2025 will go down as a watershed moment for Canadian health care, courtesy of Wildrose Country.
The combination of reforms announced by the Smith government this year represents a bold reclamation of provincial jurisdiction while respecting the federal Canada Health Act (CHA). From changing the way the Alberta government pays hospitals, to allowing patients to directly purchase diagnostic scans and testing, Smith is pushing the boundaries without breaking them.
However, the government’s most recent salvo—legislation allowing physicians to “toggle” between public and private practice—has stirred up a proverbial hornet’s nest of controversy. Simply put, Smith proposes to keep the public system but make it easier for patients to pay at private clinics for things like hip and knee operations if they would like. What critics fail to understand is that not only will these reforms fundamentally improve patients’ lives, but they may actually save the public system from imploding ...
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The combination of reforms announced by the Smith government this year represents a bold reclamation of provincial jurisdiction while respecting the federal Canada Health Act (CHA). From changing the way the Alberta government pays hospitals, to allowing patients to directly purchase diagnostic scans and testing, Smith is pushing the boundaries without breaking them.
However, the government’s most recent salvo—legislation allowing physicians to “toggle” between public and private practice—has stirred up a proverbial hornet’s nest of controversy. Simply put, Smith proposes to keep the public system but make it easier for patients to pay at private clinics for things like hip and knee operations if they would like. What critics fail to understand is that not only will these reforms fundamentally improve patients’ lives, but they may actually save the public system from imploding ...
CLICK HERE for the full story

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