and got immediate help

    • @ragazzo3215
      @ragazzo3215 Před rokem +79

      It’s now…. Bc of lack of staff.

    • @sma4827
      @sma4827 Před rokem +118

      I got into the ER in Abbotsford at 9 pm last June after a major shoulder injury, immediately got x-rays because they suspected head or neck trauma, but after they realized that my head was fine, I was triaged to the very bottom and waited until about 5 am. I was sobbing on the floor because the seats hurt too much to sit in but wasn't even offered a sling until I begged for one and when I finally saw the doc he said it'd only take two weeks to heal. Since I wasn't able to move my shoulder to the right position for the x-rays, the x-rays ended up being very misguiding and the injury was actually bad enough that I'm still not clear for sports yet 8 months later :( biggest thing I learned is you gotta advocate for yourself like crazy in this country!

    • @jokes4days
      @jokes4days Před rokem

      @sma4827 100% bro it's all fucked up if I get really sick I'm headed to Germany fuck this place 🫸🏾

    • @dolfyrantsparodies608
      @dolfyrantsparodies608 Před rokem +18

      @@sma4827 Aw, I hope you can recover soon! Do you have followups with a doctor about the injury?

    • @ibyabu
      @ibyabu Před rokem +9

      😂😂😂😂😂😅😅😅😅

  • @margaretkaufman1144
    @margaretkaufman1144 Před rokem +1387

    I'm a nurse in Canada and u wait so long in the room to see the doctor even I have gone snooping through the drawers and cupboards....my kids get so embarrassed 🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦😂😂😂

    • @johnsamurphy
      @johnsamurphy Před rokem +39

      We all do this in Canada. It's all unlocked for this reason.

    • @Eric-ew8jt
      @Eric-ew8jt Před rokem +49

      @@nasraelmi9142 ummm u ever hear of taxes? Nothing is free

    • @energyhealingbyandrea
      @energyhealingbyandrea Před rokem +5

      I have never done this ....now I am curious🤔🤣

    • @eddymaldonado7991
      @eddymaldonado7991 Před rokem

      ​@Eric you are very uneducated

    • @ragazzo3215
      @ragazzo3215 Před rokem +4

      It’s worse now bc of Covid and the lack of staff…. But it wasn’t like that before.

  • @Demonoicgamer666
    @Demonoicgamer666 Před rokem +1618

    I’d rather wait a hour and not be in financial debt

    • @Demonoicgamer666
      @Demonoicgamer666 Před rokem +51

      @Blackout____ I don’t do you need to live in America to speak on issues to do with it? I’m not Canadian either. I’m British and I’ve had to wait 2 days before but I’d rather do that than go into medical debt.

    • @jeff3388
      @jeff3388 Před 11 měsíci +18

      @@Demonoicgamer666 What about insurance/coverage. Before I turned 21 I was covered by my parents dental plan they had through their work. After your appointment they’d just take your information and send the bill to the insurance company.

    • @anonymouse527
      @anonymouse527 Před 11 měsíci +70

      And I would gladly pay $50 to cut that wait in half. See what I'm getting at? Healthcare doesn't have to cost exuberant amounts of money nor does it have to take ages. I have a feeling we're getting screwed.

    • @Demonoicgamer666
      @Demonoicgamer666 Před 11 měsíci +13

      @@anonymouse527 $50 is a lot for a hour and I reckon you’re paying $100 on the low end 500 on the high end just to see them for half hour is $250 for 30 minutes visit worth it sure it’s your health but most people can’t afford that.

    • @Demonoicgamer666
      @Demonoicgamer666 Před 11 měsíci +9

      @@jeff3388 yeah spending money on something that most of the time you don’t need you still have to pay at least 10% so let’s say your bill is $5000 you’re paying $500 that in the moment may not look like a big deal but when you realise you still got bills to pay rent $600 electric, water and gas add up to $450 then you got to buy food to begging of the month and you have already spent $1550 out of $2000 a month $300 for food depending on if you go out leaving you with $150 to enjoy and you then have car insurance and fuel which leaves you with at best $50 for yourself although you may need to pay your healthcare coverage which puts you in debt for $50. $500 may not look like you’ll need but just wait.

  • @yuppy178
    @yuppy178 Před rokem +664

    I always go late to my appointments in Canada because I know my doctors will still not be there to see me on time😂

    • @fatkid420
      @fatkid420 Před rokem +45

      I remember waiting like almost 2 hours just to see my doctor for 15 minutes. Shits wild

    • @shyryTsr2k
      @shyryTsr2k Před rokem +29

      ​@@fatkid420 see that's just criminal in my opinion. Sure healthcare here is expensive (I wouldn't know all my visits are free including any/all dental work) but I'd rather pay a bit more to be seen as soon as my butt cheek hits the chair.

    • @sebastienbolduc5654
      @sebastienbolduc5654 Před rokem +7

      Socialized healthcare. Ever been to Cuba? Cuba is a socialist/communist system. In Cuba you have to pay before you get services, anywhere, because at the end of the day they get paid either way. The government pays their salaries, so they can screw around all they want. There is no big boss to supervise them. In other words, they'll make you wait.
      In a private system doctors need to have good time management skills, like any other private sector job, or else they'd lose their job. Time is $$$. If I didn't have good time management on my job I'd be fired on the spot! Same principle with doctors within private healthcare. Clinic and hospitals don't like low ratings on Google, etc. They are constantly pushing their employees to give good services and move their butts! That's why it works way better. The doctors aren't running the show. Their bosses/administration are. And they're not being paid by the State but rather insurance companies who are constantly down their backs. Insurance companies don't like doctors who waste their money. That's why services are better and they don't do half A jobs.

    • @kevinbayley9281
      @kevinbayley9281 Před rokem

      what a bunch of whiners. you'd be fucked if you lived in the states..if you're unhappy then go live there

    • @sma4827
      @sma4827 Před rokem +9

      ​@@sebastienbolduc5654 1) why couldn't we just implement some form of auditing process to make the docs are meeting quotas? 2) it's not slow here in Canada because the doctors are paid salary which makes them lazy (which often isn't even true, most are paid per patient), it's mainly slow here in Canada bc we have a huge shortage of doctors because many of them go to med school here where it's cheaper and then move to the states where they can make so much more by charging insane amounts and Canada doesn't recognize a medical doctorate degree from a large portion of the world so we can't even promote immigration to help

  • @RextheRebel
    @RextheRebel Před rokem +875

    You know waiting times are shorter in the US? Because so many people don't go to the doctor because of how expensive it is.

    • @wembleyspack5110
      @wembleyspack5110 Před rokem +62

      Sadly thats true😢😂

    • @general_o1
      @general_o1 Před rokem +63

      exactly, this entire comment section doesn’t realize that

    • @RextheRebel
      @RextheRebel Před rokem +47

      @@shronkthestupendous4737 only a rich person or a person who doesn't live in the US could say such a preposterous statement.

    • @Perseus5
      @Perseus5 Před rokem +26

      Thank you for saying that. People just forget that part and just start talking down on socialized healthcare. In America your a customer not a patient in hospitals. I had to wait 4-5 hours to see a doctor and i had to wait in the hallway on a bed (never got a room) in under extreme chest pain in America. And let’s just say they didn’t do jack sht about the pain and slapped 27k. It took a year to fix the bill with my insurance company because they really don’t want to help people.

    • @RextheRebel
      @RextheRebel Před rokem +26

      @@shronkthestupendous4737 if you're a Canadian then you realize emergencies are prioritized and you don't have to pay out of pocket for the procedures.

  • @sarttee
    @sarttee Před 5 měsíci +48

    Canada " You feel pain.. have you tried EUTHANASIA?"

    • @user-gv1fe5sz2p
      @user-gv1fe5sz2p Před 12 dny +2

      Not gonna lie it’s sounding more and more like a valid solution now a days hahahaha

    • @dynastywarriorlord07
      @dynastywarriorlord07 Před 9 dny +1

      This kind of mentality is why there are so many serial killers around

  • @thorin5591
    @thorin5591 Před 9 měsíci +320

    In Canada you wait a long time.
    In USA you sell your car to pay the bills.

    • @carkawalakhatulistiwa
      @carkawalakhatulistiwa Před 5 měsíci

      in socialism people who need health come first, in capitalism people who have money come first.
      in socialism the homeless person who has had an accident takes precedence over the millionaire because he needs help more than the millionaire who just has a flu.
      but in capitalism the millionaire comes first, he doesn't need to queue because he can pay the hospital bills, and he doesn't need to queue with the homeless.
      because the homeless person never came to the hospital in the first place in capitalism. because it's useless to come only to be rejected because you can't pay the health costs.

