Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on AN OVERVIEW OF THE CANADIAN HEALTHCARE SYSTEM. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5-page paper focuses on the differences between the U.S. and Canadian healthcare systems. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AS43_MTcanhealt.doc
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the U.S. healthcare system if it sought a government-funded, single-payer system like that one north of the border. Horror stories about the Canadian healthcare system abounded during this period, bringing
up specters of long waiting lines to see a primary care physician, healthcare rationing and individuals who were forced to wait for emergency surgery.
What is the truth about the Canadian healthcare system, and how does it compare to that in the United States? We do know a couple of things about the
Canadian healthcare system. The system is a group of government-funded health insurance plans providing coverage to all Canadian citizens - and its known as medicare (Canadian Health Care, 2004). Now,
this is "medicare," rather than "Medicare," the latter being the U.S. government-funded health care system for senior citizens in the United States. The irony of Medicare (U.S.), of course, is
that this is a government-funded system that was passed as part of President Lyndon Johnsons attempt to provide low-cost hospitalization and medical insurance to the elderly. Its ironic because there
seems to be a great deal of furor over the U.S. government getting into the business of healthcare - but its being doing that for close to 50 years.
Getting back to Canada, from a historical perspective, the Canadian and U.S. healthcare systems werent all that different during the 1950s (Szick et al,
1999). Canada, at one point, was a land of private insurance companies, much like the U.S. was. But over the years, and primarily led by provincial elections, healthcare funding became
the governments responsibility, both on a federal and provincial level. Since the 1950s, a variety of acts and regulations were passed to help move Canadians from the fee-for-service insurance plans
...