D Marie Kiestler
Instructor C. Cook
ENG-111-1WF-2023SP
21 February 2023 The Downside of Free Canadian Healthcare The Canadian healthcare system is known to be among the best in the world. The notion is major since it provides its citizens with access to universal health care. Canadians have great pride in their government's consideration of health care as an essential human right for which they are willing to pay. The Canadian 1986 health care act directs that Canadians should receive universal access to care services despite their employment, age, status, income, or state of health (Bielska et al. 4). Despite the pros of universal healthcare services in Canada, the downside outweighs them.
The downsides include the long lead times. Canada
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Despite the advantage of having each person contribute equally to the course, it leaves healthy individuals to pay for the sick. To effect the services, the government requires an enormous percentage of the yearly budget, which could sometimes total 40%. To attain the required amount, a good portion of it comes from taxation. The amount of finance spent on Canadian health care equates to an estimate of two-thirds of personal income taxes (Palacios et al. 7). Citizens must pay up to 51% in taxes. The taxation burden falls on the citizens, who face a shortage of medical equipment, long wait lists, staff shortages, and outdated …show more content…
The downsides include the long lead times since the country has among the longest wait times for health care services globally, with basic services taking unimaginable periods leading to high death rates. The systems also drive higher taxation rates, with the amount of finance spent estimated at two-thirds of all personal income taxes. Canadians have to pay up to 51% in taxes. The systems tend to limit the costs of care services that have been noted to have low success rates, risking the lives of those who would benefit from them. Also, the system does not provide equal distribution of resources in rural and urban