    • @frankteddy8823
      @frankteddy8823 Před 5 měsíci +3

      so make more money

    • @MultiRingtail
      @MultiRingtail Před 4 měsíci +17

      In Canada, doctors also assisted suicide because they don’t want to treat patients

    • @UkrainemasterX
      @UkrainemasterX Před 4 měsíci +1

      @Hottdogg1234nah i prefer waiting, also stop using the insurance excuse it’s annoying

    • @user-nt1ls4ht5z
      @user-nt1ls4ht5z Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@UkrainemasterXcant see the comment you are replying to. How does that work? Sorry thats unrelated to your comment but your comment is also unrelated from where im sitting 😂

  • @nolimitscoasterguy4813
    @nolimitscoasterguy4813 Před 11 měsíci +21

    Atleast in the USA I don’t have to wait months to get screened for cancer only to find out it’s too late. I got health insurance anyway so that mostly covers it.

    • @thatJackBidenTalksAbout
      @thatJackBidenTalksAbout Před 8 měsíci +5

      that still happens in the US, but you also have to pay more than you would in tax whether you have cancer or not.

    • @_Sumeyo_
      @_Sumeyo_ Před 14 dny +3

      Yeah I heard a Canadian guy passed away because of that

    • @smithjerry470
      @smithjerry470 Před 6 dny +3

      ​@@_Sumeyo_many

  • @johannam.6845
    @johannam.6845 Před rokem +42

    In Canada when I had major emergencies, (example colic due to stones in the kidneys and vesicles) a half an hour after my arrival in the emergency room was already being treated. But certainly if the pain is bearable the waiting time can be 4-5h.

    • @D95RO
      @D95RO Před rokem +1

      In Portugal it's the same

    • @csillaschannel
      @csillaschannel Před 8 měsíci +4

      More like 18h. Check the recent hospital wait times in Ottawa.

    • @coconutmix
      @coconutmix Před 2 měsíci +1

      It’s the same in the US but we pay more for it. We have to wait a long time in the ER too if what we have is not life threatening.

    • @kyhblizzy
      @kyhblizzy Před 19 dny

      and that is to be expected. this is an emergency but not a life threatening issue. you were placed in priority. honestly seems more like an urgent care visit but along as it was addressed that's all that matters.

  • @augustusx82
    @augustusx82 Před rokem +90

    I prefer United States healthcare, and I’ll tell you why. My job covers 85% of the total cost. Sometimes I can see the doctor for free and if I go see a specialist I literally pay the price of a movie ticket. The bonus is that I can see the doctor the same day that I start feeling my symptoms. I’ll pay 30 bucks to see the doctor the same day that my tooth starts hurting as opposed to it being free and not being able to go for a month.

    • @nurlindafsihotang49
      @nurlindafsihotang49 Před rokem +3

      ....is it including the medication? because in our 3rd world poor country, 100% covered means that....100%.

    • @augustusx82
      @augustusx82 Před rokem +15

      @@nurlindafsihotang49 meds vary. I may get it for free or i may pay up to 10 bucks or so…but again, i can see the doctor, and get my meds for free or maybe 10 bucks at max…on the same day i get my symptoms. Ill take that over 100 percent fee but i have to wait until god knows when…probably after im already dead and the infection has spread

    • @wheresmahat345
      @wheresmahat345 Před rokem +8

      You don't know how many people would sacrifice to gain your position..

    • @ben8133
      @ben8133 Před 10 měsíci +3

      ​@augustusx82 damn bro, good for you. Which company do you work for? What type of industry to get these perks?

    • @MC-yt1uv
      @MC-yt1uv Před 9 měsíci

      If you had universal healthcare instead of paying your medical bills your company could just pay you more money.
      And employer-paid healthcare is a trap used to control workers. You can't leave a bad job because if you do you no longer have health insurance.

  • @jeromeryan4419
    @jeromeryan4419 Před 11 měsíci +74

    Ah so different in Japan.. here u need to come 5 mins earlier prior to your appointment and all the staff and nurses were really nice!

    • @H8nji
      @H8nji Před 9 měsíci +12

      Japan is built different

    • @MegaMinecrafteFan
      @MegaMinecrafteFan Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@H8njiyeah and their crimes against humanity committed all throughout Asia

    • @H8nji
      @H8nji Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@MegaMinecrafteFan Okay and? A lot of developed countries were responsible for atrocities. You know why? Because they were capable of it, technologically or otherwise.
      Go to southeast Asia today and tell me that not one person is willing to pawn off their 14 year old daughter to a sex trafficker for a wad of cash, and tell me that all cops would prevent it over taking a bribe. Go to a random tribe in the Amazon, sub-saharan African, or Papua New Guinea and tell me that none of them practice ritual human sacrifices, believe in child witches, and regularly consume human flesh. Yeah, people everywhere can be backwards. Let’s not ignore that.

    • @OpenTheWindowLuther
      @OpenTheWindowLuther Před 7 měsíci

      ​ratio

    • @jeromeryan4419
      @jeromeryan4419 Před 7 měsíci +4

      @@MegaMinecrafteFan that was during ww2. Imperial japan

  • @zdvxr
    @zdvxr Před rokem +240

    Id rather wait 8 hours than pay 8 thousand.

    • @truthseekingtroll3575
      @truthseekingtroll3575 Před 10 měsíci +40

      You are still paying that 8 thousand through high taxes so whats the point?

    • @zdvxr
      @zdvxr Před 10 měsíci +26

      @@truthseekingtroll3575 and it’s not as big as you make it seem. I get far more out of my health care than I pay towards it.

    • @ovibiswas7849
      @ovibiswas7849 Před 8 měsíci +4

      Good for you . Why shouting here . I would rather pay . At least not soul crushing texes . I can afford things and you cant . Welll

    • @twstdreality
      @twstdreality Před 8 měsíci +14

      My Canadian friend has cancer and is getting treated here in the US because she would’ve had to wait 6 months for treatment. And that’s a normal wait time for medical things like that in countries with free healthcare

    • @basedoz5745
      @basedoz5745 Před 7 měsíci

      @@twstdrealitymy mother in the United States had to wait 3 days for an xray for her broken foot, I had to wait a month for a video visit with my doctor, when I scheduled an in person visit for first thing in the morning when the doctor’s office opened I still had to wait a half an hour for the doctor.

  • @flush5005
    @flush5005 Před rokem +29

    Living in Canada all my life, and in multiple cities across the country….the sweet spot is to have Canada’s healthcare system in a mid-size town with no more than 500-800K in population. Once you hit something like 1mil, or the GTA (multi-city or tri-city), the wait times and service gets worse.

    • @laresiablair3527
      @laresiablair3527 Před rokem +5

      I'm in Charlottetown, and the wait time is horrendous, and the population is 35K.

    • @ace74909
      @ace74909 Před rokem +1

      Thank God I live in south surrey

    • @krispykremeil5465
      @krispykremeil5465 Před 10 měsíci +3

      You only have like 9 million more people than Texas in the whole country.
      The fact that any of you have to wait is embarrassing.

    • @oKINGMXLo
      @oKINGMXLo Před 6 měsíci +3

      Barrie, ON 100k pop and allistion, ON 20k i've waited min 4 hours. the health care system is broken and all the doctors have gone to the US.

    • @andresjaramillo4082
      @andresjaramillo4082 Před 3 měsíci +1

      in Revelstoke, you ask to see a doctor early in the morning 7- 7:30 and you’ll see the doctor within the next two hours same day, which is fantastic!

  • @imperiumcommentingnetwork4677

    Canada’s healthcare: “Giving Birth? Go home” - based on a story of something that happened recently
    Anerica’s healthcare: “yea we’ll help you, but it will be costly”

    • @milaliah
      @milaliah Před rokem +15

      more like “but it’ll cost your house” 💀

    • @jgwill
      @jgwill Před rokem +5

      @@milaliah don't buy sh*t insurance

    • @spondoolie6450
      @spondoolie6450 Před 9 měsíci

      A secret that everyone knows but nobody talks about.... the bill that the hospital sends you is their "wish list". If they get any of that amount paid they're thankful, and if you pay 20% they practically send a sexy nurse to your house to give you a complimentary sponge bath.

