“It’s like chalk and cheese.”
In Canada, the health care debate is often trapped between two choices: our current system or the American model. But health policy expert Terry Barnes, a former senior Australian health official, says there is a third way. We sat down with Terry to find out how Australia achieves universal coverage with wait times that put Canada to shame.
Inside this interview:
- The 49-Day Average: Discover how Australia’s average wait for elective surgery is just 7 weeks—a statistic Terry says would “absolutely flaw” most Canadians.
- The Hybrid Advantage: How Australia’s mixed public-private system allows the private sector to handle 42% of all surgeries, effectively acting as a “pressure valve” that prevents the public system from collapsing.
- Altruistic Incentives: Why Australian specialists choose to work in both sectors, ensuring that even those without private insurance benefit from top-tier medical talent.
- Spending More for Less: A breakdown of why Canada spends closer to 14% of its GDP on health care while Australia spends 12% yet delivers vastly superior access.
- A Different Universality: Why “extra charging” and patient choice are seen as normal in Australia, keeping the focus on the doctor-patient relationship rather than government bureaucracy.
“Don’t look South… look Southwest to Australia.” Terry Barnes provides a powerful roadmap for Canadian reformers, proving that we don’t have to sacrifice our values to get the timely health care we deserve.