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September 1999 (Volume 77)
Quarterly Article
David A. Rochefort
December 2024
Dec 19, 2024
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How Canadian health care is viewed in this country is a reflection of the dilemmas that confront U.S. medicine. Canada’s Medicare program first attracted the attention of American observers during the 1970s, when national health insurance proposals were being considered by the Congress (Marmor 1993). Following this episode, interest in Canada’s system quickly subsided among all but a small coterie of health policy specialists. When health care reform regained preeminence on the American political agenda in the early 1990s, Canadian practices once again emerged as rich fodder for lessons designed to guide public policy development. As political scientist Antonia Maioni stated: “Canada’s health insurance system … [became] a useful target and a political weapon in the reform debate, alternatively used as a model of what American health reform ought to aspire to, or as an ominous warning about the problems inherent in government in a national health insurance program” (Maioni 1994, 2-3).
Author(s): David A. Rochefort
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Volume 77, Issue 3 (pages 409–414) DOI: 10.1111/1468-0009.00143 Published in 1999