Canadian Shona Holmes joins the great American healthcare debate

"You got a lotta nerve
"To say you got a helping hand to lend
"You just want to be on
"The side that's winning"

—Bob Dylan, "Positively 4th Street"

By now you've all probably heard of Shona Holmes, the Canadian woman featured in those television ads that have been running all over American TV in recent weeks, the ones slamming Canada's healthcare system as some sort of nightmarish system from hell.

Well, the truth is now out and the fact is Shona Holmes never actually had a life-threatening brain tumor, as she's been claiming in those ads and interviews on American TV. Instead, according to the Mayo Clinic where she was treated, her "brain tumor" was actually a Rathke's Cleft Cyst on her pituitary gland and "Rathke's Cleft Cysts are not true tumors or neoplasms; instead they are benign cysts."

The real story, it seems, is that she was on a waiting list for treatment here in Canada for her non-life-threatening benign cyst, but didn't want to wait and therefore went to the States and paid for her own treatment instead. This is quite a different story from the one presented in those ads: a story about how the Canadian system was going to just let her die because it's such a flawed, awful, dangerous system.

All this is from a great article by Julie Mason that appeared earlier this week in the Ottawa Citizen.

Sadly, CBC's main news program, The National, covered this story last week, but somehow failed to mention (or perhaps failed to research enough to find out?) that Shona Holmes never actually had any life-threatening brain tumor—obviously the most important part of her story.

A Right-Wing Ad Campaign

Watch the ad here and listen as Holmes states that "I survived a brain tumor, but if I relied on my government for healthcare I'd be dead". This is simply not true. And Holmes, it should be noted, is not just some naive flake being used by a right-wing group to help spread their anti-healthcare reform message. She's actually an activist herself, one who has been all over the American media airwaves giving interviews about Canada's healthcare system.

Now there's no doubt that the wait times in this country can be unacceptable (and, since her cyst was starting to cause vision problems, Holmes definitely should not have had to wait months to see a specialist). However, the simple truth is that if a person has a life-threatening tumor in Canada they will be treated and not, as Holmes states, left to die.

Why she'd want to see nearly 50 million Americans left completely uninsured simply because she was unhappy with her treatment in Canada is beyond me.

Tellingly, if you listen to her talk she doesn't really seem to have much—or any—concern for the uninsured. Being wealthy enough to travel down to the Mayo Clinic for $97,000 private treatment, she seems to only be concerned with people like herself, those with money—the uninsured 50 million be damned.

Obama's Plan

Holmes' stated aim in appearing in these ads and interviews is to persuade Americans to stick with their current system and reject Obama's plan to cover everyone (a mighty flawed, non-single-payer system, I might add, but at least a noble attempt to finally cover everyone with some form of insurance).

This current system that Holmes so passionately wants America to retain is of course the very same horrifically unjust one—the only one in the industrialized world that doesn't cover all of its citizens—that the majority of Americans have wanted replaced for years.

Does Shona Holmes really think that millions of American children are better off with no medical insurance than with a system like that in Canada, no matter how much she may find it lacking?

Is she really that insensitive? Stupid? Self-absorbed?

Or does she, perhaps just like being on TV a lot?

Whatever the case, she sure comes across as a villain in all of this. A petty villain perhaps, but a villain nonetheless. Not so much to Canada and the Canadian healthcare system she's so intent on smearing with her less-than-honest tale of woe, but more so to the American public who she's hoping to condemn to the appalling status quo they presently call a healthcare system—and what the rest of the world calls a joke.

Yes, yes, of course if you're wealthy and/or you're lucky enough to have an insurance policy that actually covers you when you most need it (rather than challenges your claim and/or denies you certain treatments) then you will undoubtedly get some good care. But, seriously, who wants to live in a system in which losing your job also means losing your healthcare, as so many Americans have been finding out over the past year? Nearly 50 million citizens go without any coverage whatsoever and tens of millions more have inadequate, partial and/or tentative coverage at best. You call that a modern and just society?

"The Best System In The World"

Americans always want to believe they are the best at everything in the world and when it comes to certain things perhaps they are, but when it comes to their healthcare system the fact is they're the laughing stock of the world.

The rest of the industrialized world long, long ago accepted the basic truth that any modern, just and civilized society unequivocally must provide two fundamental things to all of its citizens: universal primary and secondary education and universal healthcare. Yet some 60 years onward America is still attempting to claw its way into the 1950s. That is, 60 years after everyone else America is still attempting to give all of its citizens these two most basic and fundamental of human rights.

And if people like Shona Holmes have their wish they never will.

