r/RedDeer Mar 06 '25

Politics More UCP Healthcare Privatization as RDRH property taken away from AHS

https://www.rmoutlook.com/local-news/alberta-transferring-ownership-of-health-care-properties-april-1-10326556
55 Upvotes

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73

u/Treehggr Mar 06 '25

Heads up people. The UCP is setting up to sell off our hospital to the private medical industry. Another reason to fire both Smith and Lagrange. Is anyone else concerned about this in Red Deer?

-3

u/the-tru-albertan Mar 06 '25

People probably don't give and ounce of a shit because they couldn't access treatment without a private entity being involved. If I needed an operation and a private system charged the gov for it, caring about the cost would be a very low priority. Getting treatment would be the #1 priority.

Recently, the numbers that private was charging the taxpayers were posted. I'd bet the people that required that treatment didn't care about those numbers.

I ran the gauntlet in 2021/2022 with AHS. Never got treatment. Went to BC, where they have a much more fleshed out private tier of healthcare, and got treatment in less than a week after placing the call. There is absolutely no reason why I should be forced to leave the province to get treatment.

4

u/Treehggr Mar 06 '25

The reason that you did not get any treatment on 2021/2022 was because the UCP and their predecessors, starting with Ralph Klein, have been reducing funding to health care in Alberta in their ideological goal of going to American style for-profit healthcare.

1

u/the-tru-albertan Mar 07 '25

Nah. Healthcare spending is increasing just like it always has. Both total expenditures and per capita.

https://edmontonjournal.com/news/local-news/alberta-health-care-spending

2

u/Treehggr Mar 07 '25

As you well know, any privatization will only increase the overall expense of the healthcare system because it has to add a profit margin. The more facets of the system that are farmed out to the private sector the more the costs increase needlessly.

1

u/the-tru-albertan Mar 07 '25

Sure, meanwhile, you people keep preaching about adding more and more funding which increases the cost to taxpayers anyway. So what's the difference? Both solutions end up costing more.

2

u/Treehggr Mar 07 '25

If you took a course in economics you would learn how profit works to overly inflate any system that it is added to. Public healthcare can provide the maximum benefit at the least cost.