Mark cited death rates for prostate and breast cancer: 19% and 25% in the US, vs 57% and 46% in Britain. The Canadian death rates aren't as bad because many of them are able to come to the US for treatment instead of waiting for rationed treatment in Canada until it's too late.
5 year survival rates are a ridiculous statistic because of lead time bias (additional time somebody is known to have the disease due to more widespread testing). I have already linked to a paper which attempts to correct for this bias by looking at a time series of mortality rates for prostate and breast cancer. The US does show a significant drop in these rates relative to other countries as more advanced treatements become available, but it's nowhere near as dramatic as the 5 year survival statistic would make things seem. Also, your contention that "many" Canadians go to the US for medical treatment is simply ridiculous. Only a very small number actually travel to the US for treatment of life-threatening illnesses. For example, my family isn't exactly poor, but there was absolutely no thought of sending my mother to the US for treatment either of the times she got breast cancer. It would have bankrupted us without a doubt. In both cases, surgery and radiotherapy were commenced within a couple of weeks of the cancer being found.
Your posts in this thread are not fundamentally in touch with reality. Tens of thousands of Canadians at a single hospital trying desperately to escape rationed care and give themselves a chance at life:
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