For another excellent article on healthcare reform in America try this quite personal recent piece by Ted Kennedy, "The Cause of My Life".

Then there's this excellent piece by Roger J. Newell, an American who spent years living under both the "socialized" British and "free market" American systems and his take on both: "American health care: the view from expatriate who came home".

Finally, check out this piece by David Sirota about how the wealthy in America (including certain Democrats who Sirota calls "Land Rover Liberals") are doing all they can to defeat universal healthcare, at least as long as it involves them having to pay even a few thousand dollars more in taxes each year from their hoard of millions and/or billions.

Let's just hope America ignores the scaremongering of the likes of Shona Holmes and the greed and selfishness of so many of its own ultra-wealthy and decides to finally join the ranks of truly civilized nations.

Mike Cowie is a freelance writer who writes about politics, music, film, travel and much more. You can read more of Mike’s views on his Web site.

Comments

Joanna D.
Whether it was a tumor or a benign cyst makes little difference. Was it not after all Mayo Clinic that diagnosed Shona Holmes while the Canadian system failed to even diagnose her? We all have just one life to live and minimizing pain, suffering and general discomfort are what we all aim for. I will not be told that I need to take a number, sit back and wait, accepting that my otherwise treatable condition is going to hamper my daily life because of the type of health care system Canada is so proud of. Let's stop for a second, stop competing with the Americans and take a critical look at our system.
I refuse to believe that had you discovered some sort of growth in your brain you would calmly wait while the Canadian health care system put you in line to see a specialist.
 
MS
I lived in US and Canada. US system may have its problems, but when it comes to treating something it is excellent. Some people I knew had no insurance and were ineligible for public assistance, but got treated for free anyway. They got funds from private sources. I think those stories of US people being left without treatment are exaggerated. Canadian health care system on the other hand is really bad. I was shocked when I first came to Canada from US. The waits, the quality of treatment, the availability of services are extremely poor. It might be free, but poor. I have seen these kind of things in the Soviet Union "let all be equal in being miserable".
 
spartikus
Joanna D. is factually incorrect when she claims the "Canadian system failed to diagnose her."

She was diagnosed. And that diagnosis was her condition was not immediately threatening. The Mayo Clinic concurs.
 
Grant
Joanna: No, it is not the Mayo clinic that diagnosed her. She had *already been* diagnosed, her doctors had already made the determination her condition was non life threatening... that's WHY she was on a wait list. If they thought her life was endangered she would have been given immediate treatment.

And MS: I get the strong impression that you're completely full of crap considering your testimony flies in the face of every serious objective comparative study of the Canadian and American health care systems ever performed.
 
Mike a Canadians view
I have been watching in the news here about your medical system. I can say without hesitation that the Canadian medical system is awesome!
I have through-out my life had many injuries and one life threatening incident. Every single time I was delt with in a timely and professional manner. I am here to talk about it.
My life-threatening issue involved a Gangrenous gall blader which was infecting my other organs. I was rushed to the hospital , they pumped me full of medicine and the next day after my temperature went down they operated on me. At the end of the day I was healthy and it did not cost me a penny. Yes I love our medicare system. Listen to the whole truth and nothing but the truth and you will find your way.
Thanks, good luck and god bless ,
Mike , a Canadian
 
tina
I am an American who has been living in Canada for the past 5 years. The medical care I get here is of the same quality or better than what I had with good insurance plans in the US, and it's a whole lot cheaper. Wait times are about the same. Best of all, I don't have keep working year after year at a job I hate with people I hate simply because it's the only way to get health insurance since I have a pre-existing condition. I recently left my original employer and struck out on my own to follow a longtime dream I could never follow in the US primarily because of my need for health insurance. Canadians don't know how lucky they are.

As to that "free" care you get in the US if you turn up in extremis at the emergency rooms? It's not free. Someone has to pay and the hospital will try to make sure it's you. Sure, you can avoid paying if you don't mind losing your credit rating, and very young people without much to lose sometimes do that. But those of us who have accumulated property and reputation can't
 
Kerry O'Grady
My wife was diagnosed with lung cancer back in 2000. It was about 6 weeks from diagnosis to the operating table. She is doing very well today, been cancer free for 9 years. Thats my Canadian healthcare.
 
Rob
It's very simple. The State of Massachusetts has had mandatory healthcare for a few years now and if that is supposed to be an example then mandatory healthcare brings nothing but bad things.
Fines for people who can't afford it. Huge increases in expenditures.
According to documents after introducing mandatory healthcare in Massachusetts health care costs in the State have soared by 40%.
This year the fine is over $1,000 when someone is not insured.
Health care is overrated, doctors are overrated.
 
