Naresh Tinani loves his job as a perfusionist at a hospital in Saskatchewan’s capital. To him, monitoring patient blood levels, heart beat and body temperature during cardiac surgeries and intensive ...
Canadians pay out-of-pocket health costs close to what Americans pay, yet Canada’s tax burden is 36 percent to 51 percent higher than America’s. These extra taxes are largely driven by government ...
An unidentified man sits in the waiting area at the nuclear medicine department at Toronto General Hospital, May 2009. The Canadian Press, Chris Young/AP When I returned home after a two-week speaking ...
Universal health insurance is on the American policy agenda for the fifth time since World War II. In the 1960s, the U.S. chose public coverage for only the elderly and the very poor, while Canada ...
As the American presidential election continues, healthcare is being thrust into the spotlight. Candidates, pundits, and the electorate are increasingly looking to their neighbors to the North, where ...
The heated and often emotionally charged debate over the Affordable Care Act (aka Obamacare) hasn’t subsided despite it being the law of the land for more than four years. Indeed, with the VA scandal, ...
Amid the debate about reforming heath care in the United States, it's tough to turn on your television these days without hearing a political ad condemning the Canadian health care system. One such ad ...
LONDON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Quantzig, a global data analytics and advisory firm, that delivers actionable analytics solutions to resolve complex business problems has announced the completion of its ...
There is an unmistakably Canadian complacency that enshrouds and swaddles our national health-care system and insulates it from a critical examination even though leaders of the Canadian Medical ...
Bolton Indictment: Lawfare and Real Misconduct Are Not Mutually Exclusive The Mamdani Delusion Seth Moulton Makes the Only Play Left on the Board A Trade Deal Without Teeth Isn’t Worth the Paper It’s ...
The implementation of assisted suicide will “save” the Canadian health care system between $34.7 and $136.8 million per year, a new report published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal claims.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results