    • @Doggo2843
      @Doggo2843 Před 8 měsíci

      Bruh

    • @Your100percentrightbut
      @Your100percentrightbut Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@jgwill Just like the hospital bills medical insurance is overpriced, especially the premiums.

  • @roofpizza1250
    @roofpizza1250 Před rokem +351

    You forgot that the American one has a crap ton of paperwork.

    • @stingsdoesntit5390
      @stingsdoesntit5390 Před rokem +22

      And a lot of money down the drain

    • @ulacylon-timetrio9664
      @ulacylon-timetrio9664 Před 11 měsíci +14

      @@stingsdoesntit5390Doctors aren’t non-profit, pay up. Also, the paper work is for a good reason usually. (Keeping records of important shit, etc.)

    • @marcusianaviation9372
      @marcusianaviation9372 Před 10 měsíci +22

      @@ulacylon-timetrio9664LOL you’re definitely American 😂😂

    • @averyfishyfish
      @averyfishyfish Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@ulacylon-timetrio9664erm. Oh sure. Heres your 728182737281 T $ for a bandaid..yep..sure enough. And oh, i have to sign 40 hours worth of paperwork for one singular benadryl..yep..wow. sure efficient...

    • @BIGDAWG91331
      @BIGDAWG91331 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@marcusianaviation9372 yea the paper work is for records

  • @MEC_2
    @MEC_2 Před rokem +174

    You’re hilarious!!! I’m a Nurse and I know people play with the instruments in the room 😂♥️

    • @JosephD
      @JosephD  Před rokem +12

      hahha oh ya!

    • @rochellehemery18
      @rochellehemery18 Před rokem +7

      Lol! I am honestly always so scared I’d get caught!!… eve wanted to! 😊

    • @applegal3058
      @applegal3058 Před rokem +9

      I like reading the medical posters on the wall.

    • @ashleymarie6682
      @ashleymarie6682 Před rokem +3

      Well if they give supposedly free “healthcare” people treat it like a fast food joint instead of a doctors office. In the US we respect the medical office supplies and furniture.

    • @jetniel497213
      @jetniel497213 Před 11 měsíci

      U act like we're savages for being curious...go clutch your pearls somewhere else while you get scammed by your hospital

  • @micheleyamamoto545
    @micheleyamamoto545 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Here in the US I recently had to wait 6 months to see a doctor as a new patient. Didn’t get seen until over an hour past my appt time. As I was waiting, another woman was very upset to find out how much she’d have to pay for some scans they did on her. Said she couldn’t afford it and she had insurance. My eye drops are $1,900 every three months and I have insurance. We have the best healthcare but most Americans can’t afford to get it.

    • @fatherson5907
      @fatherson5907 Před 7 měsíci

      Blatant lies. If you waited 6 months, you didnt bother to find a quicker appointment. And no, your eyedrops are not $1900 every 3 months (that would exceed the maximum OOP as outlined by federal law).
      You lie to strangers online to pretend you’re a victim. Seek psychiatric help.

  • @JoyfulNerd400
    @JoyfulNerd400 Před 7 měsíci +3

    In Canada I was cared for like a human. In the US my personal wheelchair was broken and nobody gave a fuck. Canada 1 America 0 lol

  • @Gen_alpha_QnA
    @Gen_alpha_QnA Před 24 dny +2

    Would you rather:
    pay $10000 for a band-aid or
    pay $0 for a clean-ish rag

  • @jaypac7126
    @jaypac7126 Před rokem +45

    The Canadian visit to the hospital made me laugh because it's true I Myself pace around the room touching things when I get tired a lay down take a power nap and wait for the doctor

  • @riley739
    @riley739 Před rokem +32

    Canada has really bad Healthcare my mother had cancer and they kept postponing her treatments and now shes dead but they never should have kept pushing back when she had cancer. Wouldnt have a problem paying for treatment at all if she got the treatment right away.

    • @dougpatterson7494
      @dougpatterson7494 Před měsícem +1

      Did you consider travelling to the US for care?

    • @gcc8584
      @gcc8584 Před měsícem

      It’s unfortunate she died but at least she didn’t have to spend any extra money other than her lifetime of taxes.

    • @ellamcfarlane5238
      @ellamcfarlane5238 Před měsícem +2

      Yeah..it’s crazy how bad health care is right now. They have such a shortage and the people that actually work are over worked. My moms a doctor in Canada and she sees hundreds of patients.. I’m sorry for you loss.

    • @framergod69
      @framergod69 Před měsícem

      yup they treated my Grandfather for pneumonia for a year then said oops its cancer and its to far gone nothing we can do

    • @Putnik93
      @Putnik93 Před měsícem

      Здоровья усопшей

  • @About9000
    @About9000 Před rokem +47

    i end up waiting here in the US as well...

    • @thegreypath1777
      @thegreypath1777 Před rokem +5

      So do I- in The USA.

    • @JohnFreedman0
      @JohnFreedman0 Před rokem +1

      It can be years.

    • @ranjesound6768
      @ranjesound6768 Před rokem +3

      Same, once in my old town of less than 180k population the ER wait was 19 hours.
      I'd rather wait and not pay

    • @GermansRuinedWT
      @GermansRuinedWT Před 10 měsíci

      @@ranjesound6768Lmao I’m so glad I grew up in the Central Valley of California. There’s only 60,000 People where I live and it’s actually a pretty developed place. I’ve never had to wait long for care or anything like that

    • @fewkeyfewkey5414
      @fewkeyfewkey5414 Před 6 měsíci

      Bud goes to the wrong healthcare facility

  • @jasonchiasson2579
    @jasonchiasson2579 Před rokem +66

    In Canada you pay for it in taxes, whether you use it or not. The equivalent of every citizen paying $7,000 per year. And it is not health care, it is health rationing.

    • @MC-yt1uv
      @MC-yt1uv Před 9 měsíci +7

      Yeah, that's also how US insurance works you still pay even if you don't use it.
      And the average American is paying $13,000 a year in healthcare costs. So we pay more than the Canadians.

    • @thatJackBidenTalksAbout
      @thatJackBidenTalksAbout Před 8 měsíci +4

      I would love to pay *only* $7,000 a year, are you kidding?!
      My insurance is decent and cheap, and costs $9,600 / year (employer "pays half" instead of paying me, and then the other half I pay out of my paycheck, so it's about $800/month), and then there's the $2,500 deductible before they start paying for any treatments.

    • @thatJackBidenTalksAbout
      @thatJackBidenTalksAbout Před 8 měsíci +1

      When I left one job they offered me COBRA - which "let's you" keep your employer insurance as long as you pay the full cost. It would have been $1,200 a month, or $14,000 a year! That's ¢14,400 that could have gone into my pocket, instead, and then I'd only have to give $7,000 to the state? Sign me TF up!

    • @fewkeyfewkey5414
      @fewkeyfewkey5414 Před 6 měsíci

      @@MC-yt1uv13k is cap I pay 3k per year for a family. Unless its in California 😂

    • @wifi961
      @wifi961 Před 6 měsíci

      You're not allowed to say that sir.

  • @christophersnyder1532
    @christophersnyder1532 Před rokem +110

    Reminds me of that episode of Mr. Bean, at the dentist.
    Take care, and all the best.

  • @WaiferThyme
    @WaiferThyme Před rokem +95

    Hahaha so very true! I went to my orthopaedic surgeon today. 6 xrays and the consult - zero dollars. Wished him a merry Christmas and went home!

    • @bvpmiranda
      @bvpmiranda Před rokem +3

      How long did it take to see him though?

    • @TrudeausBlackFace
      @TrudeausBlackFace Před rokem +13

      Yea & how much do they take from you in taxes each year!? 😂😂 No such thing as "free healthcare"

    • @WaiferThyme
      @WaiferThyme Před rokem +2

      @@bvpmiranda oo just saw this lol mmm three weeks?

    • @zombiewolf1671
      @zombiewolf1671 Před rokem +34

      ​@@TrudeausBlackFace still less than most Americans spend on medical bills a year

    • @TrudeausBlackFace
      @TrudeausBlackFace Před rokem +10

      @@zombiewolf1671 Sure. For average 4+ hours ER wait times & subpar care. Cause it's "free". People dying while "waiting" for a surgery that takes 2-3 years to take place. People dying while waiting for a doc in the emergency rooms. No, thanks. I'd rather pay for quality care.