Proof in the Pudding
Any system you undertake is going to be as good or bad as you make it. Public health care in Canada works quite well because the people working in the system do their best to make it run smoothly, and everyone accepts the system and supports it.

The States, however, loves to make a big, ridiculous, political spectacle of EVERYTHING. Any attempt at a public system there will definitely fail because you will have too many hacks and blow-hards that don't actually know anything trying to dictate how the system should work. On top of that, you will have an equal number of blow-hards complaining about how bad things have become, no matter what the reality of the situation is, and trying to sabotage it for political gain. I love how health care in Canada is relatively politics-free beyond the question, "Spend more or spend less?"
 
Eloise
Hey Mike you forgot the part where she's suing OHIP, the Ontario government health plan, for the $100K she spent at the Mayo clinic. And then there's her lawsuit against OHIP saying the lack of an American type system in Canada is a violation of her Charter of Rights:

http://www.law.utoronto.ca/healthlaw/docs/case_McCreith.pdf

This lawsuit is "supported" (whatever that means) by the Canadian Constitution Foundation. Some of the folks on the board of the CCF (Tommy Douglas will get em for that one!) are from the Fraser Institute.

I'm waiting for surgery for a tumour. It's benign. What's wrong with waiting for it? I'd have to wait in the States if I lived there too. Shouldn't someone with life threatening illnesses go first?
 
shonaisaliar
Having people buy insurance or be fined is not public health care! But, it sure makes the insurance companies happy.
 
Beth
Great story. I was in California this summer and met a couple from Dallas. He expressed grave concern about the US adapting a Canadian health care system. His most pressing question: "But doesn't it mean that I won't be able to choose my own doctor? That' what they're telling us!" I explained that I chose my own doctor and if I can't get in to see him on weekends when his office is closed, I can just pop into any free medical clinic around town and they'll help me. His eyes were as big as saucers. He couldn't believe it. That's NOT what they are telling them down south.
Beth
 
Greg C
It seems that the Canadian system is good but could be improved. This is the case with any system. The idea of the Canadian system is that everybody gets treated fairly. This is the way it should be. There are places in the USA where their system is exceptional for everyone and even those that don't have coverage. Then there are places where people lose everything they have to pay for their treatment. In Canada that will not happen. We just need to fine tune what we have. Obviously the Canadian system is the one the USA should work with.
 
Rob
Every time any government tries to mandate anything you're in big trouble. No government ever has any business telling anybody what to do.
Governments are there to serve the people and not the other way around.
Most people fined in Massachusetts opt for paying the fine because it's cheaper than paying for health insurance. (the state takes it out of your state income tax) Just another money grab by the government. Income tax is not enough as a money grab, sales tax neither so let's force useless healthcare down everyone's throat and do another money grab.
And let's not forget other money grabs such as fuel tax, environmental tax etc. Yes no difference from the days when slavery existed. You're a slave to the government simple as that.
 
Arcy
My family and I have made several trips to the states in order to get the best medical care in the world. We have a system here in Canada, but if I want an MRI for some injury, I may have to wait 4-5 weeks. In the states, I can get one in 2-days!!! Our healthcare system here in Canada works, but it's nowhere near as good as the one in the states. I know from EXPERIENCE!!
 
Dianna Inkster
I am involved in the struggle for better preventative measures so people with type 1 diabetes won't have to suffer the terrible "complications" that maimed or killed many members of their extended families years ago. In both Canada and the U.S., we are not trying to encourage a healthy body so that expensive medical interventions are NOT necessary. It is time we spent money wisely to prevent costly, maiming and even deadly complications that result from chronic disease. To properly manage my husband's type 1 diabetes costs $10,000 plus 2 consults a year with the endo and some lab work. That's still better than costly dialysis or retinopathy treatments or wild trips to the ER in an ambulance because of an unexpected low.or a stay in a old folks' home because he has dementia or depression
 
Jennifer Seet
If anyone thinks that a benign brain tumor is not life-threatening, they thankfully haven't had a personal experience with one! My son has had TWO benign brain tumors. His quality of life has been seriously compromised and he has to deal with lifelong treatments. We were told by the doctors that ALL brain tumors are considered malignant because of where they are (in the brain) and how much even a tiny tumor or cyst can damage the brain. I don't know how long I'll have my son with me, but I do know that he's more in danger of dying young than most of us.
 
