However, I habitually try to play the so-called "devil's advocate" role and found myself asking, is it really a big deal if user fees became a reality in Ontario? And when it does, can there be any reasonably pleasant side effects?
After some searching, I realize this could potentially be the needed wake-up call for many of us; people like myself tend to abuse anything we do not have to pay for, at the time/point of usage -- OK, I admit, if I'm staying in a hotel, I may leave the tap running as I polish the ivories, but as you can imagine, my habits would change when I got home!
In other words, if I know I have to pay, I'll try my best to be frugal -- if it doesn't cost me anything immediately...
So being a realist, my suggestion to the Health Minister of Ontario would be to at least give those who make the effort to turn off the tap, a tax break; for example, if an across-the-board $1,000 user fee was levied annually on working Ontario residents, and I also paid a $1,000 annual membership fee at my local health/fitness club (something that I used snow, rain or shine), at least make it revenue neutral to my tax account with an equivalent credit at year end -- something similar has been implemented for the use of public transportation, so why not healthcare?
I'd regard it as unconscionable if I made the effort to stay healthy whilst my neighbor simply slaps the alarm clock across the room at 06:00 hours and turns the other cheeks, so to speak! Yet, we'll pay the same user fees at year's end.
I'd also be doing a disservice if I were to be reticent with regards to the various options available before we got to the point of user fees; I was really disturbed by an article sent to me by a friend -- here are some of the eye-popping revelations I read:
- the most dangerous place in Canada is a public hospital
- one in every 152 acute care patients dies because of "preventable adverse events"
- two in 10 patients contract a hospital-spread infection or are given the wrong medicine
- no Canadian CEO could keep his job if his company’s "defect rate" was even a small percentage of that in our government monopoly health-care system
- the inefficiencies should be removed from the system before user pay is even considered
- people should be given access to tools such as EMRs, EHRs and PHRs, along with constant reinforcement messages/education sessions to help them maintain their health.
As with any system, regular maintenance tends to prevent breakdown and the abuse of repair facilities.


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