Health Care for Older People
- 8 May 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA)
- Vol. 275 (18) , 1449-1450
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.1996.03530420077042
Abstract
The United States and Canada are 2 federal nations separated geographically by an arbitrary line of latitude but culturally by 200 years of history. The ancestry of their institutions lies respectively, albeit remotely, in the anarchy of frontiers and the order of empire. Different assumptions about the natural way to organize society emerge in the pattern of their health services. The United States presents to the world a vision of rampant entrepreneurialism bridled by the enlightened self-interest of citizens and spurred by sporadic pricks of compassion. Canada's more collectivist tradition emerges in a concern that its health services should make sense in the context of equity and the public health, an ideal that has yet to be fully realized.1It has, however, retained the tradition of the physician as a fee-paid professional, and only in the salaried medical staff of some primary health care centers in Quebec does oneKeywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- How Does Canada Do It? A Comparison of Expenditures for Physicians’ Services in the United States and CanadaPublished by World Scientific Pub Co Pte Ltd ,2018
- Evidence-based and Evidence-biased MedicineAge and Ageing, 1995
- Hospital Expenditures in the United States and CanadaNew England Journal of Medicine, 1993
- Same Patients, Different Systems: Clinical Implications for the Care of the ElderlyJournal of the American Geriatrics Society, 1992
- Primary Care Medicine in CanadaNew England Journal of Medicine, 1992
- British Columbia sends patients to Seattle for coronary artery surgery. Bypassing the queue in CanadaPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1991
- The Deteriorating Administrative Efficiency of the U.S. Health Care SystemNew England Journal of Medicine, 1991
- Aging and the Ends of MedicineAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1988
- Prevention of age-associated loss of autonomy: Epidemiological approachesJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1984