What if Canada could end its healthcare wait-list crisis by simply copying Sweden?
Sweden once suffered from long wait times and a rigid government monopoly, much like Canada does today. But in the 1990s, they revolutionized their universal system by embracing the private sector as a vital partner. We traveled to Stockholm to learn why Swedish patients no longer fear the queue.
Inside this mini-documentary:
- The Partnership Model: How Sweden uses tax dollars to fund care at both government hospitals and private clinics, giving patients the freedom to choose without paying a large bill.
- 30% More Efficient: A look at Capio St. Göran, a privately run public hospital that delivers the same high-quality care as government facilities for 30% less cost.
- The “90-Day Guarantee”: Why Swedish health regions are legally required to pay for your travel to another region if they can’t get you into surgery within three months.
- Taking the Pressure Off: How allowing 7% of the population to purchase private insurance reduces the burden on the public system for everyone else.
- Ending the “Nonsensical” Rules: Why Sweden’s open system avoids the Canadian absurdity of patients traveling to other provinces just to bypass local restrictions.
“Don’t be scared of not standing in a queue.” Sweden proves that universal care works best when it embraces competition, innovation, and patient choice.