<img src="https://www.naturalnews.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/91/2019/08/Doctors-Hands-Support.jpg" alt="Image: Socialized medicine in Canada: No money to keep you alive, but plenty of government funds to help you commit suicide"/>
<p>The Canadian medical system has a smart way of saving money: helping people commit suicide when their care becomes too costly.</p>
<p>This sickening truth about the country’s socialized medicine was
recently illustrated by the case of a 41-year-old British Columbia man, <a href="http://pjmedia.com/trending/canadian-health-care-refused-to-pay-for-disabled-fathers-care-but-happily-paid-for-his-assisted-suicide/">Sean Tagert</a>, who had been living with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS. Also known as <a href="http://science.naturalnews.com/Amyotrophic%5Flateral%5Fsclerosis.html">Lou Gehrig’s Disease</a>,
the illness causes the neurons that control voluntary muscles in the
body to die. Eventually, patients are unable to chew, walk, talk or even
breathe, and their condition continues to decline until they die.</p>
<p>After being diagnosed in 2013, Tagert’s abilities slowly
deteriorated, and he suffered cardiac arrest in 2017. Unable to breathe
on his own, feed himself, walk or even speak, he found himself in need
of round-the-clock care.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, his regional health authority, Vancouver Coastal Health, was only able to offer him <a href="https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/als-bc-man-medically-assisted-death-1.5244731">15.5 hours of home care</a>
rather than the 24 hours he needed. Although he was later able to get
that up to 20 hours a day, his doctor said it still wasn’t enough.</p>
<p>Tagert had partial custody of his 11-year-old son and needed around
CAD $263.50 per day to stay in his home. The stress of finding
consistent care only worsened his condition.</p>
<p>There were a few institutional options, but they would have separated
him from his family and provided inferior care, according to family
members. These facilities have been likened to living in a “glass
coffin,” where people are essentially trapped within frozen bodies with
minds that are functioning perfectly. In addition, they tend to have
long waiting lists for those needing long-term care.</p>
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<p>Tagert managed to get some of the equipment he needed at home,
including a saliva-suction machine to stop him from choking, thanks to
donations he raised online. At the end, he was living on a ventilator
and completely immobile, with an eye-tracking computer his only way of
communicating. Tagert may have lost control over his body, but his mind
remained fully intact.</p>
<p>Frustrated with the system, he ultimately opted for a medically
assisted death – which the Canadian system was all too happy to pay for.
At that point, his kidney function was starting to fail. Although he
wanted to see his son grow up, Vancouver Coastal Health refused his
family’s repeated requests for 24-hour care.</p>
<h2>Doctors, patients call for changes to health system</h2>
<p>In a Facebook post, his family called out the government for the
serious shortcomings in the healthcare system there, writing: “We would
ask, on Sean’s behalf, that the government recognize the serious
problems in its treatment of ALS patients and their families, and find
real solutions for those already suffering unimaginably.”</p>
<p>Tagert’s physician, Dr. Stephen Burns, said that home care is more
cost-effective than group homes or palliative care for patients like
Tagert with complex needs, so it’s baffling that the system is unwilling
to cover it. He added that home care also has a positive effect on
patients because it allows them to be close to their family and
community.</p>
<p>Another Canadian physician, Dr. Leonie Herx of Toronto, told <a href="https://bc.ctvnews.ca/we-need-a-public-outcry-b-c-father-with-als-ends-life-after-struggle-to-stay-at-home-1.4543983"><em>CTV News Vancouver</em></a>
there should be a public outcry, saying: “We need to ensure [physical]
needs are met before we get to a place where people are feeling like
death is the only option.”</p>
<p>It’s a terribly tragic story, but it’s not all that surprising. After
all, a single-payer system sides with efficiency. If killing you is
more convenient, that’s what will happen – even if it means causing a
little boy to lose his father earlier than he had to. It’s absolutely
unacceptable that socialized medicine put this young father in a
position where he felt he had no choice but to <a href="https://euthanasia.news/">take his own life</a>.</p>
<p><strong>Sources for this article include:</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://pjmedia.com/trending/canadian-health-care-refused-to-pay-for-disabled-fathers-care-but-happily-paid-for-his-assisted-suicide/">PJMedia.com</a></p>
<p><a href="https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/als-bc-man-medically-assisted-death-1.5244731">CBC.ca</a></p>
<p><a href="https://bc.ctvnews.ca/we-need-a-public-outcry-b-c-father-with-als-ends-life-after-struggle-to-stay-at-home-1.4543983">BC.CTVNews.ca</a></p>
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