  • @barbm2720
    @barbm2720 Před rokem +30

    Free health care and most prescriptions are covered or partially covered here in Saskatchewan Canada 🇨🇦

    • @johnnyporker8837
      @johnnyporker8837 Před rokem

      Unless you're depressed in which case the government will offer to kill you

    • @MrSeedi76
      @MrSeedi76 Před 5 měsíci

      Pretty certain it's not "free". I'm guessing you're paying insurance.
      Same as here in Germany. I often hear from uninformed Americans that we have "free health care". It's not true at all. We pay insurance fees and it's quite expensive in fact. Around 15 % of our income.

    • @barbm2720
      @barbm2720 Před 5 měsíci +1

      We do not pay for health care. Ambulance fees apply unless you are on a low income government program. We do not pay for emergency services or surgeries, X Ray's, MRI'S, or any other medical testing. Some prescriptions are government covered or a very small fee is paid. Saskatchewan has had free coverage for many decades.

    • @jamalyassin7057
      @jamalyassin7057 Před 2 měsíci

      Xzbjuiop 🎉🥳🎈🎈🎈🥳🎈🎈🎈🥳🎈🎈🎈🥳🎈🎈🎈🥳🎈🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🎈 uop a good 😊☺️😊☺️😊☺️☺️☺️☺️ be able a ❤🎉😊

    • @aaz1992
      @aaz1992 Před 2 měsíci

      My ass is free

  • @maverick4022
    @maverick4022 Před rokem +33

    What a lie. Dual citizen here and uh...the majority of the US (over 80% has employer insurance (similar to Bismarck models in Japan, Germany, France).
    Public sector programs are indeed funded by tax dollars: Medicaid, State Chip, ACA, Veterans and portions of Medicare. Yes, I'm an advocate of streamlining these and having non profit insurance orgs administer them as done in other countries that use Bismarck models for their public sector.
    Lost my mom in BC Canada to Cancer last year and the wait times for the diagnostic imaging were horrendous. She was a nurse her entire life who paid her taxes for over 50 years and didn't get to see the Oncologist even once before dying. It was like a 3rd world country.
    Canada's system is collapsing right now and is so bad its being dragged to the Supreme Court of Canada as they have had 30 years to fix the crisis, yet nothing changes. Public sector needs: patient focused funding instead of block payments, user fees, cut the administrative bloat and move to a Bismarck model with non-profit health insurance orgs.
    Last - allow the private sector to fully run alongside the public sector. It's the 21st century and Canada is now the last remaining country on planet earth that makes it illegal for its citizens to purchase private health insurance for ALL services covered under Provincial Medicare. Canadian citizens deserve what every other social democracy provides their citizens: A CHOICE.

    • @stugooden7826
      @stugooden7826 Před rokem +5

      This is such a well-stated comment. I am very sorry for what happened to your mother. And I agree, the Canadian public health system needs a ton of work. The problem also is: Canadians have such a myopic view about the rest of the world vs. their own country (in many different ways). Many believe Canada's universal health care system works, and vehemently oppose private health care because of what they read on the news in the U.S. Ontario Premier Doug Ford has hinted at introducing some elements of private healthcare to supplement the universal health care system, and as soon as he did people lost their minds. A system that combines both as you said would only help.

    • @amoghtayade481
      @amoghtayade481 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Watch when you say 3rd world country 😊
      I’m an Indian citizen living in the United States and I promise that the health care in India is a 1000 times better than the US! I have been to the ER, Urgent Care and just the normal docs and everything, I kid you not, everything is better in India! I don’t know what I am doing in the states 😢 💰?

    • @dcs668
      @dcs668 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@amoghtayade481
      In the US, the healthcare you receive, depends on which State you reside in.
      In terms of medical innovation such as breakthrough procedures & lifesaving medication, & research, statistically there is not one country in the world that compares to the U.S.
      That is not to brag, that is just a statistical fact. The U.S. also collaborates with other countries on research.
      I understand, now after living here, that the U.S. needs to treat healthcare differently due to its leading position in medical innovation which is derived from a great deal of capital investment.
      Ironically, other countries with socialized medicine, have no problem using these breakthroughs & innovations but then turn around and criticize the U.S. for not having nationwide Universal Healthcare. It’s like biting off the hand that feeds them.

    • @annzzii
      @annzzii Před 5 měsíci

      Is BC’s wait time significantly much longer and has gotten much worse? I’m in Ontario, it doesn’t seem to be thhaaat bad, yes sometimes you have to wait for a long time to see a specialist, or wait in the emergency room for 3-4 hrs if your are not dying in the next 10 min. I heard cancer patients do get good treatment and don’t need to pay nearly as much as in the US. Also I used to live in China, the system there is much much faster then Canada but the quality of service is really bad, it’s like going to a super super busy shopping market, with doctors and nurses shouting at you, being super impatient coz they have to deal with sooo many people at the same time. I much more prefer to see a doctor in Canada.

    • @annzzii
      @annzzii Před 5 měsíci

      And sorry about your mom! It looks like a problem in BC, I’m not sure if it’s the same here in Ontario, I hope not.

  • @casz7098
    @casz7098 Před rokem +46

    In Canada, you have to wait even longer to get a procedure. My surgeon told me I might have to wait over a year to get my nose fixed. I've been waiting almost 2 years to get a colonoscopy.(Funny, colonoscopy doesn't come up in my auto correct.)

    • @bazookagaming1129
      @bazookagaming1129 Před rokem +6

      at least in Canada you do not have to pay 20,000

    • @casz7098
      @casz7098 Před rokem +23

      @bazookagaming1129 yeah we do. We're taxed up the ass. Our Healthcare only appears to be free, but it's not.

    • @aravindmk4073
      @aravindmk4073 Před rokem +8

      go to india

    • @shannon-leemcnaughton5031
      @shannon-leemcnaughton5031 Před rokem +4

      A few years ago I was in terrible pain and for the longest time my family and family doctor thought it was just growing pains. Only to discover that I had gallstones and before I could even properly schedule a procedure day I came into the ER with my pain level being at a 9 and I was seen in about 15mins, the ER doctor told me that if I haven’t come in when I had my gallbladder would have burst. I was given morphine, I was scheduled for surgery the next day but due to a emergency C-section it was pushed back another day (apparently it was a beautiful and healthy baby boy) but there was a cancellation the next morning and I was able to get one then.

    • @casz7098
      @casz7098 Před rokem +1

      @@shannon-leemcnaughton5031 oh wow, that's crazy. I'm glad you didn't get seriously hurt.

  • @michellebp2010
    @michellebp2010 Před rokem +82

    Pay big bucks to see a dr right away or wait 8 hrs to see one that you paid 15% taxes. Hard one

    • @mariaaguadoball3407
      @mariaaguadoball3407 Před rokem +16

      Only even when you pay the big bucks, unless they're *seriously* big bucks, you still have to wait.

    • @RaiderNation126
      @RaiderNation126 Před rokem +4

      I feel like it may not be too far apart when you count we have to pay premiums and a deductible before insurance actually kicks in. The main thing we got against themis less wait times and more specialized doctors....and Freedom! lol

    • @mariaaguadoball3407
      @mariaaguadoball3407 Před rokem +8

      @@RaiderNation126 See, as someone who lived in the US for many years, I don't get the "freedom" bit. In the US, I was limited to the doctors included in my insurance plan. In the UK & Spain, I'm limited to the doctors in my neighbourhood. And in any country, if I'm unhappy with the choices and have the money, I can go private. So how is there "more freedom" in the US?

    • @RaiderNation126
      @RaiderNation126 Před rokem +8

      @@mariaaguadoball3407 I feel you but I meant it as a joke lol. In the states when you're just yelling USA or freedom it's. Usually to make fun of our extreme form of nationalism with the pledge of allegiance and all that you know lol.

    • @lesliemccormick6527
      @lesliemccormick6527 Před rokem +4

      @@mariaaguadoball3407 Canada, hands down.
      Don't drink the U.S. koolaid.

  • @Blacklighting24
    @Blacklighting24 Před 11 měsíci +3

    I’d rather wait as a Canadian than be told by my insurance company that I can’t get the treatment my Dr suggest I need because I have to do XYZ first.

  • @Dshaw2
    @Dshaw2 Před 7 měsíci +4

    People in the comments are under estimating the wait times in Canada. If you go into Emerg in ontario with lets say a broken bone, your looking at least 6 to 10 hours.

