Sally Pipes offers Washington Examiner readers helpful information about the impact of government-run health care.

Last year, Canadians waited a median of almost 20 weeks to receive specialist treatment after being referred by a general practitioner, according to a new report from The Fraser Institute. In practical terms, that’s the equivalent of getting a referral this week and waiting until May for treatment.

Such waits are endemic to government-run healthcare systems.

Canada’s single-payer system, which prohibits private insurance for medically necessary procedures, is a prime example of the pitfalls of total government control. Twenty weeks of waiting is bad enough. But some areas in Canada fare even worse. The median wait for treatment from a specialist following referral from a GP in New Brunswick is nearly a year.
Democratic strategist believes Biden has the infrastructure in place to launch a 2020 bid
Watch Full Screen to Skip Ads

The story is much the same in the United Kingdom’s government-run healthcare system. As of September, more than 4 million people were waiting for routine treatments. That’s a drastic increase from 2011, when 2.6 million patients were waiting.

These wait times are exacerbated by the nation’s shortage of qualified medical personnel. England is short 11,500 doctors and 42,000 nurses. Some health officials are proposing group appointments, where doctors see up to 15 people at once.

The British doctor shortage is unlikely to improve. Roughly four in ten general practitioners say they’ll likely quit within five years, according to recent research from the University of Manchester.