Government administered health care - or no care at all:
This
is an excerpt from Imprimis, a free publication distributed by Hillsdale
College in Michigan:
A Canadian woman has given birth to
extremely rare identical quadruplets. The four girls were born at a U.S.
hospital because there was no space available at Canadian neonatal intensive
care units. Autumn. Brook, Calissa, and Dahlia are in good condition at
Benefice Hospital in Great Falls, Montana. Health officials said they checked
every other neonatal intensive care unit in Canada, but none had space. The
Jepps, a nurse and a respiratory technician were flown 500 kilometers to the Montana
hospital, the closest in the U.S., where the quadruplets were born on Sunday.
There you
have Canadian health care in a nutshell. After all, you can't expect a G-7
economy of only 30 million people to be able to offer the same level of
neonatal intensive care coverage as a town of 50,000 in remote, rural Montana.
And let's face it, there's nothing an expectant mom likes more on the day of
delivery than 300 miles in a bumpy twin prop over the Rockies. Everyone
knows that socialized health care means you wait and wait and wait— six months
for an MRI, a year for a hip replacement, and so on. But here is the absolute
logical reductio of a government monopoly in health care: the ten month waiting
list for the maternitv ward.
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