  • @OblivionSunshine
    @OblivionSunshine Před rokem +14

    Hahah, probably filmed this while he was waiting for the doctor. Good old Canada, eh?

  • @user-xs3ws1nj1e
    @user-xs3ws1nj1e Před 4 měsíci +21

    250 billion per year in tax money for our "free" medical".

    • @1949coupe
      @1949coupe Před měsícem

      Exactly....its not "free". Its just not as transparent, as in say Germany where 16-19% comes off your gross pay each month. On the plus side, I can walk into my local doctor's office the same day or just show up to see my GP and book an MRI in a week.

    • @dougpatterson7494
      @dougpatterson7494 Před měsícem

      I would support lowering general personal income taxes but introducing/increasing Medicare insurance premiums so that people are more understanding that it’s not “free”. Also, it would prevent some provinces from use federal healthcare transfers for other things. If that goes to a provincial health insurance pool that is separate from general provincial income/expenses it could lead to more accountability in government spending.

  • @axokrotus343
    @axokrotus343 Před 10 měsíci +6

    I’d rather wait than go into debt. Like any other sensible human being.

    • @BaconSlayer69
      @BaconSlayer69 Před 7 měsíci

      Rather wait and waste ur time I see ur time is the most precious thing u got in this world never forget that

    • @Supr_KILLA
      @Supr_KILLA Před měsícem +1

      @@BaconSlayer69​​⁠the USA doesn’t give you any healthcare. I got a fractured vertebrae and herniated disk in my back 2 years ago at 21 and I’ve seen 5 different back physicians and they still tell me “Idk” when they know exactly already. It’s insane. I can barely stand for 20 minutes before it’s unbearable to stand any longer. And I’m about to be homeless because I can’t get treatment and any job I can get rn I’m in 10/10 pain all day. In the USA you’ll wait forever and never get care no matter how many times you go to the doctor.

    • @Supr_KILLA
      @Supr_KILLA Před měsícem

      @@BaconSlayer69USA revealing itself to me as a 3rd world country

    • @Supr_KILLA
      @Supr_KILLA Před měsícem

      @@BaconSlayer69doctors in America did nothing but waste my time. Monkey ass doctors

    • @daffyduk77
      @daffyduk77 Před měsícem

      @@BaconSlayer69 So yeah, the USA way, fast-tracked to bankruptcy

  • @patriciaf2766
    @patriciaf2766 Před rokem +27

    I wish this wasn't accurate. I called to make a Dr appointment today. The earliest I can see her is mid January because it's "a non-urgent issue"

    • @dm-uc5vk
      @dm-uc5vk Před měsícem

      I called my docters office today. Earliest appointment is via phonecall in 3 weeks.

  • @crapadopalese
    @crapadopalese Před rokem +11

    Show the one where you're diagnosed with a rare form of cancer and then can't afford the medicine in the US version.

    • @brice7649
      @brice7649 Před rokem

      And then show the one where you have that same form of rare cancer, and then you just kiss your butt goodbye because you're in the canadian health care system and you know you'll be dead by the t8me they get around to you.

    • @jgwill
      @jgwill Před rokem

      @N Never heard of that

    • @MC-yt1uv
      @MC-yt1uv Před 9 měsíci

      @@Cavachonc777 Where does he shop and what kind of savings are we talking about?

  • @XxPeruvianPrincessxX
    @XxPeruvianPrincessxX Před 11 měsíci +38

    In the US if I go to a doctor, I wait a few minutes only for the doctor to look me up and down for about 30 seconds and tell me what they think is wrong with me and leaves without listening to my vitals or asking me questions. I would rather wait and have a doctor seem like they actually care about me vs a doctor the hurries through as many patients as possible and only views us as dollar signs.

    • @noseboop4354
      @noseboop4354 Před 7 měsíci +9

      You do realize most canadian doctors do exactly the same thing? Because the government pays them a flat amount per patient, so they try to pass as many people as possible in a day.

    • @trentr_001
      @trentr_001 Před 5 měsíci +5

      Every year there are 300,000 Canadians that travel to US because I they are put on a on a long waiting list to get surgery and would rather pay the money to get it done and over with... I got a concussion and waited 8 hours in the waiting room 2 other people only to be told that the doctors are very busy over and over again. I've never had to use US Healthcare but I can tell you that in Canada they do not care asmuch as they would like you to beleive. My Roommate also waited 2 days in the waiting room to get a broken hand fixed and because he was a fast healer they had to re break the bones to set it back properly which they messed up at

    • @commiehunter733
      @commiehunter733 Před 4 měsíci +1

      It's not better in canada 😂

    • @hyunbinpark3382
      @hyunbinpark3382 Před 4 měsíci +1

      I waited for 2 hours and did the exactly same thing XD

    • @12thhouse4thhousevibes
      @12thhouse4thhousevibes Před 3 měsíci +1

      😂😂😂😂 They don’t give a shit here. They have so many patients to see. Chop, chop, next.

  • @canadian8770
    @canadian8770 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Well 14k a year ain’t bad considering 13k in America isn’t even enough for 5 days in the hospital

  • @hugh2hoob668
    @hugh2hoob668 Před rokem +30

    He paid for the paper he sat on in usa $5000 😂

    • @Darkpara1
      @Darkpara1 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Use the water fountain? That's another 3k

  • @Maggotseatflesh
    @Maggotseatflesh Před rokem +5

    As a Canadian
    I approve of this because it’s not fails

  • @CatWhiskerClaws
    @CatWhiskerClaws Před rokem +22

    We wait a while in the US also 🤣

    • @Dark_Force_Of_Wishes
      @Dark_Force_Of_Wishes Před rokem +6

      Then That Means Canada Wins.

    • @MC-yt1uv
      @MC-yt1uv Před 9 měsíci +2

      But, we get the privilege of helping the CEO of an insurance company buy a yacht.

    • @faithrb01
      @faithrb01 Před 9 měsíci +1

      We've been waiting longer and longer BECAUSE we keep getting pressured to be more like other countries.

    • @thatJackBidenTalksAbout
      @thatJackBidenTalksAbout Před 8 měsíci

      @@faithrb01 yeah, side effect of the ACA meant more people actually got insurance that covered "pre-existing conditions." more usage=longer lines. but on the flip side, the ACA made it so physician owned hospitals can't expand and doctors can't start or take over hospitals, so private equity runs things more for profit, prioritizing the most profitable conditions for the people most able to pay. rich get treated, poor get streeted

    • @davahn122
      @davahn122 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Not even close in wait times lol

  • @margaretkaufman1144
    @margaretkaufman1144 Před rokem +8

    🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦free health care legal pot but the wait is ridiculous

  • @Pauly651
    @Pauly651 Před 5 měsíci +2

    This is the same is Australia my mum was literally dying and it took they 4 hours to come and do nothing and leave for 2 hours and give her a jelly cup finally after the entire 6 hours they finally helped me

  • @nickgames3856
    @nickgames3856 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Bro, I live in US by the side of a huge hospital, near Lake Nona(a medical city) there are a max of 5 cars in the entire hospital parking lot. A lot of people here have the mentality "Oh, if it gets worse then I will go." But when it gets worse, it alredy too late. Like most cancer cases, there are a lot of cancer related deaths in US because of the mentality "I will go if it gets worse", and when the person finally goes to the doctor, the cancer already spreaded through the body. Health should be free, it is a human need, a human right!!!!

    • @BaconSlayer69
      @BaconSlayer69 Před 7 měsíci

      Nothing is free in society some people put in the work

  • @alimusawi100
    @alimusawi100 Před rokem +3

    Seeing my Family doctor has always been quick provided I show up 15 minutes before the appointment. However going to the hospitals for semi emergency can take hours before you see a doctor. But never have to worry about paying the bill. I also know that private Health care is incredibly costly but fast in Canada.

    • @thatJackBidenTalksAbout
      @thatJackBidenTalksAbout Před 8 měsíci

      it's not that bad compared to how many hidden costs we have. like, "employer provided insurance" is basically a more expensive version of Canada's tax, as anyone who's considered taking COBRA after leaving a job can usually attest to.

  • @coupe-lee
    @coupe-lee Před 7 měsíci +3

    If you work a full time job and have decent benefits in the US, this isn’t a problem.

    • @Uberizando.Vida-LokaOficial
      @Uberizando.Vida-LokaOficial Před 2 měsíci

      i think this is dafault for any country...here in brazil you can die in in the public hospitals...if you pay or have benefits like you said your life will be better...

