Many
people have a problem with the Canadian health care system, and I am one of them.
It’s inefficient and inconsistent. Doctors are mostly apathetic professionals
making rounds through the small, dingy rooms of public clinics. Success is
measured by the number of people they manage to send home from their clinics –
cured or not.
It’s
obvious that this is important. The health care system is meant to care for our
health, and if it doesn’t do that, we have a serious problem.
Shouldn’t
health be the main priority of the health care system? Shouldn’t doctors want to
make their patients well again, as soon as possible? Shouldn’t efficacy, not
ease, be the criteria by which doctors evaluate treatment?
You
might ask what right I have to be talking about this. Well, I’ve been in and
out of waiting rooms and doctors’ offices and labs pretty often in the last few
years. In April of 2011, I caught a virus. At first, it seemed like a
run-of-the-mill thing. I was tired, and spent my entire Easter break in bed,
thinking it would go away on its own. When it didn’t, I booked an appointment
with my doctor. She sent me for a few standard blood tests, and then… I waited.
The
policy with these tests is that the doctor’s office will only call if the tests
come back positive. Mine didn’t, but I was still sick three weeks later, when the
results were supposed to have come in, so I went back to her office. She
confirmed that none of the tests had come back positively and sent me for a few
more tests.
The
cycle repeated itself, with all the test results coming in negatively, the
doctor failing to contact me, and me revisiting her office every few weeks for
the next two and a half months.
At
this point, I was completely fed up with the system. I had been sick for two
and a half months, and I hadn’t been diagnosed. My doctor was sending me for
two or three blood tests at a time, and she didn’t seem to be concerned about
how long my illness had lasted. I had been home from school for the entire
duration of the sickness, barely able to do anything except for lie in bed. I
was having brief hallucinations and my memory was faulty. I was scared, and she didn’t care.
That
was went I walked into the office. When I walked out, I was infuriated. Since
none of the tests thus far had come back positively, she told me, she thought
it was a rare virus. She specifically told me that it must be “one that isn’t
often tested for.” Then she sent me home.
I
had no prescription. I had no blood test requisition sheet. All I had was my
doctor’s feeble assurance that it would probably go away on its own in a little
while: the health care system had given up on me. I was no longer a priority,
and it didn’t matter that I was sick and scared and insecure.
I
am not the only person who has been treated this way by Canadian medical
professionals. The system is inherently problematic, and it fosters an
environment of coldness and indifference. Ask someone who has experienced it
firsthand – when patients are not truly cared for and health is no longer the first
priority, can Canadians still boast about our health care system?
I
say no.
You're failing to realize what most mature people would and that is that your health isn't just dictated by a doctor. It takes communication and work from both YOU and your doctor in order to get the medical attention you need and fix whatever is wrong with you. Most disturbing to me, is the fact that you stayed with this doctor for this long. You're an adult. Take your health into your own hands. If you're not happy with how this doctor is treating you then go find another doctor, look for more opinions on your illness; the options are endless. However, the last thing you want to do is sit and wait for a doctor to help you. Help yourself.
ReplyDeleteI don't really understand how people can complain about somethings that's free. With your free health care their are only so many resources available. I do agree that some improvements could be made, however there is always the option of private health care if your not happen with the current situation.
ReplyDeleteHealth care in our country is leaps and bounds above what is available in many other parts of the world. One negative experience, that I'm sure everyone has had at some point in their lives, doesn't make an entire system bad. We should be thankful that everyone has access to some sort of health care when it is needed and not have to worry about paying for it like our neighbours to the south.
ReplyDeleteA lot of viruses are hard to test for and that isn't your doctors fault... Do you know how many different people contract different things all the time. How do you expect research to be able to compete and control all of these. That is why there are so many different types of common colds.. Everything is constantly changing and I would encourage you to be a little more rational in your thinking. I have had many family members who have had much more serious conditions compared to a virus, and it has been a lengthy battle for them to be diagnosed as well. But what you should remember is that at least here in Canada no matter how many tests you are doing you are never getting charged. You could go to another country and have just as much trouble. How much more pissed off would you be if the doctors failed to figure anything out AND you were paying a ton of money for each test?
ReplyDeleteGo see a different doctor if you hate yours so much! If your problem was really that serious, and your doctor didn't seem to care, then I'm sure another would. If you can't find a doctor to care, then maybe you're not as sick as you think you are! The reason doctors don't chase after us is because they're not trying to sell us healthcare, which is wonderful. True that there is a lack of funding being fed into the system, which could realistically only be solved by all of us paying higher taxes, so it's kind of a lose lose situation. However, if you can afford something better, feel free to fly south and pay for it!
ReplyDeleteI completely agree with all the above commenters. Tommy Douglas just rolled over in his grave.
ReplyDelete