Originally Posted by
Hawk405359
We have a lot more MRI machines per capita than Canada, because patients don't want to have to wait 30 days or more to get one, which you might in Canada depending on where you live and how big the line is in front of you. If you need an MRI in the US, the amount of time you need to wait to get one on can typically be measured in hours, rather than weeks.
Health care is like anything else, it's customer driven. People who use the emergency room as doctor visits, people who want those tests and those very, very expensive machines and want it now, people who demand every physician be perfect and have no qualms litigating every issue even if the doctor did a good job, all those things get rolled into health care costs. A country like Canada rations things a lot more closely. You can't have it both ways, either you give the patient every possible tool and technique at their disposal, or you have low costs and patients have to wait, possibly living in excruciating pain for longer while waiting for their hip replacement. Doctor payments are a paper tiger in the debate.
The idea that a good doctor can look at you and come up with an accurate diagnosis is just false. Fact is, while there are unnecessary tests done, I'd be wary of any doctor who just decides in 10 minutes what's wrong with you. Our knowledge base involving diseases is expanding, we know more now than we knew 30 years ago and we have a lot better idea what we need to rule out. Unless it's a really, really obvious issue that no doctor should miss, it should take a little more time than that.
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