Phil
This debate has nothing to do with health care. Rather it is about the American belief in their citizens' constitutional right and OBLIGATION to self-determination. State-run social services are seen by most as a threat to American liberal democracy: liberty, equality, and property (the three ideas on which they base "life, liberty and the pursuit of happinees). This means they also impinge the American myths of equality of opportunity, and self-sufficiency. That these myths, formulated on agrarian principles over two centuries ago, ignore the urban social reality of the twenty-first century is, astonishingly, irrelevant. Health care is a personal responsibility and, alas, the line over which too many Americans will not cross, despite all the reasoned arguments for why they should.
 
Frank F. O'Barski
I am a pragmatist. Pragmatism kept us from being eaten by Dire Wolves and Saber Cats long before there were liberals or conservatives. All these philosophical straw men are meaningless. The fact is, we have the most expensive healthcare with the least benefit to the people of any modern, industrial society. The current trend is unsustainable. The phony conservatives are going to watch what happens to our civil rights when the economy collapses under the burden of a broken health care system. Just as they stood by and watched their gang shred the Constitution under co-presidents CheneyBush.
 
Richard Gibbons

A few years ago, my wife & I were considering immigrating to the US, we owned a profitable business which dealt mainly with US & S American customers, had bought a house in Florida & were shopping for an industrial building. When I found out that as a 65 year old with a few pre-existing conditions, I would not be able to buy health insurance - period, and if I came down with a serious condition, I would be expected to do what all non-wealthy Americans do and sell our house & move into a trailer, we abandoned the idea and fled back to Canada where, as in most of the rest of the industrial world, high quality health care is a universal right. (also, at about that time George W was re-elected and the future for the US economy was obvious)
 
David Copelin
I've lived and worked under both the Canadian and the US health care systems. The Canadian one is better, I think; the standard of care is the same, and I've never had a problem with wait times. Last year I had a necessary major operation that would have cost me thousands of dollars had it been in the US, money that I don't have; in Canada, I didn't have to worry about that, and the level of stress was far lower. That's a health issue too. Are there improvements to be made in Canada? Sure. But to underfund universal health care, as some people want to do, in order to reveal its flaws, is cynical and dishonest. Years ago, there were the same bogus cries of "socialized medicine" here in Canada; now Canadians by and large would revolt if the system were seriously threatened. Better socialized medicine than socialized barbarism. The insurance companies run the US medical system based on their own desire for profit, and they contribute a lot of money to politicians to keep the votes going their way. So far, they've won. They lie to the American public, and many people believe them. "Can't choose your own doctor," indeed. The earth isn't flat, Saddam Hussein had nothing to do with 9/11, and Elvis has definitely left the building. So there is hope that the US will eventually get over the "every man for himself" mantra and get a good universal health care system for all its citizens.
 
Alex D
Yeah dude, you're just another person looking for a handout. How can you call something "mighty flawed" yet sit there and still cheer lead for it. You do it because you don't want to work for what you have. If you were really concerned about the health of Americans you wouldn't support any B.S. legislation from the Left and wait or (HELP- what a concept?) until a better, true solution comes along. and I second Joanna Ds comments. You suck.
 
Truthsayer
Phil, you're full of BS. The truth is that the U.S. is a country that runs like a private institution/coporation. They're 2 Americas: the private where those who can afford to pay do so and live comfortably, the second is public, where everyone else lives, and where the roads, transportation systems, healthcare and schools fall apart, violence rises, and no one cares. The US, despite it's wealth, is considered a second-world country by the standards of the western democracies. The US healthcare system is the costliest and the income gap is the widest among western democracies;the crime rate is the highest, too. In the US people trust private corporations more than governments. There's NO sense of siblinghood or community in the US, where everyone owns a gun and it's every man for himself. Everyone is suspicious of his neighbor. The reason Americans don't want a healthcare system that covers everyone is because some Americans *fear* that the unwanted--non-whites, poor people--may benefit from it. They don't have a sense of community.
 
