VANCOUVER – A new study released Wednesday by the Fraser Institute suggests 45,619 Canadians went outside the country for non-emergency medical treatment in 2015.
That amounts to around one per cent of patients, the report states, which is down from 2014 when 1.1 per cent of patients (52,513) went abroad. But it’s still higher than 2013, when the number of patients was estimated to be 41,838.
READ MORE: Presidential debate: Trump calls Canadian health care ‘slow’ and ‘catastrophic’
The study from the Vancouver-based think tank comes out days after U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump took a swipe at the Canadian health care system during a town-hall debate with Democratic challenger Hillary Clinton.
Trump said when Canadians need a big operation, they go to the United States because of what he said was a “catastrophic” Canadian system in certain ways.
The Fraser Institute study did not indicate how many Canadians went to the U.S. for medical treatment, only that they went outside the country.
The Republican candidate also accused Clinton of secretly plotting to implement a Canadian-style, single-payer health care — a system he said “would be a disaster” if adopted in the United States.
READ MORE: Jane Philpott: health care funding for provinces has strings attached
The study says wait times are among the likely reasons some Canadians seek treatment elsewhere. Citing its own research, the Fraser Institute claims patients waited an average of 9.8 weeks for medically necessary treatment in 2015 after seeing a specialist.
- BC Hydro offers free AC units to lower-income, vulnerable customers
- ‘It’s nice to be the villain’: Vancouver Canucks gear up for Game 3 in Nashville
- ‘Why aren’t we doing more?’ White Rock on edge with killer on the loose
- Joffre Lakes to close for 3 periods this year under agreement with First Nations
Comments