Epi
Active Member
I'd like to see more prevention. For starters I think a minimum fitness standard for a high school diploma would go along way towards reducing health care costs in the long run.
Actually in a strictly money sense, it costs far less for that 60 year old working person to die of a massive heart attack, then for the 85 year old previously physically healthy person who's been withdrawing from CPP and OAS for years, who gets dementia and slowly deteriorates over 5 years requiring long-term care, assisted living and repeated hospital admissions in the end for things like pneumonia. And since as far as we know now, dementia rates rise exponentially as you get older and we still don't have any real treatments or prevention for it (being physically healthy doesn't help with Alzheimer's), and so does cancer rates which we aggressively treat older and older, for sure the person who lives longer will eventually cost the system more.
I think the real issue with health care is that at some point we need to find a balance that 'doing everything you can do' is not in society's best interests even if it is in the best interests for the individual. Using experimental cancer care which costs a bundle and only 10% live longer, or endlessly prolonging the lives of severely disabled or demented people is commonplace now. Morally we should help individual people as much as we can, because that's probably what one would want for themselves. But we may reach a certain tipping point with ever more expensive, directed and specific treatments and technologies (and ever more old people) that the entire system may come crashing down.
Well unless Japan invents us some robotic care workers fast...