  • @slothofastudent
    @slothofastudent Před rokem +2

    Usa better, just get a decent job with a low deductible. My husband got hurt and tore a bunch of stuff in his leg. We paid 150. No insurance would have been close to 9k after emergency room and specialist. But given we pay about 400 a month to get this.

    • @AzizDoufikar2280
      @AzizDoufikar2280 Před 5 měsíci

      Yeah and what about others that can't get "decent job" according to you and therefore can't get better healthcare.Healthcare is a right not privilege

  • @GeekeryMade
    @GeekeryMade Před 9 měsíci +1

    LMAO, I regularly wait a couple hours at most doctor appointments in the US and pay through the nose to do so. Gladly change for waiting without masive debt

  • @lesliemccormick6527
    @lesliemccormick6527 Před rokem +21

    So glad to be Canadian.

    • @billclinton912
      @billclinton912 Před rokem +8

      Health care isn’t free here, you still pay a lot for it in Taxes.

    • @lesliemccormick6527
      @lesliemccormick6527 Před rokem +5

      @@billclinton912 Health care is a basic human right, so that is sad.

    • @wreckssmusic
      @wreckssmusic Před 11 měsíci +1

      😂 Yeah right. I got my shoulder and elbow injured and the best they can do is give me tylenol, no xray or whatever.

    • @MC-yt1uv
      @MC-yt1uv Před 9 měsíci

      @@billclinton912 In the US we pay more for healthcare, we are just giving it to insurance companies instead of the government.
      Americans are the only people proud to pay more for healthcare because they are scared of the word socialism.

    • @Emirthemarvelfanboi
      @Emirthemarvelfanboi Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@lesliemccormick6527BaSiC hUmAn RiGhT....
      Still doesnt change the Tax comment lib

  • @ajporoznik9738
    @ajporoznik9738 Před rokem +23

    I live in Kingston Ontario Canada. If I wanted to see my family doctor all I have to do is call in at 8:30 am when their phone lines open, and I can have an appointment that day. And no I don't have to pay anything for it.

    • @joycesamuel5065
      @joycesamuel5065 Před rokem +18

      You paid it in taxes already.

    • @MC-yt1uv
      @MC-yt1uv Před 9 měsíci

      @@joycesamuel5065 When all costs are taken into account (e.g. taxes, insurance rates, out-of-pocket) Americans pay more for healthcare than any other nation. And without an appreciable increase in quality.
      In America we have convinced ourselves that we will pay twice as much to a private insurance company if it means not paying half the amount in taxes.

    • @ak1996able
      @ak1996able Před 6 měsíci

      @@MC-yt1uvservice is way faster ppl have died waiting to be helped

    • @WasFakestCenturyAesthetics
      @WasFakestCenturyAesthetics Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@MC-yt1uvso you've never depended on the Canadian system?

  • @shannon-leemcnaughton5031

    I love the fact that I live in Canada and I don’t have to pay a shit ton for healthcare I would rather wait three hours then pay for healthcare (I do understand that the reason our healthcare is free is because our taxes are higher) I still don’t care I love Canada specifically Ontario!!! ❤🇨🇦

    • @lyric3333
      @lyric3333 Před rokem

      I think you're delusional please see your doctor, oh wait 😬

    • @thegreypath1777
      @thegreypath1777 Před rokem

      Do you have room for one more?

  • @astroroyal3903
    @astroroyal3903 Před 9 měsíci +2

    I didn't mind painfully waiting to be treated in the hospital as a Canadian, rather wait for a few hours then to spend the rest of my life paying off my hospital debt.

  • @wallyf7020
    @wallyf7020 Před rokem +16

    Canada....yes you need to wait but it's free. Allows people who do not have the means to pay to get seen by a doctor the possibility to do so at a cost of$0.00

    • @thecrittercouple523
      @thecrittercouple523 Před rokem +9

      It's not free. It is through your taxes. Your still paying 🙄

    • @RandomNonsense1985
      @RandomNonsense1985 Před rokem +11

      @@thecrittercouple523 “Free at the point of service” would be more accurate.

    • @jgwill
      @jgwill Před rokem

      You live in one of the RICHEST countries in the world. Why can't you afford to pay for healthcare?

  • @oSTYNCLSYo
    @oSTYNCLSYo Před 4 měsíci +11

    USA hands down. I would rather pay the bill than pass it on to the taxpayers.

    • @Sharon-bo2se
      @Sharon-bo2se Před měsícem

      Think you are forgetting about other social programmes you take for granted, e.g. fire departments. Look around the world and the US is the only major one without universal health care. You have outrageous fees to profit the few, many people without care, many in massive debts. Then compare markers like life expectancy, maternal and infant mortality, etc.
      Compare prices on invoices between India, the UK, even Canada, vs the US; it is cringe worthy. Is Canadian health care perfect? No, it needs work, esp after the pandemic. I do not see a Conservative govt that will improve things(they are like your GOP and owned by the same billionaires in the shadows. The Cons do a lot of damage when they are in and it takes years to repair.

  • @Lycan3303
    @Lycan3303 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I had to wait 12hrs in the ER before someone saw me !!!!what hospital did you go ?

  • @reiiwashere
    @reiiwashere Před rokem +2

    honestly in canada you have to wait a solid 20 minutes (from the Canadian province im from) and dont charge much for example from what i know its 45 dollars for an ambulance

  • @markfrank5937
    @markfrank5937 Před rokem +33

    You may wait in Canada, but at least everyone can see the doctor. The US, you wait, pay out the ass, and those who can't afford it (and don't qualify for free or low cost coverage) don't see a doctor at all. 🤷

    • @MarcusCollins69
      @MarcusCollins69 Před rokem +7

      That or they have to pay a 500k in medical care and are now in debt

    • @markfrank5937
      @markfrank5937 Před rokem +2

      @@MarcusCollins69 exactly.

    • @Brandenuzis
      @Brandenuzis Před 9 měsíci +3

      I have never paid a penny over $100 for anything medical related in New York lol my daughter broke her arm and the ambulance ride was $47

    • @shellybaby5th
      @shellybaby5th Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@Brandenuzis Wow, you have decent health insurance{not BCBS). I've read where people have used Ubers instead of ambulances because of astronomical ambulance bill.

    • @davahn122
      @davahn122 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Lmao the average wait time is 25.6 weeks

  • @securitylifecanada
    @securitylifecanada Před rokem +5

    emergency rooms are a nightmare in canada

    • @MC-yt1uv
      @MC-yt1uv Před 9 měsíci

      Emergency rooms are a nightmare in the US.

    • @jorgeaspera
      @jorgeaspera Před 8 měsíci

      I have wait 8 hours here in California and that’s at the good hospital now the bad ones I been there a full day sun up tell sun down

    • @TheServantOfJesusChrist
      @TheServantOfJesusChrist Před 8 měsíci

      I live in California and my sister was pregnant and they took her in right away

    • @Uberizando.Vida-LokaOficial
      @Uberizando.Vida-LokaOficial Před 2 měsíci

      try here in Brazil....Have you already watched walking death??

  • @diobrando6919
    @diobrando6919 Před 11 měsíci +1

    In canda you wait but get it cheap while America less waiting time but pay hell of a lot more

  • @allamericantrolling
    @allamericantrolling Před 6 měsíci +1

    I live in America I pay out the ass and I still have to wait 😂

  • @brunorbattlehammer
    @brunorbattlehammer Před rokem +6

    You missed the part where the canadian books an appointment for the next available appointment.... a month from now

    • @thatJackBidenTalksAbout
      @thatJackBidenTalksAbout Před 8 měsíci

      that's pretty normal for my part of the US. would be several months for a specialist. some specialists are booked up to a year in advance. it's basically because I live in an area where everyone can actually afford healthcare, as compared to one of the places where people just use street drugs for pain or die 'cause they can't afford treatment.

    • @brunorbattlehammer
      @brunorbattlehammer Před 8 měsíci

      @@thatJackBidenTalksAbout yea its rough in the states but im talking about booking a month or more to see a general practitioner. Speciallist you could be on a waiting list for upwards of a year if they dont forget you

    • @thatJackBidenTalksAbout
      @thatJackBidenTalksAbout Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@brunorbattlehammer yeah, that's what I was saying. I usually have to book a month ahead for my PA - not even a full on GP, a physician's assistant. dermatologist is about 2 or 3 months in advance, cardiologist...not worth the wait + cost 😂 was supposed to be something like $300 for the cardiologist, just for him to probably say "cut back on the caffeine and beer"

  • @joemcqueen6050
    @joemcqueen6050 Před rokem +19

    Haha....so accurate on both!

