| Code Blue |
“Will medicare be there when I need it?”
Increasingly, Canadians are asking themselves this question. We hear the horror stories every day: hospital hallways lined with patients; long waiting lists for cancer treatment; a shortage of high-tech equipment. No wonder confidence in medicare, Canada’s most cherished social program, has fallen to a historic low. In Code Blue: Reviving Canada’s Health Care System, David Gratzer takes a close look at our health care system – from the overcrowded emergency rooms of Montreal hospitals, to the thriving practices of Canadian doctors who have decided to head south. He explores our misconceptions about the American health care system, analyzes demographic trends, and exposes the emptiness of political debate on the subject. Gratzer argues convincingly that the problems with medicare stem from its very structure, a structure that will only continue to weaken as Canada’s population grows older. Do the commonly proposed solutions to these problems – increased funding, two-tiered services, better management, user fees – really have what it takes to correct such major flaws? Gratzer concludes they don’t, and looks at several models in other countries before writing his own prescription for ours. Published by ECW Press of Montreal and Toronto
Winner of the Donner Prize 99/00 for best Canadian Public Policy Book. The Donner Prize, the largest of its kind in Canada, annually awards $25,000 to the winning author and $10,000 each to two runners-up. The runners-up in 99/00 were FREE-FOR-ALL: THE STRUGGLE FOR DOMINANCE ON THE DIGITAL FRONTIER by Matthew Fraser (Stoddart Publishing) and GETTING AWAY WITH MURDER: THE CANADIAN CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM by David M. Paciocco (Irwin Law). Code Blue‘s Introduction… |
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“Will medicare be there when I need it?”
