“I live in Canada. Why would I have to go to another country to get my hip done?”
SecondStreet.org’s Colin Craig sat down with four Alberta women who were left in “excruciating pain” with “zero quality of life” while sitting on government waitlists. Faced with waits of up to four years just for a consultation, they chose to fly to Lithuania to reclaim their lives.
Inside this Roundtable Discussion:
- The Wait-List Trap: From being prescribed fentanyl to needing wheelchairs just to visit a grocery store, these women share the debilitating reality of life on a Canadian waitlist.
- The Lithuania Alternative: Discover why patients are choosing a clinic 7,557 km away that provides “spotlessly clean” facilities, English-speaking staff, and immediate surgery for roughly $12,000–$14,500.
- The Fiscal Reality: While these women paid out of pocket, the Alberta government spends roughly $21,000 for the same hip procedure locally—meaning the government could save money by adopting European-style travel reimbursements.
- Life After Surgery: Hear the emotional updates from grandmothers who are finally back to walking 18,000 steps a day and playing with their grandchildren pain-free.
- A Message to Government: A collective call for “common-sense” reforms, like the Ireland Model, to end the suffering of thousands of Canadians still stuck in the queue.
“It breaks my heart that so many people are living in that pain.” This roundtable is a powerful testament to the human cost of the status quo and a demand for a system that puts patients before bureaucracy.