  • @-Geet-
    @-Geet- Před 7 měsíci +1

    Bro I have waited like 4 hours but like that’s nothing compared to what you have to wait sometimes like my brother went there to get his finger shaped back into place with like 8 shots just to get a x-ray it took 5 hours then he came back home at midnight 💀

  • @sailing_Reimagined
    @sailing_Reimagined Před 8 měsíci

    You must do a video showing how the insurance company in the US controlled your medical care not the Doctors. And if you go to a clinic to see someone other than an MD. This is why in the up they don’t say him going to the Doctor. They say I’m going to see a provider. I have seen both systems up close. The US system is failing. People don’t go to the doctors until it’s too late due to the cost.

  • @kidchuckle
    @kidchuckle Před rokem +8

    LOL. Thankfully I'm a patient guy

    • @JosephD
      @JosephD  Před rokem +1

      ha very good!

    • @TrudeausBlackFace
      @TrudeausBlackFace Před rokem +2

      You better be. What other option do you have in Canada?

    • @foreignfat6009
      @foreignfat6009 Před rokem

      ​@@TrudeausBlackFace At least you have the option, unlike USA retarded healthcare system.

    • @TrudeausBlackFace
      @TrudeausBlackFace Před rokem +1

      @@foreignfat6009 Not retarded. If you have a job, you can pay for your own healthcare. If you're a slob, you get no healthcare. I like that system & I'm a Canadian.

    • @thegreypath1777
      @thegreypath1777 Před rokem

      @@TrudeausBlackFace - Same in The USA.

  • @mariaaguadoball3407
    @mariaaguadoball3407 Před rokem +8

    When I lived in the US, I always had to wait an ungodly amount of time for the doctor to show up. I don't know about Canada, but both the UK & Spanish national health services are at worst as slow, but usually considerably faster.

    • @alimusawi100
      @alimusawi100 Před rokem

      The UK's NHS is purposely inefficient so politicians can eventually privatise it. Canada's is slow because of bureaucracy and shortage of staff.

    • @mariaaguadoball3407
      @mariaaguadoball3407 Před rokem +1

      @@alimusawi100 Well, the NHS has those problems because it's chronically underfunded, but I know what you mean. Still, talk to Americans who have to rely on insurance & you'll find many of them also have long waits.

    • @jgwill
      @jgwill Před rokem

      @@mariaaguadoball3407 I never had to wait more than an hour for any appointment I can remember?

    • @mariaaguadoball3407
      @mariaaguadoball3407 Před rokem

      @@jgwill And in the UK & Spain, I've never had to wait as long as an hour. Except maybe (maybe) once when I had to go to the emergency room on a Friday evening.

    • @jgwill
      @jgwill Před rokem

      ​@@mariaaguadoball3407 I have never heard of anyone visiting European/Canadian health centers that never had to wait weeks or months to get appointments, and then wait hours at the appointment as well. Also, chronically underfunded means they need more tax money from you to pay for it right?

  • @shys2944
    @shys2944 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Canadian living in the US, absolutely agree! But there are no jobs in Canada.

  • @ronicmwest401
    @ronicmwest401 Před 7 měsíci

    Most people don't go to the doctor in America because of cost. Sad reality. Plus depending on where you are the wait time may still be long.

  • @leonegamble
    @leonegamble Před rokem +5

    Bruh Canadian healthcare is free oc it’s better

  • @ashleymarie6682
    @ashleymarie6682 Před rokem +22

    Canadians dont get free healthcare. They pay 30% of their income before they even get a paycheck. So really theyre paying more for inferior care.
    Here in the US, my family pays about 1-2% of our income to total of health premiums and after insurance costs for a family of 5. About $350/month. If we lived in canada, we would be paying $7500/month whether we used health services or not.

    • @88Expert
      @88Expert Před 11 měsíci +3

      Ya but since everybody is paying. The number will become smaller that's how division works.
      Also with an added bonus you don't need to worried about your bill afterwards

    • @legalyaya12
      @legalyaya12 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Not to mention Canadians travel to the U.S. when they need specialized medical care or don’t want to wait 5 months for surgery with Stage 4 colon cancer, for example.

    • @Lakeshore14
      @Lakeshore14 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@legalyaya12Not the case for me. I was diagnosed with colon cancer after a routine colonoscopy. Was referred the same day for lab work and had a CT scan the following week. Saw a surgeon within another week and had surgery 10 days later. Spent 3 days in the hospital and have had follow up scans. Everything was scheduled quickly and my out of pocket expense over the last 2 years has been $0.

    • @GermansRuinedWT
      @GermansRuinedWT Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@Lakeshore14That’s still a really long time???? I had an infected toe once after stubbing it and they literally had me in and out of the hospital within an hour, For a TOE. You wanna know how much I paid? 0$

    • @thatJackBidenTalksAbout
      @thatJackBidenTalksAbout Před 8 měsíci +1

      it's not inferior, just used more, so there's a slight wait.
      it's not $350, it's $350+ whatever an employer pays that could be paid to to the employee instead - my COBRA from one place was $1,200/month after I left, which meant my employer was paying another $800 they could have paid me instead.
      and then there's the $2000 deductible, the copays for every visit, the prescription costs for every fill...
      if it was paid for by taxes, the state can use economy of scale to make big guaranteed purchases, rather than insurance and clinics nickel and diming us at every turn

  • @valmac1234
    @valmac1234 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Just did self pay at an Advent Walk in clinic in Orlando yesterday. Its $318 now. 2 mins with the "doctor"

  • @albertaalternativenews-yyc7097
    @albertaalternativenews-yyc7097 Před 2 měsíci +1

    As someone who has lived in both countries and works in healthcare, I can confirm this is accurate. In the USA you pay a lot out of pocket, but it’s a lot faster. In Canada you pay a lot more but through taxes instead of out of pocket.

  • @royalfamily3076
    @royalfamily3076 Před rokem +2

    You have to pay hell lot of taxes in Canada.. and so much long waiting times

    • @thegreypath1777
      @thegreypath1777 Před rokem +1

      @Royal Family - You have to pay high medical bills in The USA, and you STILL have long waiting times

    • @brownnomad6805
      @brownnomad6805 Před rokem

      The grass is not greener on the other side. Switzerland and USa has the highest expense in Healthcare and still there is equal wait times.

    • @royalfamily3076
      @royalfamily3076 Před rokem

      @@thegreypath1777 isn’t it shorter than that in Canada?
      For MRI, canada wait time is 1 year

  • @kyle381000
    @kyle381000 Před 11 měsíci +22

    In America, they want your credit cards BEFORE they even look at you.

    • @angelalepera2315
      @angelalepera2315 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Lies

    • @davahn122
      @davahn122 Před 7 měsíci +1

      lol no

    • @Darkpara1
      @Darkpara1 Před 6 měsíci

      Other than the ER, pretty much. The first procedure done is the wallet biopsy to decide how much you will be overcharged.

  • @dccoulthard
    @dccoulthard Před 6 měsíci

    As an American who lived in Montreal, I can say that the wait times I had in the US were MUCH LONGER.

  • @thomasdeturk5142
    @thomasdeturk5142 Před rokem +1

    If the US had the same healthcare system as Canada we would not have these medical bills people would be paying we would have fewer people dying from the lack of health insurance. The US would not be spending trillions of dollars on the military industrial complex and instead fund for single payer healthcare system and cancel all student debt.

  • @retrop1783
    @retrop1783 Před 6 měsíci +5

    Canadian system sucks. Downright horrible. I don’t know many people that wouldn’t be willing to pay for insurance rather than wait months for a biopsy and then months more for a surgery, whilst everyone else is still backlogged. Massive respect for healthcare workers, some of the most dedicated people in our country!

  • @thegreypath1777
    @thegreypath1777 Před rokem +2

    American here: You have this dissolution that Americans don’t have to wait to see their doctors - you are wrong. You could duplicate the same waiting time as the Canadian in your film. Handing over all of your credit cards at the end is accurate though, for Americans.

