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Alberta Provincial Politics

If an election was held today, who would you vote for?

  • UCP

    Votes: 9 13.6%
  • NDP

    Votes: 48 72.7%
  • Liberal

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Alberta Party

    Votes: 4 6.1%
  • Undecided

    Votes: 5 7.6%

  • Total voters
    66
The whole exercise was dumb, but at least the best one (other than the red letters one) was chosen

I'm just so glad they didn't pick the one with the cowboys on horses and the pumpjacks.
 
Meanwhile, the Globe and Mail just leaked that the UCP plans on making family doctors offer 2 streams of service (public and private for pay). Remember Danielle's promise that this wouldn't happen if we just voted for her?

Nenshi just challenged her to call an election as a referendum on this privatization scheme.
 
Meanwhile, the Globe and Mail just leaked that the UCP plans on making family doctors offer 2 streams of service (public and private for pay). Remember Danielle's promise that this wouldn't happen if we just voted for her?

Nenshi just challenged her to call an election as a referendum on this privatization scheme.
She's kind of busy using the NWC to skirt those pesky courts.
 
Meanwhile, the Globe and Mail just leaked that the UCP plans on making family doctors offer 2 streams of service (public and private for pay). Remember Danielle's promise that this wouldn't happen if we just voted for her?

Nenshi just challenged her to call an election as a referendum on this privatization scheme.
It is an option to participate in both streams, not a requirement. Quebec has had thus fir years, but for some reason the sky didn't fall
 
They are also much poorer and have administrative structures straight out of the 70s - hard to disaggregate what makes them worse, or whether it is a combination of all three.

Yeah you aren't kidding, they'd be the 6th poorest state in greater trumpmerica..

Fig2_GDPperCapita2024_graph_v1.jpg


Seeing that, I hope the Gripen deal does go through in Quebec, they could use some more industry to wean off the equalization cash.

That chart also makes me want to see the shipbuilding program doubled or even tripled to give the Maritimers a boost as well.
 
Quebec has a lot of issues, poor administrative state and an older population. They also have a larger administrative state because they want to regulate their own things, which just adds costs, a good reminder for Alberta.

They have far more doctors in the private stream, but they also have far more regulation and lower pay for almost all specialties. There's very little incentive for out of province medical students to stay for more paperwork and lower pay. It's not necessarily true that if Alberta does this, they'll be like Quebec, because our admin is inherently less cumbersome and pay is better.

I do think some form of private care needs to happen, without it, we cannot possibly fund care sufficiently. If someone pays to get ahead, that may be "unfair" but it shortens the waitlist for those still on it. The most important thing with privatization, which increases dollars going into the demand side, is to pair it with supply side reforms. If we simply privatize the healthcare, more dollars are still competing for the same insufficient pool of providers. What needs to happen is private dollars to increase supply, and those dollars flow to increased physicians, whether that's attracting outside physicians or increase internal training capacity.
An example is if we need to do more MRIs, we now allow private funding. The private clinic, pays to buy the machine and hires technicians trained in the US, charges patient a fee because so they can recoup those costs, that would increase healthcare supply in AB. But if they simply bid up the wages of the existing pool of technicians, those private dollars just increased profit margin without an increase in healthcare capacity.
 
Quebec has a lot of issues, poor administrative state and an older population. They also have a larger administrative state because they want to regulate their own things, which just adds costs, a good reminder for Alberta.

They have far more doctors in the private stream, but they also have far more regulation and lower pay for almost all specialties. There's very little incentive for out of province medical students to stay for more paperwork and lower pay. It's not necessarily true that if Alberta does this, they'll be like Quebec, because our admin is inherently less cumbersome and pay is better.

I do think some form of private care needs to happen, without it, we cannot possibly fund care sufficiently. If someone pays to get ahead, that may be "unfair" but it shortens the waitlist for those still on it. The most important thing with privatization, which increases dollars going into the demand side, is to pair it with supply side reforms. If we simply privatize the healthcare, more dollars are still competing for the same insufficient pool of providers. What needs to happen is private dollars to increase supply, and those dollars flow to increased physicians, whether that's attracting outside physicians or increase internal training capacity.
An example is if we need to do more MRIs, we now allow private funding. The private clinic, pays to buy the machine and hires technicians trained in the US, charges patient a fee because so they can recoup those costs, that would increase healthcare supply in AB. But if they simply bid up the wages of the existing pool of technicians, those private dollars just increased profit margin without an increase in healthcare capacity.

I encourage you to read this whether you like the source.or not. Doctors from AHS giving personal accounts of being forced to serve private clinics. Anesthesiologists being prioritized for low risk surgeries like knee replacements and leading to backlogs for those receiving cancer treatments and surgeries in the public system. This isn’t simply allowing the wealthy to jump the queue for a hip surgery, it’s robbing resources from the public system and leading to the de-prioritization of those in most urgent need.

 
Let's all take a moment to remember the dynalife fiasco that resulted in months long waits for labs and $109,000,000 flushed down the toilet.
Wylie’s report found that between 2013 and 2023, Alberta spent $125 million on “government-initiated laboratory procurements that were abandoned or unsuccessful.”

This included $90 million for outsourcing community lab services, as well as $35 million for the procurement of the NDP’s superlab construction and its subsequent cancellation by the UCP.

They then paid 50 million for Dynalife itself

And that money is wasted. Previously the government would’ve paid a lab provider a contract an then they’d fulfill. Now the government bought them and is fulfilling the testing publicly. It’s actually making healthcare less private. The $109M figure is calculated over 10 years from a bunch of different things and isn’t the lab debacle in 2023 alone.
 
I encourage you to read this whether you like the source.or not. Doctors from AHS giving personal accounts of being forced to serve private clinics. Anesthesiologists being prioritized for low risk surgeries like knee replacements and leading to backlogs for those receiving cancer treatments and surgeries in the public system. This isn’t simply allowing the wealthy to jump the queue for a hip surgery, it’s robbing resources from the public system and leading to the de-prioritization of those in most urgent need.

This is a fundamentally different problem. None of this care is private, it’s the public system paying for surgeries just in different locations. There’s logic to moving some of this outside of the hospital. There’s no reason a knee replacement needs the operating facilities at Foothills, by moving that private increase specialization and decrease costs. When you get a root canal, there’s dentists that specialize in doing that, in a space designed for it and it’s more efficient than if you did it at a hospital. And the “being forced” to work on knee replacements instead of cancer surgeries is a bit dramatic. Even in a hospital, there’s scheduling of surgeries and the “less critical” surgeries have to happen at some point. So yes, there are times a cancer surgery is scheduled after a knee replacement.

To actually enable a private care stream, is that someone can wait for a public knee replacement, whether at a CSF or hospital, or pay out of pocket to a specialized clinic to do it with their own insurance instead of waiting or going to another country to do it. That would reduce the public wait list, and now the government isn’t funding that knee replacement or is funding only a portion.

But once again, any increase in demand NEEDS to be paired with increase in supply. The most fundamentally important reform we need to make in healthcare is residency. The government currently funds a count of residency spaces and each increase is 100k-150k per year. This is truly the bottleneck in the system. It starts with hospital funding. We fund hospitals with an overall budget and then pay for the residency spots separately. Some countries like Germany, funds their hospitals, both public and private, on base + activity. Hospitals can run completely on attending physicians, which is expensive, or they can train residents which help reduce their costs. Giving hospitals incentive to hire residents and allowing residents to rotate between large hospitals for specialized rotations and community hospital for other rotations.
 

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