It has, we (the US) have the most inefficient and expensive healthcare systems in the world...by far.
The two Canadians I worked with both agreed anything beyond a general check up they'd head home to Canada to have done.
So yes from a consumers perspective that had both options available to them Canada won both times.
Meanwhile, (in the part of Canada that exists in reality) the Premier (Governor) of Newfoundland went to the US for heart surgery because the surgery he needed isn't even available in his province.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...my-choice-danny-williams-says/article4311853/
The other issue that is of dire impact in Canada is their trauma care is lagging far behind US trauma care.
You can start reading on this issue here:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26756769
And here:
https://www.facs.org/quality programs/trauma/ntdb
Canada invests far less money into ambulances, air ambulances, paramedics, and mobile emergency surgical equipment. The State of Alaska has more air ambulances than does the whole of Canada.
So does Hawaii.
All of Canada has fewer PICU beds and hospitals than does Los Angeles County.
Canada has 15 hospitals with PICU resources and a total of 85 PICU beds serving a population of ~36 million as of this year (which is an improvement from 2010).
Los Angeles County
alone has over 1,000 PICU beds spread over more than 20 hospitals serving a population of ~ten million.
There's a hug disparity in access to MRI and CT scan resources and while I hope things have gotten better it wasn't so many years ago that there were more such machines in California's Sacramento County than there were in the entirety of Canada.
Canadian health care costs less because they simply don't provide costly services in Canada. Even to their political leaders.
In terms of health care outcome data there's a disparity between the US and several other countries that does not take into account the fact that the US takes in far more immigrants than any other country in the world. Most of those immigrants arrive in the US with untreated, chronic conditions and they get added to our heathcare outcome data even if they never pursue treatment in the US.
Illegal immigrants typically don't seek out care because they're afraid of being deported. Note that while the popular focus is on the illegal immigrants from Mexico and Central America there's an approximately equal number of illegal immigrants in the US from Eastern Europe and Asia. Including these people with legal immigrants and we're close to 15% of our current population immigrated into the US in the past ten years.
We do not sort native born people from foreign born people for the purposes of statistical analysis so the impression one can get from out healthcare outcomes is that we're doing really poorly. The fact is that we're not.
The US treats people for certain diseases (such as HIV-AIDS) with a far higher success rate than any other country in the world. Of the people who seek PICU care we have the lowest mortality rate in the world for PICU cases. We simply need to get more people to seek out this care and the other care options that were accessible to them under the laws that preceded Obamacare.
I can go on all day and if you want to read reams and reams of healthcare data I can aim you at it because I work at a state agency where one of our main tasks is to create heathcare analysis for the State of California.
On a personal level my HMO (Kaiser) replaced my knee for me when the VA wanted to amputate my leg above the knee. I'm walking around on two legs because of private health care and if left to the government I'd be waiting for a prosthetic to show up maybe someday.
No thank you.