“I’m a survivor of the Canadian medical system.”
Reagan Johnson was a 20-year-old construction worker when a back injury derailed his life. After years of “jumping through government hoops” and undergoing temporary surgeries that left him in chronic pain, BC’s health care system gave him a final answer: prepare for a wheelchair and a life on methadone. This mini-documentary follows Reagan’s journey from desperation to a $63,000 life-saving surgery in Germany.
Inside this mini-documentary:
- The Failure of Temporary Fixes: How two government-funded disectomies in Canada only masked Reagan’s problem, eventually leading to bone-on-bone agony and a loss of feeling in his legs.
- The Methadone “Solution”: Why the Canadian system offered Reagan heavy narcotics and a wheelchair instead of the advanced surgical options available globally.
- Searching for Hope: Reagan’s “deep dive of desperation” online, which led him past options in Mexico and India to a specialized clinic in Germany.
- The German Experience: A look at the world-class care Reagan received, including a five-story rehab center and a specialized surgical team that restored his mobility.
- Barriers to Progress: Why the German clinic Reagan used gave up on expanding into Canada due to excessive government red tape.
“Stay in Canada and be in a wheelchair… or get some money and go get surgery.” Reagan’s recovery is proof that Canadian patients deserve more than “stonewalling” and painkillers. His story highlights the urgent need for government accountability and the removal of barriers that keep innovative clinics out of Canada.