The father of Canadian health care, Tommy Douglas, once said, "Let's not forget that the ultimate goal of Medicare must be to keep people well rather than just patching them up when they get sick."
It's time Canada did the same, writes Paul Kershaw in the Toronto Star.
"Our medical care system will never be enough to prevent people from dying early," he writes.
"So long as Canadians can't access safe homes, good incomes, quality child care, and a healthy environment, our medical care system will never be enough to prevent people from dying early."
That's why, when it comes to health care, "public dialogue so often asks how much more to invest in medical care to treat those already sick, what share of this funding should be delivered through public or private clinics, and how much of it should be used to pay doctors," Kershaw writes.
"These questions are important, but their answers are not enough to make us healthy."
That's why, when it comes to health care, federal and provincial governments should be investing more in things like housing, poverty reduction, and child care.
"The first stops are in our neighborhoods, jobs, child care centers, and schoolssomething COVID made painfully clear," writes
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