    • @thatJackBidenTalksAbout
      @thatJackBidenTalksAbout Před 8 měsíci

      yup. anywhere where most people can afford care is going to be booked up long in advance. anywhere that isn't...people just aren't going 😕

  • @kyle381000
    @kyle381000 Před 4 měsíci

    In Canada, I take great comfort knowing that sick people are treated based on their reasons for being there rather than their ability to pay. If some guy moans about waiting two months for a new hip, tell him about the child with cancer whose parents don't have to sell their home to pay for treatment.

  • @JenJenANDChrissy
    @JenJenANDChrissy Před 26 dny

    The key in the USA is to get a good paying job that offers great insurance. I worked for a supermarket thru college. There was nothing taken out of my paycheck for the insurance premiums and I only had to pay $100 per year for a deductible before the insurance covered 90% of my healthcare costs. Preventative stuff like mammograms, PAP smears, colonoscopy, physicals were free. Meds were $10 for name brand and $5 for generic. I could go to any specialist I wanted without seeing my Primary Care Physician first. I've never had better insurance since then, and I even work in health care now. My husband works for non-profit type companies and his insurance is equal to what I had at the supermarket.

  • @TriangIe
    @TriangIe Před 10 měsíci +13

    “Doctor, my arms really hurts!”
    Canadian Doctor: “Hmm, would you like to try euthanasia?”

    • @MC-yt1uv
      @MC-yt1uv Před 9 měsíci +5

      Patient: "Doctor, my arm really hurts!"
      American Doctor: "That sucks, hopeful it gets better. That will be $200."

    • @gojomodu9934
      @gojomodu9934 Před 6 měsíci

      The irony they can euthanize. But some guy does what they do to depressed people and he is a killer. Make it make sense

  • @sadimasochist4543
    @sadimasochist4543 Před rokem +23

    Realistically the Canadian guy should have been a skeleton in the wait room to illustrate how long you have to wait to even be SEEN by a doctor and the chances of getting a good doctor is slim to none. In the US you get seen that day.

    • @thegreypath1777
      @thegreypath1777 Před rokem +2

      @Sadi Masochist - No, in The USA you do NOT get seen that day. You Canadians have a misguided concept of The USA’s healthcare system.

    • @sadimasochist4543
      @sadimasochist4543 Před rokem

      @@thegreypath1777 You 100% get seen that day by a physician or a doctor especially if you're paying for it That's not the case in Canada You're waiting months to get an appointment just to be seen. Canada's " free " healthcare is so bad that now they're offering to assist suicide people since paying for their medical with that " Free " healthcare seems to be a lot harder than previously advertised

    • @MC-yt1uv
      @MC-yt1uv Před 9 měsíci +2

      Uh, which part of America do you live in? Whenever I call the doctor's office they ask what time next week works for me.

    • @thatJackBidenTalksAbout
      @thatJackBidenTalksAbout Před 8 měsíci

      If you need a specialist in the US, you *might* get seen in a few months. If you live somewhere with a lot of old folks who have medicare, good luck even getting an appointment at a clinic. And all for the low, low price of about $800 to $1200 less pay per month, assuming your employer even has to "provide" insurance.

  • @typhon800
    @typhon800 Před 4 dny

    I shattered my shoulder in Canada. They said 3 months wait for imaging and suggested I drive to buffalo NY.

  • @jvkemir
    @jvkemir Před 8 měsíci +1

    but it’s like Canadian is better bc imagine ur dad died in the hospital and they were like “cAsH oR cReDit?”

    • @UrbanMatts
      @UrbanMatts Před 6 měsíci

      u might be on to something

  • @archimedesbird3439
    @archimedesbird3439 Před 10 měsíci +14

    Canadian Healthcare:
    -Hey, doc, I've been worried about this pain in m...
    -Have you considered MAID?

    • @H8nji
      @H8nji Před 9 měsíci +3

      *Have you considered SSRI’s and mutilation?

    • @usa1949
      @usa1949 Před 9 měsíci

      American Health Care Hey just go And Sit Down and I will Check you also United States health care is better and More Cheaper go to United States

  • @peggysandberg3959
    @peggysandberg3959 Před rokem +4

    Canada
    won
    so
    effortlessly

  • @terrificentertainment
    @terrificentertainment Před 22 dny

    as a dual citizen american and canadian. Having spent the first 26 years of my life in canada I can attest to the accuracy of this short. I tore my ACL and I had a 4 month wait to get it done (for free mind you) where as I could have paid 20k and had it done the next week in the US. Now being a citizen with insurance in the US if I was to tear my ACL it would cost me my accident deductible (I have a small supplemental policy in the case for accidents as that is my major concern) of $500 and I could get it done almost immediately. Also free is never actually free, just look at the taxes in provinces like Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia where the majority of the population lives.

  • @krispykremeil5465
    @krispykremeil5465 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Ohh yes 45% of your income goes to Taxes. But "FREE" health care tho right. 🤣
    People are dumb

  • @hugh2hoob668
    @hugh2hoob668 Před rokem +5

    I asked a doctor 1 extra question $250 no joke usa sucks

  • @Shiba2007
    @Shiba2007 Před rokem +4

    In Canada you wait a long time, but don't have to pay for it?! Is that what I'm supposed to understand? I know in USA we pay a lot.

    • @CROSBYVSOVECHKIN87
      @CROSBYVSOVECHKIN87 Před rokem +4

      Healthcare is covered thru taxes in Canada

    • @guylainelaroche6391
      @guylainelaroche6391 Před rokem +4

      We don't wait that long if urgent....real emergency case are deal with quickly

    • @ajporoznik9738
      @ajporoznik9738 Před rokem +3

      I live in Kingston Ontario Canada. If I wanted to see my family doctor all I have to do is call in at 8:30 am when their phone lines open, and I can have an appointment that day. And no I don't have to pay anything for it.

    • @Shiba2007
      @Shiba2007 Před rokem +1

      @@ajporoznik9738 Lucky. Not often there are same day appointments in America even for kids...

    • @zuzulip
      @zuzulip Před rokem

      ​@@guylainelaroche6391 lies. I was at the emergency room for 7 hours plus another 3 hours to see the doctor 10 total

  • @dorfone
    @dorfone Před 9 dny

    Over the last few years, I've had congestive heart failure, a heart attack, three abdominal surgeries, lens implants in both eyes,emergency surgery for a blocked stomach and have literally spent months in the hospital here in Canada plus there were hundreds of follow up visits to doctors over the years. The cost to me was $0.00, zero, nothing, nada. A few times I did have to wait hours in the emergency room, althought not for the serious emergency stuff. I would not trade the Canada medical care system for the lousy USA one ever. You would have to be crazy just to live in the USA.

  • @roughryder5
    @roughryder5 Před měsícem

    I went to the ER in Toronto due to chest pains and tingling in the arms and I waited literally 8 hours in the waiting room...

  • @suebrown3465
    @suebrown3465 Před rokem +5

    Love the ending..well done!
    Take care and stay healthy 🇨🇦❤️🤒

  • @DangerWrap
    @DangerWrap Před rokem +4

    Canada: You wait until you heal yourself.
    Japan: Don't sick on the weekends.

  • @mikhail6884
    @mikhail6884 Před rokem +1

    I think this is only for ER/ walk in clinics. When I go to my family doctor and miss 10 mins I have to wait 4 months again to visit.

  • @n1co2017
    @n1co2017 Před 11 měsíci +1

    huh i am Canadian and i never have to wait over 5-10 minutes since i have appointments tho i guess if you don't have one it could take a while.

  • @jillkeller9824
    @jillkeller9824 Před rokem +3

    I love your videos and your take on Canada vs America and I understand that this is just in jest but sadly it isn’t very representative of the truth. Both have pluses and minuses and one of the reasons I won’t move back to Canada is because of bad healthcare there.

  • @dirtbagkeith6556
    @dirtbagkeith6556 Před rokem +3

    Ha! Down here we wait forever AND have to take out a mortgage each visit.

  • @sakikoso5416
    @sakikoso5416 Před měsícem

    When I moved to Canada, after my first visit to a clinic I wasn't really sure about free medical system and asked the lady in the waiting room "do we just go out the door after seeing the doctor...?" and she was like "Um... What eles do you do...? lol"😂 Her face looked like I was asking the most weird question of the century.

  • @perrinayebarra
    @perrinayebarra Před 11 měsíci +1

    In America you die still trying to pay off your medical bills. In Canada you die in the lobby waiting for a room to open up but at least you didn’t have to pay.

    • @usa1949
      @usa1949 Před 9 měsíci

      United States is better