Angus B
Count me in as another supporter of Canada's flawed universal health care system. Recently, I started having back pains. After an initial mis-diagnosis as a torn muscle, I was slated to have a CAT scan at St.Paul's at 8am on a Monday morning. Afterwords, I was told that it would take up to 5 days to get the results. I got home around 10:30am. Within 5 minutes I received a call from my GP informing me that I had a serious bacterial infection in my spine and that I needed to pack a bag, get over to VGH emergency and prepare to be admitted. By the time I arrived, he had faxed over my file and I was indeed admitted immediately. I ended up in the hospital for a month during which time I received nothing but first rate care from all of the doctors, residents and nursing staff. This week, two months after being released from the hospital, I was declared infection free.
One of things that I thought about on many occasions during and after my stay in the hospital, is the financial situation my family would be in if this had happened in the US. Because of some of the complications I encountered during my stay in VGH, I had to have a wide variety of tests including 4 MRIs, a couple of ultrasounds, several xrays, and antibiotics that in one case would have cost $500 per day if I had been required to pay for it.
While I will concede that there are problems with our system, especially when it comes to elective procedures, overall, it is way better than a system where the quality of your care is directly correlated to the quality of your bank account. This is why we must fight people like Dr.Brian Day who would happily sacrifice universal access in order to pad his own bank account.
In regards to controlling costs, I think that there are opportunities that the health minister needs to look at and expand. For instance, my wife and son belong to a fantastic community clinic called Raven Song. This clinic has doctors nurses and a new type of health care professional, nurse practitioners. Nurse practitioners receive extensive training beyond a regular nursing degree and see patients and diagnose a lot of standard ailments. (Soon they will even be able to prescribe medications.) This frees up doctors to take care of the more serious patients and saves the health care system millions of dollars, because it takes less time to train a nurse practitioner and they are paid a lot less than a physician. Nurse practitioners could be especially helpful in communities where there simply aren't enough doctors. This is just one way that we could help our ailing, yet vital, universal health care system.
 
Linda G
Right now I am going through the hassle of trying to find new car insurance because our company increased it by 57% because of two minor tickets in a three year period. When you are trying to select the better deal, there are so many issue and pitfalls to consider. This is what it must be like to be an American trying to secure or keep health insurance. Most of us don't like dealing with insurance companies. We Canadians are so fortunate that we have access to essential health care without dealing with insurance companies. Our doctors are better off here, too. They can focus on care and not what an insurance company will or will not cover.
 
Grimmlok
I'm sorry, I have a hard time believing ANYBODY waited "in line" to get an MRI in Canada. The most I, or anybody else in my family had to wait was a couple days up to a week at the most.

I've had broken limbs, almost pneumonia and a cardiac issue that turned out to be a massive panic attack brought on by wonky brain chemistry. Each time I was seen immediately and treated immediately, with follow up appointments made to make sure everything was taken care of.

Out of pocket cost? Zero.
 
Mike M
The Great Betrayers

Norway had their Quisling, the US of A had their Benedict Arnold.. and Canada, our Holmes?

The debate surrounding healthcare reform in the US gives us a chance to witness some of the most colossally ignorant behavior ever to emanate from a supposedly civilized and democratic nation. Obama's proposed reforms are cautious, to put it mildly. Yet to gauge things by the rhetoric of his detractors, you would think he was ushering in some sort of neo-Communist regieme: "Round up the guns! Euthanize everyone over the age of 68! Etc!"

So it was bound to happen.. a partisan and sensationalist US media hungry for the next sound-bite, and eager to fuel this farcical "debate," found in one Canadian woman an all-too-complicit poster child for Victims of the Failed Socialist Healthcare Experiment Up North. Yes, if not Shona Holmes, then who? But it is Holmes we see all over YouTube now, so be it: Let it never be said that a Canadian wouldn't speak up to decry ineptitude and short-comings in our public institutions. Gods know, our healthcare is well worth a little pride, and even more so our continued scrutiny and diligence.. each of us. Every level of government in this country has been telling us for years we can't afford health, we need to cut back, we need "realistic expectations." Who doesn't have a personal experience (wait times), who hasn't felt impotent anger over the poor treatment of a loved one, at least once as a result of healthcare inefficiencies?

Is Canada's system of universal healthcare perfect? No! But it's a model worth preserving, and if we let it fail then shame on us. In the meantime, for those who would shill for the US networks, thanks for nothing.. or, for one thing, rather: "Quit trying to Holmes me." It's not every day we get to coin a phrase.
 
Stryder
Gee I wonder how much the sick care company's are paying her.
 
JJinLA
All I can say is don't have a skiing accident on Canadian slopes that involves brain injury. I know one actress that didn't survive because the medical specialy hospital and specilists were too far away. I don't think that would have happend in the USA.
 
steve222
JJinLA funny how you don't even list the name of the "Actress"

 
Martin Dunphy
JJinLA

To set the record straight, and to answer steve222's post, the actor was Natasha Richardson, wife of actor Liam Neeson, and after her fall on Mount Tremblant, she refused medical assistance, claiming she was fine, and sent the ambulance away. After experiencing headaches the next day she was admitted promptly to a local hospital, then taken by ambulance to a hospital in Montreal. She was soon airlifted, under medical supervision, to a hospital in New York state, where she died two days after her fall.
There was no lack of prompt medical attention in any way.
 
 
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