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Healthcare Equality Index 2022 [hrc.org]

 

In its 15th year, the Healthcare Equality Index (HEI) is the national LGBTQ+ benchmarking tool that evaluates healthcare facilities' policies and practices related to the equity and inclusion of their LGBTQ+ patients, visitors and employees. The HEI 2022 evaluates more than 2,200 healthcare facilities nationwide.

A record 906 healthcare facilities actively participated in the HEI 2022 survey.

[Please click here to read more.]

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Within Canada's "universal” health-care system, there are important health treatments that are universally inaccessible, except for those with a lot of extra doe to blow. Therefore, somewhat similar to the U.S., people's health comes second to maximizing profits, in particular those amassed by an increasingly greedy pharmaceutical industry. Resultantly, we continue to be the world’s sole nation that has universal healthcare but no similar coverage of prescribed medication, however necessary.

A late-2019 Angus Reid study found that about 90 percent of Canadians β€” including three quarters of Conservative Party supporters specifically β€” support a national 'pharmacare' plan. Another 77 percent believed this should be a high-priority matter for the federal government. The study also found that, over the previous year, due to medication unaffordability, almost a quarter of Canadians decided against filling a prescription or having one renewed.

Not only is medication less affordable, but other research has revealed that many low-income outpatients who cannot afford to fill their prescriptions end up back in the hospital system as a result, therefore costing far more for provincial and federal government health ministries than if the medication had been covered. Ergo, in order for the industry to continue raking in huge profits, Canadians and their health, as both individual consumers and a taxpaying collective, must lose out big time.

[P.S. I also wonder whether it's just me, or is it a bit curious how the only two health professions’ appointments for which Canadians are fully covered by the public plan are the two readily pharmaceutical-prescribing psychiatry and general practitioner health professions? Such non-Big-Pharma-benefiting health specialists as counsellors, therapists and naturopaths, etcetera, are not covered a red cent. I've never been much of a Coincidence Theorist.]

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